Article Sphere Logo
Main Article Categories
 Alternative Medicine
 Arts And Entertainment
 Automotives
 Beauty
 Business
 Communications
 Computer And Technology
 Disease And Illness
 Finance
 Food And Beverage
 Health And Fitness
 Home And Family
 Home Based Business
 Insurance
 Internet And E-Business
 Legal
 News And Society
 Pets And Animals
 Product Reviews
 Real Estate
 Recreation And Sports
 Reference And Education
 Self Improvement
 Shopping
 Travel And Leisure
 Women Health And Fitness
 Women Interests And Issues
 Work At Home
 Writing And Speaking
 All Categories
 Questions and Answers
 
"Political Satire" Articles
 

Displaying Results for Political Satire (0-20 of 1414)

Who would have thought, since Ford's horseless carriage rolled off the assembly line, that the covered wagon might make a comeback? But then whoever thought that gas prices would burn through the world's wallet the way they have been lately?

Researchers, listening carefully to the speech patterns of monkeys, determined that the creatures were incensed that they had evolved with all of their hair still bristling out of them, and they demanded the immediate remedy of a shave and a haircut.

As the conviction of Ken Lay and Jeffrey Skilling begins to lower the curtain on the Enron scandal, it has occurred in the now startlingly vacated halls of corporate America that so many execs are now in jail that the nation may have to start to importing its titans of business.

How gullible does he think the rest of the world is? Is the unaware soul actually deluded into thinking people everywhere can't see that he was using the letter as a transparent pretense to grandstand for his own treacherous and impossible agenda?

"I've been a New Englander all my life," a swarthy resident of Bangor, Maine, said, as he took another bite of the state's famous delectation. "But I never thought I'd see that day that lobsters would show up for dinner of their own free will."

CEO Steve Jobs commented, "We want to have an Apple store wherever there is a lot of people, and it's hard to think of a more likely location than the Mexican border just across from Tijuana. When those Mexicans come running across, we want to be there to sell them an Apple product."

"Well, to tell you the truth," Mr. Lay said, "I hardly ever notice anything. I mean, I didn't notice anything was wrong when Enron's finances were going up in flames. So it's only understandable that I wouldn't notice a little thing like the jury going off to deliberate how much time I'll spend in jail."

As computers grow ever more compact, a new breakthrough in miniaturization is hitting the shelves of computer stores that should have great appeal to graduates and their elated parents.

Think whatever you might of William Jefferson Clinton, you have to give the ever-smiling overachiever credit. He finds, in the lassitude of his post-Presidential years, a devoted and commendable calling to charity. And so canny is the man that he is able to extract a $5 million advance from Knopf to write a book about his benevolence.

A prescient judge in Wisconsin, noting that any guy who would try to force a woman to do anything, let alone submit to sex, obviously has poor social skills, particularly in regard to women, has sentenced a sex offender to remedial training with guys who actually know how to behave with a woman.

Saddam Hussein, now formally charged with crimes against humanity, is now faced with charges by irate tie makers.

"This man is guilty of killing the tie business," a representative of the plaintiffs stated immediately after his arrival from New York's garment district. "You can see the evidence just by looking. Every day he shows up for his trial wearing a white shirt without a tie. I ask you, what kind of example is that? "

Barry Bonds finally smacked the homer that broke Babe Ruth's revered tally. Umpires immediately checked his bat for the presence of steroids.

Bonds, who has often been accused of employing the performance enhancers but never convicted of the practice, was both cheered and jeered as he rounded the bases.

Four-Star General Michael Hayen, in confirmation hearings before the Senate, insisted that it's time for the CIA "to get out of the news." The General, continuing to make his case, pleaded, "How can you infiltrate a terror cell undetected when your face has been plastered all over the world?"

Professional hockey associations, long mournful of the unfortunately uneconomical seasonal nature of their game have decided to give the boys of summer a run for their money. To effect the balmy transformation, the teams will exchange their footwear from ice skates to roller skates.

As the price of gasoline continued its flaming ascent and interest rates rose, Wall Street tanked. A frazzled investor, who witnessed his portfolio lose over 50 per cent of its value in five minutes, took a swig of Mylanta, and said, "I've gotten used to the ups and downs. The only thing that goes up all the time is my blood pressure."

The trial of Saddam Hussein took a surprising turn, when a witness stated that he had seen and talked with a number of the people the jocund dictator and his unrepentant henchmen are accused of killing during a crackdown in the rebellious village of Dujail.

As music fans well know and widely resent, the music business has traditionally sold one or two songs per album that people actually want to listen to with a lot of other songs that, regardless of their merit, very few people have any interest in. The price was, however, right for the music biz.

While the buildup of greenhouse gases, particularly carbon dioxide, may be welcome news for plants, which, of course, breathe it in and breathe out oxygen, the benefits are not so apparent to human beings, particularly athletes, especially during the summer, which is, of course, the height of the baseball season.

Can the urge to be correct ever qualify as an improvement over freedom?

If you listen to the current rhetoric of advocacy that thunders about from the halls of the Capitol to interviews from even the most remote corridors of the nation, you would think it has become an American value of far more consequence than the mere idea of individual freedom.

Naturalists, noting the encroachment of a fungus on a rare breed of frog that would have wiped them out, went the extra mile to prevent their imminent extinction. They flew to the rain forest where the critters cowered, popped a few hundred healthy ones in boxes, and flew them back to preserves in the U. S.

 
 
 

[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

 

Complimentary Industry Resources

 
We are pleased to offer you this exciting, new, and entirely free professional resource. Visit our Free Industry resource center today to browse our selection of 600+ complimentary Industry magazines, white papers, webinars, podcasts, and more.
No credit cards, coupons, or promo codes required. Try it today!
 

Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
Copyright © 2005 - by Larry Lim, Singapore - Article Search Engine Directory at ArticleSphere.com™
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.
Template Design by Larry Lim

Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Belarusian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish German English Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Irish Italiano Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Malay Maltese Dutch Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Vietnamese Welsh Yiddish