Geniuses and 4-Year-Olds
Question: What do a genius and a 4-year-old have in common?
Answer: They can't be defeated in an argument.
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Question: What do a genius and a 4-year-old have in common?
With the indictment of Dick Cheney's chief of staff (and soon, perhaps, Karl Rove) on charges of lying to investigators pursuing a non-crime, one can't help but think of Martha Stewart, who was jailed not for securities fraud but for foolishly misleading investigators. What a mess. And the crying shame is that the biggest liar in the whole affair, Joe Wilson, is getting off scot free.
As the White Sox celebrated their historic championship, all-time home run king Hank Aaron attempted to throw a wet blanket of racial grievance over the festivities. Noting that only 9 percent of Major League Baseball players are African Americans, including none on the National League champion Astros, Aaron suggested that baseball authorities look into the matter.
Last night the Chicago White Sox completed a sweep of the Houston Astros in the World Series, mercifully ending an 88-year drought. Combined with the championship last year of the Boston Red Sox and the 2003 championship of the Chicago Cubs, I think it's time to confidently say that baseball curses are a thing of the past.
The Golden Rule is not only a good way to live; it's also a good way to do business.
The other day I saw an anti-Rove bumper sticker. I remember all the conservative animosity toward Bill and Hillary during the last administration, but I can never recall seeing a bumper sticker targeting the oily James Carville.
While Karl Rove and Tom DeLay have legal clouds hanging over them and President Bush has to somehow clean up his Harriet Miers mess, future historians will note that it was a great week for the Administration. First, Iraqis approved their Constitution by referendum, improving the possibility that democracy is in the autocratic region's future. Second, the trial of Saddam Hussein, the "Butcher of Baghdad," has begun. Even the president's harshest critics can't ignore this good news . . . can they?
The White Sox and Astros are in the World Series.
From our couches and easy chairs we sports fans tend to confer a moral status on our favorite athletes that they usually do not deserve. Michael Jordan is now confessing to 60 Minutes an extensive and damaging gambling habit. This has been known for some time. When "MJ" was winning six championships with the Bulls, his supporters excused such behavior with references to his "competitive nature." Or they said gambling was his choice of "recreation," and besides, he could afford it. More recently, Jordan's philandering has been exposed.
"This product is not intended to treat or cure any disease. (In fact, there is no reason to buy it. We just hope to cash in on your gullibility.)"
One road sign on the way to middle age is when you grow older than your sports heroes. You know you've arrived when you're older than their coaches and managers.
With the White Sox playing late into the night and now possibly headed for a World Series victory for the first time since World War I, expect a birth dearth in Chicago about nine months from now.
During an outing yesterday with my kids, it struck me again how many parents nowadays name their children last names ... not that there's anything wrong with it. If I'm not mistaken, the names of three kids in one family were Jackson, Cole, and Kennedy (a girl). What this means I haven't a clue. I'm just wondering where all the regular kid names went. Jimmy, Johnny, and Lisa have been replaced by Tyler, Smith, and Reagan. Am I the only person to have noticed?
It was a busy news week: Iraqis prepared to vote on their new Constitution. The press was up in arms over a (gasp!) staged teleconference with U.S. troops. The controversy with the Harriet Miers nomination rolled on, with members of the Administration accusing conservative critics of sexism and elitism. And Al Gore announced he would not be running for president.
Some people (such as the president) are telling evangelicals to support Harriet Miers for the Supreme Court because she is a fellow evangelical. Kind of reminds me of the liberal assessment years ago that evangelicals are "poor, uneducated, and easy to command." We aren't. Actually, we're glad that Miers has received Christ and is going to heaven. Some of us just aren't so sure we want her going to the Supreme Court.
Seeking to shore up conservative support for the unknown and underqualifued Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, President Bush is playing the religion card. "People are interested to know why I picked Harriet Miers," the president said. "They want to know Harriet Miers' background. They want to know as much as they possibly can before they form opinions. Part of Harriet Miers' life is her religion."
News item: In what was interpreted as a step forward for the strained relations between Pakistan and India, Islamabad has accepted a planeload of food and supplies from Delhi. However, the Muslim leaders of the quake-devastated region that split violently from India over half a century ago declined an offer of helicopters from their largely Hindu neighbor.
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A Brit named Michael Hinten has created something called The 100-Minute Bible. It is billed as a way to introduce God's Word to people who are too busy. I'm all for finding innovative ways to communicate truth to postmoderns, but whoever said God was convenient? Not Jesus, who spoke a lot about taking up your cross and walking on the narrow way.
When Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast and killed 1,000 people, I seem to recall al-Qaeda types rejoicing in "Allah's judgment" against the decadent Americans. Now that an earthquake has killed at least 30,000 people (mostly Muslims) in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and India, where are these theologians now? I hope and expect Americans and Christians will be as conspicuous in their efforts to help these latest victims as al-Qaeda was conspicuous in its absence after Katrina.
A favorite piece of parenting advice I have received is, "You are going to have to tell your children no often enough. Be sure to say yes whenever you can."
George W. Bush's defense of his ill-advised nomination (apparently from a position of political weakness) of the underqualified Harriet Miers, a long-time friend, seems to rest on three shaky pillars.
Time magazine's cover piece this week, "The Battle Over Gay Teens," reports that boys are having their first sexual encounters with other males at an average age of 14 and are the focus of intense recruiting efforts by older homosexuals. And we are supposed to think this is healthy?
My namesake, Hurricane Stan, was a weak Category 1 storm. And yet it killed more than 50 people in Central America. Why? Two words: building codes. It's hard to keep your house from sliding down a mountain when it's made of plywood or cardboard.
With time running out, it's fourth and goal from the one yard line. "W," down by three points, stands behind center and scans the defense. Linebackers Harry Reid and Teddy Kennedy appear ready to crash in from the left and stop any nominee trying to score for Team Bush from the right. But "W" has any number of strong backs (Janice Brown and Michael McConnell, just to name two) who can get the job done and leap over Dick Durbin to paydirt. Plus, he has an offensive line of determined conservatives who outnumber the Democrats at the point of attack.
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Getaways, like politics, are all about expectations. If you fail to meet them, you are disappointed. If you exceed them, you are pleased. So keep your expectations modest.
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