Associated article: Pajamas Media
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Monday, January 31, 2011
Authorities Nab Notorious Youth Soccer Gang After 3-0 Victory Leaves Seven with Hurt Feelings
Associated article: Pajamas Media
Labels:
personal responsibility
Friday, January 28, 2011
Select Panel of Experts Concludes Common Sense Is a Myth
Washington, D.C.--A select panel of self-identified experts announced its conclusion that "common sense is a myth" to a small audience of similarly-minded elite."We have surveyed a wide variety of commonly-held views," said Professor Elizabeth Bartholemew Rottgenstein, "but we have concluded that none of them are shared by members of this most qualified, prestigious, and heavily credentialed panel."
The head of the panel described its methodology as "one in which we surveyed the universe of sense amongst us and looked to see if a similar array of correct opinions were prevalent amongst most other people. Alas, we found our sense was not common, and were compelled to conclude there is no such thing as sense of a common variety."
Associated article: National Review
Labels:
egotism
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Obama Inspires Nation to Find "Bold New Ways to Do the Math"
Washington, D.C.--President Obama used his State of the Union Address to urge Congress to find "bold new ways to do the math" of balancing the federal budget, advocating spending even more taxpayer dollars on things like roads, cars, and high-speed rail lines while ignoring major spending cuts."Accountants tell us there are only two sides to a balance sheet," said Obama. "But we as a nation can do better. Much better."
The President took the opportunity to recognize several students in the audience who he said were examples of young pioneers "willing to think outside the pizza box" and find new ways to scatter numbers randomly around ledger sheets.
Associated article: Associated Press Fact Check
Labels:
federal spending
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Sausage Inspector Closes Senate for Safety Violations
Washington, D.C.--A federal sausage inspector closed the U.S. Senate yesterday after finding "shocking violations of basic safety regulations.""The crafting of legislation is often compared to making sausage, but the U.S. Senate has utterly failed to meet the basic requirements of safe sausage-making," said the inspector.
According to inspection officials, while sausage-makers must specify in advance exactly what ingredients are going into specific types of sausage, the U.S. Senate "often lumps completely unrelated pieces of legislation together in one 2,000-page package no one person could ever fully understand."
Even the Democratic health care law contains in its last 141 pages changes to the first 763 pages, while a separate bill enacted a week later revised many provisions in the first bill.
"While the Republican-controlled House of Representatives has required the publication of bills well in advance of a House vote and the listing of the constitutional authority for every bill introduced," said the inspector, "the Senate continues to fall well short of minimal sausage-making requirements."
Associated article: New York Times
Labels:
legislative process
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Jerry Brown Checks State of California Into Rehab
Los Angeles, California--After being busted for racking up tens of billions of dollars in debt above the already-existing $500 billion in unfunded public pension liabilties held by the government, Governor Jerry Brown has checked the entire State of California into rehab.Brown was caught in the state Capitol with a bevy of environmentalists, lawyers, and public sector unions.
"He thought the prospects were poor that a Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives would be willing to bail him and his state out," said a Brown spokesperson. "Voluntarily submitting to rehab was the only alternative."
Associated articles: San Francisco Chronicle; Wall Street Journal
Labels:
California
Monday, January 24, 2011
Celebrities Hiring Assistants to Manage their Moral Outrage
Los Angeles, California--As celebrities advocate more and more restrictions on the use of energy that will make energy less affordable -- especially for people with smaller incomes -- they're increasingly hiring personal assistants to manage their moral outrage."I work for a celebrity who owns four homes, a helicopter and private jet, seven cars, including a Humvee, two yachts, and a three-story earth mover he uses to build new recreational islands," said one celebrity assistant. "I'm here to help him manage all those assets while also maintaining a large collection of advocacy issues that require consistently solemn moral outrage."
"It's a juggling act," said another celebrity moral outrage assistant, "trying to find time for my client to spout off on the need for people to sacrifice more while squeezing in that third trip to the private villa off Tahiti."
Associated videos: YouTube; The Blaze; YouTube 2
Labels:
celebrities
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Obama Resorts to Air Guitar
Washington, D.C.--Having run out of options to reenergize his presidency, President Obama used a televised address last night to play air guitar.White House advisers told the president he needed to simplify his message to a few wild windmill maneuvers and a rockin' heavy metal stance, which they hoped could better further his agenda than alternative communications strategies.
"We decided it was best to let Obama be Obama," said a White House spokesperson. "And that's just what happened last night: the president struck a phony pose, engaged in some theatrics, and pumped his arms in celebration."
Labels:
egotism
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Local Man Picketed for Reading Newspaper Article on Unflattering Race Statistics
Nortown, Illinois--Crowds of anti-racism protesters continued to gather outside the office of an area man who was spotted reading a newspaper article featuring unflattering racial statistics, including those showing that 72% of black babies are born to unmarried mothers, compared to 29% of whites, and that only 12% of black fourth-grade boys are proficient in reading and math, compared to 38% and 44% of white boys, respectively, even adjusting for poverty."It's an outrage that these statistics exist," said one protester, "and even more outrageous that someone would choose to read them."
Associated articles: Associated Press; New York Times
Labels:
racism
Monday, January 17, 2011
EPA Regulates Vegetarians as Their Methane Emissions Rival Those of Cows
Washington, D.C.--The Environmental Protection Agency is predicting an increase in human vegetarian diets consisting of the same harder-to-digest vegetable matter that causes cows to emit large quantities of carbon dioxide and methane gas. Consequently, the EPA will begin regulating vegetarian emissions beginning next year as part of its efforts to combat global warming."Let me be clear," said President Obama, announcing the plan, "Vegetarians eat vegetable matter just like cows do, and the body's inability to fully digest the many complex carbohydrates in the vegetarian diet results in the excessive production of carbon dioxide and methane. Vegetarians also don't eat cows, whose similar diets produce the same gases. The result is a vicious circle in which vegetarians and cows contribute to ever greater global warming gas emissions."
Associated article: The Straight Dope
Labels:
global warming
Friday, January 14, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Democrats Demand Stronger Microphone Control Laws and Shorter Audio Feeds Following Shooting Tragedy
Washington, D.C.--Following a tragic shooting committed by a lone deranged man whose motivation had no discernible political connection, Democrats in Congress moved to prevent "ideas from getting into the wrong hands" through stronger microphone control laws and limits on the size of television audio feeds."The constitutional right to bear speech has limits," said one proponent of the legislation. "Do you really need a microphone this large or an audio feed that holds more than a few minutes of sound data to shoot down a bad idea?"
Associated article: Charles Krauthammer
Labels:
free speech,
Second Amendment
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
More and More Federal Bureaucrats Roaming Beyond Their Natural Habitat
Allanville, New Jersey--Local residents are seeing more and more federal bureaucrats roaming beyond their government buildings, sun bathing on driveways and rummaging through garbage cans."The bureaucrat population has exploded," said one neighbor. "Many of them have nowhere else to go."
"They rummage through everything, and then just saunter away, leaving a total mess," said another resident.
Officials say the encroachments are the inevitable result of vastly larger increases in public sector employment, leaving private citizens exposed to more and more intrusions.
"One bureaucrat trapped himself under our kiddie pool," said another neighbor. "Then he fined us for not putting a cover on it."
Associated articles: National Review; Wall Street Journal
Labels:
federal regulations
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Authorities Uncover Supreme Court Fetish Club
Washington, D.C.--Just days after the House of Representatives' first-ever public reading of the U.S. Constitution led detractors to say the event showed Republicans' reverence for the nation's founding document was a "fetish," those same detractors were found at the Supreme Court, on their knees, enjoying a domination routine run by the most left-wing Justices on the U.S. Supreme Court.Authorities said they were called to the scene when passers-by heard cries of "Work your will on us, harder, harder!" as prominent advocates of the judiciary's governmental supremacy begged several of the unelected, lifetime-tenured Justices to impose their own policy preferences on them through a variety of sick and twisted distortions of the constitutional text.
Some of the participants defended their involvement in the Supreme Court fetish club, saying they were just trying to work out some "intimacy issues" with their democratic form of government.
Associated articles: National Review; Wall Street Journal; AOL
Labels:
Founding Principles,
Supreme Court
Monday, January 10, 2011
Friday, January 7, 2011
After Spending an Hour Reading U.S. Constitution, House Commits to Reading All 162,000 Pages of Code of Federal Regulations Over Next 23 Years
Washington, D.C.--After Republicans initiated the first public reading of the U.S. Constitution on the House floor, they committed to reading aloud the entire 162,000 pages of the Code of Federal Regulations over the next 23 years."It took a bit over an hour for Members to read the entire Constitution during our proceedings," said one Representative. "So we expect it will take about 23 years to finish reading just the code of federal regulations. We hope to get to the I.R.S. Code and the U.S. Code of Federal Statutes some time later this century."
Association articles: Politico; George Will; Wall Street Journal; associated video: Liberty Central
Labels:
federal regulations,
Founding Principles
Democrats to Hold 2012 Convention in 1862 Los Angeles
Washington, D.C.--The Democratic National Committee today announced its plans to hold the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles circa 1862.Democratic Party officials said they "looked forward to presenting to the American people our political vision of class warfare that denies the ever-expanding value for all created by a free enterprise system, in a setting bereft of things like cell phone, skyscrapers, and electricity, and marked by malnutrition, dysentery, and other primitive conditions."
Labels:
class warfare,
free enterprise
Thursday, January 6, 2011
White House Spokesman Spins Out of Control, Lands in Press Pool, Injuring Seven
Washington, D.C.--Obama Administration press secretary Robert Gibbs "spun totally out of control" earlier today, lofting into the air and flipping over several times before finally coming to a stop in the middle of the White House press pool."Journalists understand the need for press secretaries to spin events in favor of the administration they work for," said one reporter who was injured while standing next to the pool. "But there have to be some sort of standards that keep things from getting out of hand and hurting innocent people."
Labels:
press manipulation
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Treasury Secretary to Leave Administration to Serve Chinese Official Who Won Him at Silent Auction
Washington, D.C.--Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner announced he would leave the Administration next week to begin serving the Chinese official who won him in a recent silent auction. The auction was held to help retire parts of the massive debt the U.S. owes to China."I'm so grateful to the U.S. for weakening its own economic system to the benefit of competing Chinese companies," said the Chinese Finance Minister, "that it was the least I could do to bid on one of the U.S. auction items."
The minister placed the winning bid of $1 billion on Geithner, who has agreed to do odd jobs for the minister for a week in November. The U.S. is in debt an additional $899 billion to China.
Associated articles: Wall Street Journal; CBS News
Labels:
national debt
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Left-leaning Legal Activists Rally to Watch Monster Trucks Drive Through Giant Holes in Constitution
Cambridge, Massachusetts--Thousands of left-leaning legal activists from around the country are flocking to what has become a popular pastime for law students, lawyers, and judges: attending rallies to watch monster trucks drive through giant holes in the U.S. Constitution."We sit around, watch the trucks roar by, and talk about how our interpretations of certain parts of the Constitution have a way of nullifying the rest of the document in all practical effect, achieving a predetermined result that matches our policy preferences," said one rally participant. "Yeee-ha!"
Associated article: USA Today
Labels:
Founding Principles
Monday, January 3, 2011
Man in Obama T-Shirt Robs Bank Unnoticed
New Rochelle, New York--Over a dozen bank customers watched nonchalantly as a teller handed over hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to a man wearing an Obama t-shirt.When asked why by local police, the teller said "It's gotten to the point where I didn't think anything of it. Of course someone associated with the Obama campaign is going to demand hundreds of thousands of dollars in other people's money."
The responses of other witnesses were much the same.
"With government takeovers of health care, home loans, banks, and energy," said one customer, "I just assumed along with everyone else that a guy with an Obama t-shirt wanted lots of taxpayer money, and they were going to do whatever it took to get it."
The man in the t-shirt was quickly apprehended, after which he told police "I didn't say anything to the teller. She just handed me the money and I took it."
"I'm used to the Obama shirt giving me a kind of moral authority like that," he said.
Associated articles: Washington Examiner; Wall Street Journal; Washington Post
Labels:
taxes
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Very Short Story: The Three "I's"
The Three sat motionless, their black robes hanging straight down as if weighted at the seams, as rigid as the tunics on the marble statues that lined the dais.
They were sometimes compared to the Sun, around which everything moved in precisely predictable orbits. But after clerking for them, the Three seemed more than ever like a trio of black holes, toward which everything inevitably fell.
Nothing escaped the reach of their opinions. And so it was a citizen’s prime duty to understand them.
Long before the Three, judges had based their conclusions on general rules, couching them in the language of universal principles applied to the particular circumstances at hand.
The country was a bustling place then, where people interacted under a regime of mutual freedom. But that freedom led to many different kinds of legal proceedings.
And as the number of judicial decisions grew, the larger became the palate from which the Three could choose the colors with which to draw their decisions that would bind us all on their canvas. And so their decisions came to resemble portraits of themselves more closely than ever. The Three became the Law.
This was to the benefit of all, we were taught. No longer would citizens have to stake their liberty on predictions based on the application of abstract principle. Now they could focus their attention on adhering to the decisions of the Three alone.
The bailiff called the court to order.
Today’s trial began as usual. The claims were brought against the defendants under the Article of the three I’s, each “I” representing one of the Three and symbolizing their collective expression of societal will.
There were two defendants, both wearing the traditional white jumpsuits that symbolize their appearance as two blank slates on which the Three would write their will.
The Three recognized the Citers of Precedent, a corps of professionals dedicated to reminding each of the Three of their previous opinions. The Citers studied in grand universities, and were tasked with memorizing the Three’s written decisions and contributing toward the Great Academic Project: the synthesis of each of the Three’s opinions into a unified theory capable of predicting their future will, and thereby charting a path within which the citizenry could safely walk.
One of the Citers stated the facts of the case: the defendants considered themselves to be married, and bound by their own vows.
A collective gasp rippled like a gas leak through the spectator galleries.
The two people before the court, said the Citer, were found holding themselves out to their fellow citizens as being bound by their own commitments to each other, when the Precedents had long been understood to negate the practice. In the estimation of the Three, marriage was an archaic commitment to maintain rules that their own personal experience had revealed to be unwise over time.
“We shall consider the precedents,” said the three in unison, and they retired to their chambers.
We clerks gathered in the library to collect the precedents on which the Three’s decisions would be rendered.
The rows of precedent books wound their way through the library. The newer volumes, bound in moist shiny leather, gradually gave way to the much older tomes, whose dried covers had wilted whole pages of parched paper, littering the floor in forgotten corners of the building.
I walked over to return some of the fallen pages, and happened to glance at what they contained. I had apparently found some very early precedent that appeared to cite an Article that preceded the Article of the Three “I’s.”
It was the Article of the One “I.”
I brought the page back to my fellow clerks and asked them if we should include these older precedents in our recommendation to the Three, as it might nudge them into upholding the marriage of the committed couple whose fate the Three held in their hands.
Indeed, the old precedents I had found seemed to resonate with the married couples’ notion that they had built their own household on a foundation that only they could alter -- not the Three or anyone else. These precedents described how this Article of the One “I” was once part of a larger plan agreed to many years ago. Under this long-forgotten “Article I,” the laws would be made by those in a “House” composed of “Representatives” chosen by “the People.” The people in the House would agree on the laws, and those laws would bind everyone until the people in the House agreed to change them. Not the Three. The People.
Labels:
judicial activism
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