Americans really hate filing their taxes
A Wallet Hub survey
found Americans really don’t like doing their taxes. Fifty-one percent
of people surveyed said they’d rather do jury duty. One in five would
prefer talking to their kids about sex. And more than 10 percent would
swim with sharks, spend the night in jail and drink expired milk.
Pillow fight
If you watch TV, chances are you’ve seen Mike Lindell hawking his invention My Pillow,
which he credits with all sorts of major health benefits. But a
district attorney looked into Lindell’s claims, found them
scientifically baseless and sued him, costing Lindell a $1 million
settlement. Still, Lindell said sales remain strong because he stuck
with advertising on Fox’s The Ingraham Angle. Other advertisers
are boycotting the show because host Laura Ingraham ridiculed Parkland
shooting survivor David Hogg. But Lindell shouldn’t count his sheep just
yet: Now there’s a boycott against him for not boycotting.
This really stinks
For
two months, dozens of train cars carrying 10 million pounds of poop
have been stranded in a rail yard in rural Parrish, Alabama. The stench
has proven unbearable for the town’s 982 residents, who say they seldom
leave their homes anymore. We can’t blame locals if they view the smelly
situation as a poster child for the evils of Big Government, since
convoluted federal red tape has prevented the cars from moving on to
their original destination. And locals can’t be happy that the excrement
hails from the Yankee states of New York and New Jersey.
Top Chick
A
chicken known for its intelligence, resilience and ability to withstand
cold winters is becoming the official state poultry of New Hampshire. A
class of fourth-graders recommended the New Hampshire Red for the
title, and members of the New Hampshire General Court — i.e., the state
legislature — agreed, saying the chicken ably represents New Hampshire
qualities. Republican Gov. Chris Sununu has said he’d make the honor
official.
When
1,000 pounds of marijuana went missing from a police warehouse in
Pilar, Argentina, the city’s former police commissioner and his
subordinates speculated it was consumed by mice. Nice try, but experts
blew that theory up in smoke. They told a judge that, first of all, mice
wouldn’t eat pot and, secondly, pot would kill them if they did. Since
the warehouse wasn’t littered with mice corpses, eight officers were
discharged from their duties and might face criminal charges.
Lobbying for legalization?
The same day House Speaker Paul Ryan announced he would not seek re-election,
former House Speaker John Boehner announced he was going to work in the
cannabis industry. Boehner took a seat on the advisory board of Acreage
Holdings, an investment company with an established footprint in the
burgeoning pot industry. What might that mean for the legalization
effort? A representative with MariMed Inc.,
a pot cultivation and processing company, proclaimed Boehner’s presence
on the board “game-changing validation of cannabis’ future promise and
value to human health and the wellness of the American public.
APB for Phil
Depew
Police Department in upstate New York announced via Facebook the arrest
of winter and warned that any more snow produced by the season would
work against it in court. The department also called for Punxsutawney
Phil, the groundhog from Pennsylvania, to turn himself in for predicting
six more weeks of winter.
Dear Winter,
You are hereby placed under arrest. You have the right to remain silent and out of sight, but apparently not the ability. Any further snow you produce will be held against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney, but only if you turn in the groundhog that predicted six more weeks of winter. If you are willing to work with us, we are willing to look past your most recent transgressions over the course of this past week. The choice is yours.
Sincerely,
The Depew Police Department
You are hereby placed under arrest. You have the right to remain silent and out of sight, but apparently not the ability. Any further snow you produce will be held against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney, but only if you turn in the groundhog that predicted six more weeks of winter. If you are willing to work with us, we are willing to look past your most recent transgressions over the course of this past week. The choice is yours.
Sincerely,
The Depew Police Department
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First stones, now bats
Weeks
after a Pennsylvania school district equipped teachers with buckets of
rocks to deal with school shootings, another Pennsylvania school
district has armed teachers — with miniature baseball bats. The
superintendent of Millcreek Township School District said the 16-inch
wooden bats should remind teachers to fight a school shooter with any
weapon available.
Bigger than a breeze
A
Florida woman arrested for possession of drugs blamed the weather.
Police in Fort Pierce reported stopping the woman and two passengers and
searching her vehicle after getting a whiff of marijuana. The officers
found two bags, one containing pot and another containing cocaine, in
the purse in the driver’s lap. She explained: “It’s a windy day. It must
have flown through the window and into my purse.”
Jesus Christ would vote for Oprah
Jesus
Christ, an 83-year-old woman who lives in Waterboro, Maine, says she
did not know Oprah Winfrey was asking for a sign from God about running
for president when she sent a letter to the television magnate. Christ —
who 50 years ago changed her name and began writing letters to promote
peace and faith — said she wrote to Winfrey because she likes her. But
should the TV celebrity run for the White House, Jesus Christ will vote
for her.
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