By Art Kumbalek 2 hours ago
I’m Art Kumbalek
and man oh manischewitz what a world, ain’a? So listen, how ’bout our County
Sheriff “Hopalong” Clarke apparently getting a gig with Homeland Security? And
once he begins his new job, the first thing that will be safer and thus more
secure will be the inmates over by the county jail, I kid you not.
Anyways, as I’m
sitting here today I’ve heard that the Powerball jackpot has risen $250
million, and whoever eventually wins, the rest of us losers can be comforted
with the belief that there will be at least one American who can afford health
care, what the fock.
And speaking of our county sheriff, for your benefit
during this time of economic hardship for so many, allow me to kind of
plagiarize myself in regard to winning and losing:
For those who
sometimes may need to count on a helping hand from the government, let me
guess: At the last lottery drawing the numbers came up and you went down,
didn’t you? You got suckered into purchasing another bum lottery ticket. Get
over it.
Cripes, hard to
believe any outfit that sells as many faulty products as our government lottery
cartel does can stay in business but what are you going to do, ain’a? Take your
ticket stub back to the clip joint you bought it from and ask for your money
back? Ha! Forget about it. I already tried. No dice. They acted like I was
speaking some kind of foreign language. And come to think of it, at the
mini-mart I frequent, I was. English. Ba-ding!
But seriously,
just because your lottery-financed dreams have been dashed down the dumper like
yesterday’s undigested baloney sandwich doesn’t mean that you’ll feel any
better by packing it in and stepping in front of the first bus that comes by,
no sir.
Take some solace
in the fact that at least you know you’re a loser. Know thyself, like they say in the Bible. Not like these
supercilious dickweeds who pride themselves in not getting snookered into these
lottery scams. I got one thing to say to them: If you don’t play, you can’t
win, and when you don’t win—well, you lose, any way you look at it, loser.
But really, so
big focking deal you lost in the lottery again, that now you can’t run away
with the uber-stacked manicurist you’ve had your eye on over by the beauty
parlor where the wife goes; that you can’t tell your know-it-all boss that you
won’t be in for the next 30-focking years; that, damn it, you still have no pot
to pee in; yeah, those new soles for your pair of dress shoes will have to
wait, and so will the knob from the collection agency knocking on your door even
as I write and you read.
But do you
really think you’d be happier if any of those dreams had come true?
Yeah, probably,
but just because the lottery numbers you so carefully picked mega-sucked does
not mean that your life is as good as over. Hell no, not by a long shot. What
it does mean is that your life will continue to stink, and the familiar does
have its own comforts I’ve heard. Don’t worry, you still got plenty more losing
ahead of you, so buck up, buddy.
And what’s so
great about that? Hey, read your Bible sometime, mister. Somewheres in there it
says, “The meek shall inherit the Earth,” or so I’m told. Got that? It doesn’t
say, “The focking rich bastards shall inherit the Earth,” does it? Of course
not. That would be stupid ’cause you can’t inherit what you’ve already got,
what the fock.
No sir, the
Bible specifies the meek—another way
of saying losers. That’s right.
Losers. Just like you, and me. And just so’s you know how special that is,
second place inherits two Earths. Ba-ding!
Hey, the losers
are going to win the Earth, which may be a lot like winning a goddamn
hippopotamus in that the first thing you got to ask yourself is, “What the fock
am I going to do with that?”
And when you losers win the Earth, I imagine you’ll
need to decide as to how you’ll want it: paid out as one lump planet or as an
annuity spread out over a period of years. Me, I’d go the annuity route. For my
first payment, I’d take Tahiti and Fiji out there in the South Seas, introduce
myself to the native gals and spend my time making sure they were comfortable.
Next year, do I hear Monte Carlo?
From http://shepherdexpress.com/article-29785-powerbull.html
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