Monday, October 28, 2013

Pincus "Ming" Manelbaum and the Art of War



If you see that your opponent is decked out in full dress uniform sporting two epaulets -- one on each shoulder -- you must make a point of being seen in full dress uniform with three epaulets (4 if you can swing it).  This will sow terror into the heart of your opponent.  Additionally, if one of your epaulets comes loose and falls off, you need not busy yourself with such trifles as sewing on another epaulet, as you will already have a backup. Thus is the wise general empowered and emboldened by sowing and not sewing simultaneously. The Zen masters call this “sew-sow.” In the Art of War, sew-sow is not so-so; sew-so is good.

Do not waste precious time anticipating your opponent’s next move. Your opponent has already anticipated that you will attempt to anticipate your opponent’s next move, thereby sucking all the air out of the room. To stay one step ahead of your opponent, you must imagine yourself as your opponent imagining what you would do if you were your opponent’s opponent (i.e., you) anticipating your opponent’s next move. If, following your recovery from the nausea induced by your faithful practice of this exercise, both you and your opponent show up at the observation deck at the top of the Empire State Building at exactly 12 noon, you will know that Game Theory is not entirely poppycock.

While laying waste to your opponent’s territory, focus your mind’s eye on the post-battle landscape. Today, you are the invading soldier; tomorrow, you are the ruler. Leave nothing uninspected. Survey all the land from the highest hilltop to the lowest plain. Give yourself permission to ask this question: “Would this be a good spot for a frozen yoghurt shoppe?” replete with the utterly pretentious and superfluous “pe.” (Your opponent will surely mispronounce “shoppe,” attempting to effectuate some imagined, hyper-accentuated Elizabethan “eh.”). This will confound and demoralize your opponent, and will also be a shibboleth, marking your opponent as the one talking loudly and obnoxiously in an interminable line wending around the corner and peopled with star-struck rubes desperate to be at the next big happening. If the signs are not favorable for erecting a frozen confections stand as a monument to your conquest [and also, if the proper permitting cannot readily be obtained], decamp for a land where the members of the local peerage are more corruptible, and the countryside less overrun by competing styles of soft-serve. The patient general knows that a vanquished populace needs a half-decent incentive (such as a liberal selection of toppings) to at least go through the motions of appearing compliant and servile.

In the midst of a campaign, do not be distracted by the chattering of subordinates. Some will counsel advance; others retreat.  Still others will insist that you hold the line. Lest you succumb to the temptation to be pulled this way or that by these underlings, quiet the noise so that all that remains is the still, small clarity of your inner voice. Listen to it carefully. It will always tell you the truth without fail. And the truth is:  None of these lieutenants have as many epaulets as you have; that is why they call you “General.”

Never lose sight of your goal. Keep it pinned to the inside of your jacket at all times.  Better yet, keep it pinned to the outside of your jacket where you can keep an eye on it. And while never losing sight of your goal, be mindful of the costs. Are they cross-classified efficiently to maximize deductions? The savvy general has the foresight to save all receipts, setting the dubious ones aside for further “analysis.”

The successful general rises above petty squabbles, enforcing discipline through the religious application of strict measures, such as ordering the ranks to find the solution to a crossword puzzle riddled with multiple errors. To the Machiavellian maxim that the Prince is to be both feared and loved, add the Pincus Ming Mandelbaum Principle: The general is to remain an enigma. In a pineapple.  Under the sea. It is not for a mere foot soldier to pierce the veil between better judgment and an incomprehensible policy. While the cold, hard truth may be that the general is oft times clueless, this is a privileged secret. It is inviolate. An army will rebel against the most accomplished of generals whose expressions of self-doubt are exposed to the regiment, whereas an incompetent buffoon practiced only in braggadocio and self adoration will engender mindless loyalty to the ends of the earth. 

Any fool can start a war. Every child knows this.  They are born knowing it. Do not suppose that your opponent does not already know it, especially if your opponent has read ahead. It is no accident that in the annals of history, very few wars have been started by a child – a taunting spree or a temper tantrum, maybe – but not a full-fledged war. The reason is simple: most wars begin well past a child’s bedtime or else on a school day. As effortless as it may be to start a war, for all but the most talented of generals, it is a bridge too far to end one. The insightful general, therefore, consults not only the movement of the opponent, the celestial bodies, and the wind, but also the academic calendar and the television cartoon schedule.  The battlefield is littered with generals who imagined that they, instead of circumstances beyond their comprehension, turned the tide. In the Art of War, the general who truly seeks a comprehensive peace must experience the moment through the eyes of a child, think what a child thinks, feel what a child feels, and hear what a child hears. And when you, dear general, hear the final bell ring, ask not for whom the bell tolls; just know this: recess is over.

And so is the war.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

It's So Haimishe on the Moon




"Where are you from?"

                 

                           "The Sea of Tranquility."


"Really? Which exit?"


                           "Ha! Ha!  Very funny!"


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYYn1OKcVOI
                                           


Monday, July 8, 2013

TEXT MESSAGES OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE


SALVE, CLAUDIUS:  U GET MY TXT???

SALVE, HECTOR.  WUZ ASCENDIT? 

STUCK IN SENATE ALL POST MERIDIAN.  CAESAR DRONED ON AD NAUSEAM: “VENI, VIDI, VINCI,” MILKING THE APPLAUSE.
FELT LIKE THROWING UP (ERGO “AD NAUSEAM”) .

OMGS! CICERO FUNDITUS GHOSTWROTE THE “VENI” SPEECH. SCIUNT.

VERITAS DAT. NOW “C” IS CAMPAIGNING IN JUDEA WITH IT.

RIDERE OUT LOUD!!!!!

WHO’D BELIEVE THIS STERCORE? :/

I, CLAUDIUS.  I’D BELIEVE IT.
IN ROMA ALIQUID EST POSSIBILE.

A LIQUID EST POSSIBLE!!? WTF DOES THAT MEAN!????

NON A LIQUID, TU IDIOTA! ALIQUID!

OH.

GOTTA GO. C. U.

QUO VADIS?

HIPPODROME.  CHARIOT RACE.

HEY! ME II! IBID! WHERE YOU SITTING?

OP. SIT.

???????

JUST KIDDING.  HA HA!

OK. MAYBE ILL C. U. THERE.

SICK! C.U.

U MEAN [SIC]?

NO, SIK [SIC]?

SICK, SIK, [SIC]!

J

HEY. I’M TXTING U A PIC OF THE BIG C RITE NOW.

I CANT OPEN IT.

U HAVE TO HOLD DOWN THE  VIII KEY THE MMXIII AND THE IX KEY AT THE SAME TIME.

TECHNOLOGY SUCKS.

WHO IS YOUR SERVICE PROVIDER?

SPQR MOBILIUS.  STILL NOT GETTING THE PIC.

???  O THATS Y.  I WAS TRYING TO TXT YOU FROM THE CATACOMBS. NO RECEPTION DOWN THERE. I JUST MOVED OVER TO THE SUNDIAL BY THE FOUNTAIN OF THE FORNICATING BARBARIANS.  OK. I HAVE A GOOD SIGNAL NOW. I’M RE-SENDING THE PIC. SO YOU SHOULD HAVE II PICS. DID U GET?

??? I’LL CHECK LATER. STOP TXTING PICS TO ME NOW. TEMPUS FUGIT. GOTTA GO.

 L QUI YOU GOIN’ WITH?

DUDE!  DON’T END A SENTENCE WITH A PREPOSITION!

WHO YOU GOI’N WITH, ASINE?

HA HA! STULTE!

SO, WHO YOU GOI’N WITH?

TRIMALCHIO, ET AL.

UBI TRIMALCHIO IBI PANEM ET CIRCENSES!

VERBUM!

VERITAS? TRIMALCHIO IS SO JUVENILE!

U MEAN JUVENAL?

HA! HA! RIDERE OUT LOUD! I MEAN PETRONIOUS!

HA! WELL, IGNOSCAS, SI  SERIUS VENIO. GOTTA GO.

OK. YOU HANGIN’ AT THE COLOSIUM TAVERN POST RACE?

??? QUE SERA, SERA

U GOT THAT EMENDO! THE FUTURE’S NOT OURS TO SEE.

OK, POSTEA VIDEBO VOS. SEE YA!

OK. VALE! AMICUS. AND REMEMBER, WHEN U R AT THE STADIUM…

QUOD?

SI TIBI PLACUERIT FACERE, FAC VOCEM ANSERIS.

QUOD!!!!?

HONK IF YOU LIKE HONKING.

OH.


































Monday, May 27, 2013

Monday, April 22, 2013

Sunday, March 31, 2013

KIM JONG UN RESPONDS TO THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE



Dear Editor:

I am not a subscriber or even casual reader of your so-called “newspaper.”  For one thing – no good comics. For another thing, who can afford the villas in Cinque Terre listed for sale in the Real Estate Classifieds? Thirdly, the Trib is banned in my country. But one of our “agricultural attachés” brought a copy back from Paris yesterday and showed me an article you had published about me.

It was all about how I am threatening the world with nuclear missiles, and how my people are starving, and how I am mercurial and a Class-A nut job, and blah blah blah.  The usual stuff.  Then, mid-way through the third paragraph, I read this:  “The baby-faced dictator remains jealous of his older exiled paternal half-brother Kim Jong-Nam.”

Ok, like, for starters, “Baby-Faced?” Excuse me?

Had your intrepid reporter bothered to do his homework, he would have learned that I am, hands down, the biggest heartthrob north of the Demilitarized Zone. I so much as step foot in the Pyongyang People’s Pleasure Place & Pâtisserie and the whole place falls into a swoon. All the girls want to dance the “Hustle” with me. (The PPPP&P is a swanky little disco we have here. Thursday is Mandelbrot night, hence “Pâtisserie”).

Why do you think that one of my official titles is “Number 1 Handsome Man?” Every Korean of the female persuasion dreams of having a date with me. Whose photo do you think is taped to all the vanities in the country?  The Pope’s? Jerry Lewis’? Guess again, Sparky! It is me, myself, and Mois! (Jerry Lewis is number 3 on the male pinup hit parade, just so you know).

Can you guess what Pop (“Dear Leader”  not to be confused with “Dear Abbey”) use to call me?  “Macho Macho Man.”  Pop was the World’s Number 1 Dad. Don’t take my word for it; he had the coffee mug to prove it.  He used to sing “Macho Macho Man” in the shower all the time. Do you know it?  “I want to be a macho, macho man.”  Those are the lyrics.  He’d say “American Adventurists!  I’m going to bomb the shit out of them as soon as we get one of these ferkakta rockets to work!”  Right after that, he’d jump in the shower and sing “Macho Macho Man.”

In case you were wondering, I also like to sing in the shower. Here’s a little song that I sing in the shower to perk me up right before I meet with our supreme military brass to map out our top secret strategy for the surprise attack on America planned for next Tuesday. It goes like this:

I’m going to Pyongyang
Pyongyang here I come
They got North Korean women  there
And I’m gonna get me one.

By the way, did you know that the first time Pop ever played a game of golf, he shot 11 holes-in-one?  EEEELEVEN!  Read ‘em and weep! Once I went bowling with him, and I scored a perfect 300.  He scored a 360, which is like a 300, plus 60! Can the horse’s ass at the Trib who called me “baby-faced” say that? I didn’t think so.

Now I’m going to clue you in on a little secret about my brother, Kim, who you seem to think I’m so jealous of. Are you ready?  Here it is.

He’s a moron.

I’m sure you’ve heard the kooky stories about him. Well, take it from me: the stories are true. When we were kids, I shared a bunk bed with my brother.  Being the younger (albeit, the handsomer, by far) I had to sleep in the bottom bunk.  My brother used to keep me up nights babbling on  about how much he wanted to go to Tokyo Disneyland and how he was going to fight off coyotes and savages in Frontierland and learn everything there was to know about the future in Tomorrowland. It was like a fetish.  I’d say: “Kim.  Give it up already.  It aint gonna happen, bro.”

But he would have none of that. He had a portable record player under his covers that played little 45s. And all he ever wanted to listen to was “It’s a Small World After All.” He played it non-stop. Sometimes he would play it at 78 speed so that everybody in the chorus sounded like they had just sucked down a bathtub full of helium. He would hum along with it like Donald Duck in heat. That’s what I had to go to sleep to every night.  I wanted to shove that little record player down his throat. Instead, these years of psychological torture conditioned me for my role as Great Successor to Dear Leader.

Then, one day, when the rest of us were distracted by some bogus threat from the lackeys in the South engineered by the Yankee imperialists, my idiot-sans-savant brother bribes some minor palace functionary to get him a fake passport and to help him slip out of the country undetected at dawn. Then he finally makes his way to the fantasy land of his childish dreams, and what does he do there?  Can you guess? Spends the whole day riding around and around on the  Alice in Wonderland Teacups, squealing like a piglet in doody, that’s what!

His whole life, he fantasizes about his big day at the amusement park where giddy capitalists go to wait on never-ending lines like Soviets of old trying to buy toilet paper. How many times did I suffer through his breathless descriptions of his hoped-for exploits?  He had planned every detail.   He was going to venture into new horizons.  He was going to have once-in-a-lifetime thrills.  Who knows?  Maybe he was even going to flash his man boobs for the cameras at the bottom of the Space Mountain water slide. But, no!  When the big moment finally arrives, all he wants to do is go on the girly teacup ride until closing time.  
Ha!  Can you believe they were grooming this troglodyte to be the heir to our Dear Leader?

Still, in a perverse kind of way, Tokyo Disneyland is the greatest thing that ever happened, because it got my half-wit half-brother out of the country for good.  Can you imagine what an unmitigated disaster if my brother were in charge around here!?  I shudder to even think of it.

In conclusion, I have demonstrated to you that:  (1)  I am not baby-faced.  Just the opposite: I am the Number 1 Handsome Man. (2) Saying that I am jealous of my brother is the stupidest thing I ever heard. It is the other way around. I know he is kicking himself in his fat ass every day wishing he was me.  But he isn’t me. I am me. Number 1 Handsome Man. (3)  There is no number 3.

Well, that’s all for now.  Hope this sets the record straight.

Sincerely,

Kim Jong Un