Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

2007: Ready, Fire, Aim

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 2007: Ready, Fire, Aim

    Newsweek
    Dec 22 2007


    2007: Ready, Fire, Aim

    Lego blocks were banned by progressives, Che's hair was for sale and
    Sheryl Crow urged (almost) giving up toilet paper.

    Dec. 31, 2007 - Jan. 7, 2008 issueUpdated: 1:02 p.m. ET Dec 22, 2007

    In 2007, came the revolution. Determined to end the war in Iraq and
    begin the reign of justice in America, Democrats took over Congress
    and acted on the principle "ready, fire, aim." They threatened to
    tell the Ottoman Empire (deceased 1922) that it should be ashamed of
    itself (about Armenian genocide) and raised the minimum wage to
    $5.85, which is worth less than the $5.15 minimum was worth when it
    was set in 1997. Onward and upward with compassionate liberalism: The
    Democrat controlled Senate flinched from making hedge fund
    multi-millionaires pay more than a 15 percent tax rate. At the
    year-end, there were more troops in Iraq than there were at the
    year's beginning. Although it was not yet possible to say the war was
    won, it was no longer possible to say the surge was not succeeding.
    The McClatchy Newspapers, with the media's flair for discerning lead
    linings on silver clouds, offered this headline: AS VIOLENCE FALLS IN
    IRAQ, CEMETERY WORKERS FEEL THE PINCH.

    The King of Spain told the president of Venezuela to "shut up" and 51
    percent of Venezuelans seconded the motion. Rudy Giuliani said, "I
    took a city that was known for pornography and licked it." Hillary
    Clinton accused Barack Obama of having been ambitious in
    kindergarten. Disraeli once said of Lord Russell: "If a traveler were
    informed that such a man was leader of the House of Commons, he may
    well begin to comprehend how the Egyptians worshipped an insect."
    Mike Huckabee became a leader among Republican presidential
    candidates.

    In March, when a planned trek by two explorers to the North Pole,
    intended to dramatize global warming, was aborted because of
    temperatures 100 degrees below zero, an organizer of the
    consciousness-raising venture explained that the cancellation
    confirmed predictions of global warming because "one of the things we
    see with global warming is unpredictability." Al Gore won the Nobel
    Peace Prize that should have gone to nine-time Grammy winner Sheryl
    Crow, who proposed saving the planet by limiting - to one - "how many
    squares of toilet paper can be used in any one sitting." At the U.N.
    global-warming conference in Bali there was Carbon Footprint Envy - the
    airport did not have space to park all the private jets.

    As Americans debated expanding government involvement in health care,
    Britain's National Health Service told Olive Beal she would have to
    wait 18 months to get her hearing aid. She is 108.

    Thanks to federal supervision of K through 12 education, when a
    Johnson City, N.Y., parent complained that cheerleaders lead cheers
    for the boys' basketball team but not the girls', the U.S. Department
    of Education, citing Title IX's requirement of sexual equality in
    scholastic sports, demanded equal "promotional services." Two Los
    Angeles teachers were fired after a controversy that began when one
    had her class, during Black History Month, make a presentation about
    Emmett Till, the Chicago 14-year-old who was tortured and murdered in
    Mississippi in 1955 after his wolf whistle at a white woman. Some
    students and teachers charged that school officials said Till's
    whistle could be construed as sexual harassment. In an inexplicable
    (and probably temporary) spasm of good taste, public opinion sent Don
    Imus packing because he said on his radio program something no more
    tasteless than things he had been saying for years, to the delight of
    a large (and evidently fickle) public.

    A Seattle day-care center banned Lego building blocks because the
    beastly children "were building their assumptions about ownership and
    the social power it conveys, assumptions that mirrored those of a
    class-based, capitalist society." The center reinstated Legos but
    allowed the children to build only "public structures" dedicated to
    "collectivity and consensus." In other lingering reverberations of
    communism, scientists unearthed what they think are remains of two
    more of Czar Nicholas II's children murdered by Bolsheviks, who never
    played with Legos. A Cuban exile, former CIA operative and Bay of
    Pigs veteran announced plans to auction what he says is a lock of Che
    Guevara's hair taken from the corpse before burial in Bolivia.

    When the Confederate monument in Montgomery, Ala., was desecrated,
    was that a "hate crime"? Saying he wanted to bring Alabama "into the
    20th century" - the 21st would be a bridge too far? - a legislator,
    worried that "a shower head" might be illegal, moved to repeal the
    state's ban on the sale of sex toys. A mayor looked on the bright
    side of his city's high homicide rate: "It's not good for us but it
    also keeps the New Orleans brand out there." Lucky Belgium has been
    without a government since June.

    In 2007, for the first time, two Hispanic surnames, Garcia and
    Rodriguez, were among America's 10 most common. Paul and Teri Fields
    of Michigan City, Ind., named their baby boy Wrigley.

    Death, as it must to all, came to Paul Tibbets, 92. Eighty years ago,
    12-year-old Paul flew with a barnstorming pilot who dropped Baby Ruth
    candy bars over a Florida racetrack. In 1945, Tibbets was pilot of
    the Enola Gay, the B-29 that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
    "What about the shortstop Rizzuto," asked Casey Stengel long ago,
    "who got nothing but daughters but throws out the left-handed hitters
    in the double play." Phil Rizzuto, the oldest living Hall of Famer,
    was 89. Emma Faust Tillman, 114, of Hartford, Conn., had been the
    world's oldest person. She was born during the presidency of Benjamin
    Harrison. Robert Adler, 93, gave the modern world its most beloved
    invention. The TV remote, of course.

    http://www.newsweek.com/id/81587
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X