Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Prophet and loss
Authorities contacted here said they were certain they were dealing with a plot to defame the prophet, not just an innocent mistake. “It does not even matter if they stood up and ‘edhammo’ or ‘hamedmo’ , said a police official. “We know what they were up to.” He also indicated that there may even be additional charges. “By God, we have examined their shoe soles to make certain they have not been walking about printing anti-Islamic propaganda in the sand.” The same official stated that the nickname “Ham” was offensive all by itself to Muslims, and added that Mr. Edwards’ fingerprints, “if you squint at them and hold them a certain way,” appeared to spell naughty words in Arabic, but he declined to name the words.
A lawyer for the defendants, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that the law is very strictly applied, and has been used to punish spelling out the name of the prophet in a football cheer and using alphabet soup letters. He stated, too, that Sudanese citizens are forbidden to eat Danish since a Copenhagen Newspaper published controversial cartoons about the prophet last year.
Crowds of angry Sudanese rioted in the capital on news of the arrests, demanding death to all infidels and also an extra helping of millet. A spokesman for Sudanese President Lt. Gen. Omar Hassan al-Bashir hinted that the three men were Israeli agents and said the president would demand that western countries remove the syllables mo, ham and ed from all dictionaries or he would declare a jihad. But he added that if "somebody important" came to visit him and "brought a nice gift", the whole problem might go away.
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Heart of Dogness
While John McCain and Mike Huckabee have refused to comment, Huckabee pointing out that while the Bible does cover landscaping in the Book of Genesis, it gives no guidance on dog handling, the other candidates have already weighed in. Rudy Giuliani claimed that when he was mayor of New York, the number of attacks on Hondurans by German Shepherds declined by one hundred percent. “Not a single Honduran was bitten when I was Mayor, not even by a Yorkshire Terrier,” Giuliani stated proudly. Duncan Hunter declined to endorse the law, but attributed the problem to New Jersey’s strict gun laws. “If that Mex boy had him a Ruger up in his pickup, this never would have happened,” Hunter declared. Similarly, Ron Paul stated his firm opposition to new laws of any kind, while Fred Thompson stated that it was a private matter. “We are well past the day when a German shepherd could bite a person of color in public,” Thompson said. “But on private property, well, that’s another matter.”
Only Tom Tancredo expressed outright enthusiasm for the law, stating that any dog that bit an immigrant was a hero in his eyes. Tancredo not only approved of the law, but he called on the Governor of New Jersey to pardon Congo, and said that he would nominate the dog for the Medal of Freedom. “The only thing that bothers me is that his name, Congo, doesn’t sound very American,” Mr. Tancredo said. Mitt Romney, who waited until the other candidates had spoken before making any remarks, issued this statement through a spokesman: “It’s bad for dogs to bite. On the other hand, Mitt is concerned that if they do not pass this law, Princeton may become a sanctuary suburb where illegal immigrants can taunt American dogs and get away with it.”
Finally, President Bush, when asked what he thought Congo might say if he could speak, clenched his teeth as if talking through a muzzle and squeaked, “Arf. Please don’t kill me”.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Republican Candidates Race to the Bottom, but the Audience Gets There First
Question Number One, from Earyl in Rounders Bend, Montana:
EARYL (drooling, holding up his pants with one hand while playing with the safety of a Desert Eagle with the other): Which one of you pilgrims has got the biggest piece? And are you gonna mess with my rights to carry this one? Don’t worry, (giggles) I haven’t shot up the schoolhouse yet.
DUNCAN HUNTER: In the American tradition, I am armed to the teeth. So is my family. My little grandson, he’s so cute, you should see him with his twenty-gauge that his Mamma gave him.
MITT ROMNEY: My sons have guns! My sons do! Three of them! Guns, that is. I love guns! Guns are great! Guns …
MODERATOR: Time’s up!
MITT ROMNEY: …Guns !
RUDY GIULIANI: Guns? I don’t need no stinkin’ guns. I am Rudy damn Giuliani, and you had better watch out.
TOM TANCREDO: [When are they going to ask about immigration? When?]
FRED THOMPSON: Boy, you don’t get to see my piece. Only mah waf gets to see that big boy!
AUDIENCE: Laughs, scattered boos.
RON PAUL: [ ~sigh~ These sub-cretin anti-intellectual yahoos never stop yammering on about their guns. Why don’t they just read None Dare Call it Treason? That explains everything.]
MIKE HUCKABEE: As the only bona-fide Christian minister up on the podium, I am armed with the Bible.
JOHN MCCAIN: [Why am I up here? When can this be over?]
Question Number Two, from Earryll, in Apocalyptic Revelation, Alabama:
Earryll (staggering back and forth in front of the camera and struggling to hold up an enormous Bible): I have a question, which if answered properly, will unlock the secrets of the Universe, and all of you had better get it right or God will punish you. What is your interpretation of the Whore of Babylon?
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval, menacing foot stamping.
DUNCAN HUNTER: I read the Bible every day to my family. And the whore of Babylon, obviously, is Hillary Clinton.
AUDIENCE: Laughter, shouts of agreement.
MIKE HUCKABEE: I believe in every word that’s in the Bible, literally. Except the part about plucking out your own eye. I don’t go there.
MITT ROMNEY: I believe in the Bible too, including the part about plucking out your own eye! In fact … (tries to pluck out his own eye, is restrained by moderator and Rudy Giuliani).
RUDY GIULIANI (breathing hard): Whew. I carry a bible with me everywhere. Under my shirt. In case one of my ex-wives or children takes a shot at me.
FRED THOMPSON: I have the words of the good book tattooed all over my private parts. But I’m not gonna show you, ‘cause they’re private.
TOM TANCREDO: [When are they going to ask about immigration? When?]
JOHN MCCAIN: [Why am I up here? When can this be over?]
RON PAUL: [ ~sigh~ These sub-cretin anti-intellectual yahoos never stop yammering on about their Bibles. Why don’t they just read Protocols of the Elders of Zion? That explains everything.]
Question Number Three, from Earryylleene in Flashback, Nevada:
EARRYYLLEENE (sitting primly with hands in lap): I would love to get a job mowing lawns, scrubbing toilets or cutting up dead chickens in a smelly factory, but I can’t get hired because of all these Mexicans everywhere. How quickly will you throw them out? Also, if I get an abortion, which one of you will punish me the hardest?
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval.
TOM TANCREDO: [At Last!]
FRED THOMPSON: That’s a two part question. I don’t answer two part questions.
RUDY GIULIANI: When I was mayor of New York, I ratted out thousands of illegals to the federal government…
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval.
RUDY GIULIANI: Thanks. But the federal government never deported any of them.
AUDIENCE: Boos, Jeers, small objects thrown.
MITT ROMNEY: When I was governor of Massachusetts, I was as mean as can be to immigrants! I wouldn’t let them go to school or hospitals or drive a car!
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval.
MITT ROMNEY: Thanks! But the liberals in my state would not let me waterboard them!
AUDIENCE: boos, jeers, Chairs thrown.
MITT ROMNEY: (pointing) Aa-and that guy, Rudy, he operated a sanctuary city!
AUDIENCE: Boos, jeers, fists shaken at Giuliani.
RUDY GIULIANI: (pointing back) Well, Mitt, you ran a sanctuary mansion!
AUDIENCE: Boos, jeers, fists shaken at Romney.
MITT ROMNEY: (pointing) Aa-and that other guy, Huckabee, he ran a sanctuary state and had a sanctuary in his church!
AUDIENCE: Boos, jeers, fists shaken at Huckabee.
MIKE HUCKABEE: Well, now, let’s remember that we are all children of God.
AUDIENCE: Weeps, kneels, prays. Stars and Bars waved.
MODERATOR (coming out from behind RON PAUL, where he has been crouching): Let’s get some of the others in here for comment. And thanks to the audience for being so lively.
DUNCAN HUNTER: I’ve already taken the first step by putting up a huge honking fence between my district and Mexico. It’s got two walls, a road in between, watchtowers with machine gun mounts. When I am president, I will extend this wall around the entire United States, including Alaska and Hawaii. We’ll also have to mine the harbors and flood all the fields, in case the immigrants try to parachute in.
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval.
TOM TANCREDO: I just want to say how happy it makes me to see everyone up here trying to out Tom Tancredo Tom Tancredo in being harsher and more bigoted toward immigrants than Tom Tancredo. But it is just not possible. Sorry!
AUDIENCE: Roars of approval.
JOHN MCCAIN:[Why am I up here? When can this be over?]
RON PAUL: I am the only candidate up here with a workable, constitutional solution to this problem. It’s obvious if you read the “Proceedings of the Tri-lateral Commission” that these 12 million Mexicans are agents of a foreign power. So the solution is to give them all citizenship…
AUDIENCE: Jeers, boos, chairs thrown, fists shaken, weapons brandished.
RON PAUL: Wait, wait… and then try them all for treason and execute them!
AUDIENCE: Wild applause. Frenzied dancing in the aisles. Pistol shots.
MODERATOR: Well, we have time for just one more question. Traditionally, it’s lighthearted, so…
Question Number Four, from Sal, in Flatbush:
SAL: Yo, Rudy! What’s up with rooting for the Red Sox in the World Series?
RUDY GIULIANI: I am a Yankee fan first, an American League fan second. So if the Yanks don’t make it to the series, I root for the AL team, Sal.
MITT ROMNEY: And in Massachussets, we hate the Yankees! Hate ‘em like sanctuary cities! Go, Sox!
AUDIENCE: Dead silence.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Pervez Takes It Off
The ceremony, already unusual because it was open to the public, began conventionally enough as a Pakistani Army Band in kilts played “Auld Lang Syne” on bagpipes, followed by the Lahore Bell Choir’s interpretation of Baluchi folk favorites. And when Mr. Musharraf stepped up to make a few remarks, no one expected anything but the usual valediction. But Musharraf first stunned, then wowed the crowd as he winked at the band, then launched into a roaring and well-rehearsed rendition of “Let Me Entertain You”.
He started by peeling off first one long silk glove, then the other, then turned his back to the crowd of soldiers and removed his ascot as he sang over his shoulder. The audience of enlisted men whistled and stamped their feet as Mr. Musharraf removed his army jodhpurs, then produced a butane lighter and set fire to them, in an obvious dig at Hillary Clinton’s asbestos pantsuit. Musharraf showed real mastery of the technique as he whirled each garment around his head, then tossed it to the screaming front row of hand-picked officers. When he got down to a tiny black speedo and cavalry boots, the troops began to wave dollar bills, and Mr. Musharraf pranced at the front of the stage so they could tuck them in anywhere they would fit. But at the very end, they were disappointed when Mr. Musharraf would not go any farther, despite raucous shouts of “show us your baton ”.
Around the world, not everyone was as pleased with Mr. Musharraf’s performance as the troops. Muslim leaders and Mitt Romney expressed sharp disapproval, with Mr. Romney calling the display “disgraceful” and calling for Musharraf to resign his generalship. Informed that Musharraf had resigned his generalship, Romney blinked and began muttering “sanctuary cities” over and over again. But North Korea’s Kim Jong Il said that he would offer Musharraf a starring role in his new musical about a successful tractor factory.
Monday, November 26, 2007
Pants on Fire
This setback occurred just as Assistant Secretary of State John Negroponte has wrapped up a productive visit to Pakistan, where he worked out a compromise in which Musharraf agreed to change into a cricket uniform as long as Benazir Bhutto would wear her girls’ field hockey kit, and allow Musharraf to spank her. In a phone conversation, a State Department spokesman suggested that Mrs. Clinton was interfering “in an unproductive way” in a tense situation. “This throws all of our delicate negotiations with President Musharraf into a cocked hat”, said the spokesman. “Musharraf was already pretty envious because he heard that Rudy Giuliani looked good in a dress.” Later, the spokesman called back and asked to take back the reference to a “cocked hat”.
An analyst for the Brookings Institution explained that the sudden mention of an asbestos pantsuit may have put Mr. Musharraf in a difficult position with his own military, who have been pestering him to obtain new uniforms so they can look nice while beating up pro-democracy lawyers. “The security forces feel that we ought to reward them for not catching Osama Bin Laden until after the 2008 elections. Meanwhile, we keep fobbing them off with advanced fighters and surface-to-air missiles.” The analyst went on to say that Musharraf’s threat to develop his own pantsuit line was, in all likelihood, purely for domestic consumption. “They’re bluffing on that one. He just has to placate his generals.” A technical source at the Pentagon agreed that Pakistan is years away from developing sophisticated clothing. “They don’t even have the patterns for culottes,” the source reported.
Returning from an extended Texas vacation and on his way to a long weekend at Camp David, President Bush seemed to be growing impatient with Pakistan’s prolonged difficulties. Asked if there was a “sartorial crisis”, the President replied that everything was fine in Sartoria, but Pakistan was a mess. “President Musharraf needs to take off his uniform,” the President repeated. “If he’s worried about what to wear, he can just wrap himself in the flag. That’s what I do.”
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Saving Reagan's Rep
Recently, conservatives have mounted a spirited defense of Ronald Reagan in the New York Times op-ed , against the charge that his visit to Philadelphia, Mississippi was a form of coded racial statement. Both David Babbling and Lewis Cannon have been so interesting on the subject that Pan Zen Zero has decided to conduct an imaginary interview with them as a sort of thought experiment.
PAN ZEN ZERO: Both of you have defended Ronald Reagan for starting his presidential campaign in Philadelphia, Mississippi by saying that it was due to disorganization and indiscipline in his campaign. Can either of you elaborate?
DAVID BABBLING: Right. The whole thing was an unfortunate mix-up. Reagan was against it before he was for it. Or for it before he was against it. Either way.
LEWIS CANNON: In fact, I uncovered evidence that Reagan actually thought he was going to the real Philadelphia. You know-- the one in Pennsylvania.
PZZ: Oh, yes?
LC: Yes, for sure. The whole time, Reagan kept asking when he could get to visit the Betsy Ross House. When Nancy broke the news to him that he was in Mississippi, he just sat down and quietly leafed through his collection of Bonzo stills.
PZZ: But there is evidence that the campaign was invited there, in order to soak up some support from former Wallace voters.
LC: Well, he was the great communicator, not the great geographer. He didn’t expect to find many Wallace voters in Pennsylvania, but he was a trouper and he went anyway.
DB: So you see, planning to speak about states rights where he thought he was going really was an act of political courage. Or would have been, if …
LC: And the core of my argument is, all the liberals claim that this was some sort of masterstroke. Why they think appealing to Wallace voters by talking up states’ rights on ground zero of the resistance to black voting rights was a masterstroke beats me. Ron was really embarrassed by the whole thing. It was almost as big a fiasco as Dukakis in the tank.
DB: Which gets to another of my points in his favor, that Michael Dukakis went there eight years later. That’s a vindication if ever I heard one!
PZZ: But Reagan went there to boost states’ rights. Dukakis spoke about civil rights!
DB. Yes, but Reagan didn’t make a strident appeal to racism, only a low-key appeal. For example, he deliberately spoke at the state fair and avoided making his speech from the top of the dam where the murdered civil rights workers were buried. In fact, he was so low-key that the crowd didn’t even react.
PZZ: Yes, why do you think Reagan’s speech fell flat there?
DB: I don’t think the crowd could understand him because of his accent. After all, he was from Illinois. Then, too, he wasn’t at all like Wallace in his delivery, no “Hooo-ey” or “Goddamamightydam’s”, so they didn’t know how to take it. But the liberal press got it, all right. They ran right for the phones to crucify poor Ron with their agitprop.
PZZ: So you don’t think “states’ rights” in that context was a coded message?
DB: There are no “coded messages”. Hemingway said so. It’s all part of this vast liberal conspiracy theory about Republicans.
LC: Right. See, when conservatives hear “welfare queens”, they immediately think of white people. It’s only those dirty-minded liberals who get the wrong idea. So paranoid! It’s the Stalinist legacy, probably.
PZZ: What about Willie Horton?
DB: Wait a minute, that was a completely different Republican, George H.W. Bush!
PZZ: Well…
LC: And again, no conservatives even dreamed he was a black guy until they saw the pictures. Especially in the South, the idea of a governor letting a black guy go free was so off the radar, they just assumed: “White Guy”.
PZZ: What about “macacca”?
DB: Now, there you go again! Once more, different Republican.
PZZ: Yes, but we’re talking now about how Republicans use racial stereotypes to scare the voters and stir them up. What about that sneak attack on John McCain, the “black love child” smear?
DB: Doesn’t count. Republican on Republican. Why should liberals care? Only if they’re deep into all these wild conspiracy theories, I’ll bet.
PZZ: OK, then; back to Reagan. So this wasn’t a racial message?
DB. Right. Ronald Reagan didn’t have a racist bone in his body. He might have been a little callous at times, that’s all.
LC: And the proof that he wasn’t a racist is that he wasn’t homophobic or anti-Semitic. Plus, one time he was nice to some black guys.
PZZ: Back up a minute. How does not being homophobic or anti-Semitic add up to being non-racist?
LC: well, the three go hand in hand. At least in the Republicans I know.
PZZ: But there are some Jewish Republicans.
DB: and African American Republicans, too.
LC. Yeah, go figure.
PZZ: OK, so Ronald Reagan wasn’t personally a racist. But he was a lifelong opponent of civil rights legislation, wasn’t he?
DB: Not in communist countries. Only here at home.
LC: And again, only for the noblest reasons. He thought that since it was southern whites who had robbed African-Americans of their voting rights, it was only fair for southern whites to give them back. It wouldn’t mean as much, coming from the federal government. That was Ron—always the personal touch!
PZZ: So why did he oppose a Martin Luther King holiday?
DB: Reagan was afraid we were getting too much like the French – a holiday, here, a holiday there, big powerful unions, pretty soon no one is doing any work, just committing adultery and smoking cigarettes all day while beefing about the government. And again, he was vindicated in the long run. Look how Sarkozy wants to imitate the United States now.
LC: Here, I can see you’re still not convinced. I’ll offer you one more proof that Reagan was not a racist. It’s a known fact that he never had one of those minstrel-faced lawn jockeys all through the fifties when they were so popular.
DB: Really? Even I didn’t realize that. It’s a key fact; it should be more widely known.
LC: It’s a scandal how the liberal press keeps down the important stuff.
PZZ: Well, thanks, you two, for getting this all on the record.
DB: This has been fun and productive. Let’s get together again real soon and set the record straight on what happened to all those weapons of mass destruction.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
The naked emperor strikes back
Opposition parties have been outspoken in their rejection of the suggested procedure, characterizing it as nothing more than a bid to stall for time. “We cannot just wait around for Musharraf to develop a six-pack,” Mrs. Bhutto insisted in a speech to supporters. “Believe me, even with a subscription to Bally’s he’ll never be another Schwarzenegger.” Mullah Abdullah Nasrullah of the Baluchistan Revolutionary Front, or BaRF, was unusually scathing in his response. “Just wait and see,” Nasrullah sneered. “Next he will say he needs to wear his new wing-tips because the ground in Pakistan is so stony. Then he will say he needs supp-hose because of the varicose veins in his legs. Before long, he’ll be right back in a three-piece suit, complete with matching tie and suspenders!” And suspicions in Pakistan have not been helped by the rumor that Mr. Negroponte presented the President with a ten million dollar gift certificate to Jos.A.Bank.
Friday, November 16, 2007
Help for the Second Amendment
Suggestion Number One: “All the deer in the woods being a big nuisance, and even if they are not, it being a hoot to go out there and blast away at them, etc.”
This revision covers most cases of owning small arms, and may even extend to machine guns, rocket launchers and dynamite, as one can “blast” in many ways. If anyone can show that deer are not actually a “big nuisance” (hardly likely as long as there are gardeners), then the “hoot” clause provides coverage. The case of deer possibly going extinct is neatly covered by the “they are not “ wording. An objection may be raised that weapons activity seems to be limited only to “the woods”, but this is negated by the open-endedness of “out there”, which may be taken to include fields, streams, parking lots, shopping malls and church suppers, among other possible venues.
Suggestion Number Two: “The ability of any citizen to settle disputes in a manly way being central to a Judaeo-Christian society somewhat influenced by Hellenism and tempered by admiration for Roman virtue”, etc.
While this version might seem to be quite restrictive, in reality it balances an exhilarating permissiveness with sober responsibility. Anyone might get into a dispute, so anyone ought to be able to keep and bear. But on the other side, only “citizens” really get to do it, which effectively disarms illegal aliens and even legal aliens, for that matter, as well as felons and children. In rural communities and inner cities where nine-year-olds often carry guns, their rights can be protected simply by allowing them to vote. Female citizens need not be put off by the use of “manly” as it does not exclude them from owning weapons but merely characterizes the use of them as typically male behavior, something most women already believe to be true. Atheists and Muslims may take exception to “Judaeo-Christian”, but so what? They are always taking exception to something. Finally, the inclusion of Hellenism and Roman virtue opens the door to legalized assisted suicide, which might even bring the atheists back on board.
Suggestion Number Three: “It being a statistical probability approaching certainty that from time to time the executive branch may go bonkers, and that some of us will have to set them straight, etc”.
This third example is my personal favorite, as it gets nearer to the “original intent” of the founders concerning the Second Amendment as they wrote it. Additionally, it honors their effort to construct a document sufficiently vague as to be useful in any era. As a famous jurist has put it, “I cannot define ‘bonkers’, but I know it when I see it”. And each generation will certainly work out for itself not only the meaning of “bonkers” but also “set them straight”, not to mention “some of us”. But it’s the beauty of a written constitution that come what may, the ability to lock and load, just in case, remains inviolate in this version.
I am aware that in proposing three separate revisions, I may be open to the complaint that each one is only a partial solution. Rest assured that I have no objection to combining all three of them into one long, flowing clause if that is the only way to get the job done. Really, the larger the rationale, the more secure the safeguard. Plus it will generate a lot more business for lawyers just to figure out where to put the semi-colons. As a final note, I can imagine some doubters wondering how we will get along without the “well-regulated militia” part. To them I can only say, that’s what the National Guard is for. Isn’t it?
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Bhutto Escalates Her Demands
In the U.S., The Bush administration appeared to be taken by surprise by Mrs. Bhutto’s new position, and an apparent gap seems to have opened up between the State Department and the President. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice has issued a statement that “under no circumstances do I ever want to see President Musharraf without his clothes on. Preferably, all of them”. Asked to clarify her remarks, Ms. Rice merely added, “Ick”. President Bush, however, seemed more open to the proposal. Speaking to reporters as he left for a long vacation at his ranch in Texas, the president stated, “I’ve already seen him that way in the White House locker room. Heck, Dick [Cheney] and I even snapped towels at his saggy butt.”