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CSotD: Every Day is Humpday!

Dear Leader will address the nation this evening, and Garth German has picked up on the timing. Apparently, the address will be about Iran, though it might also be about Sharpies or about the judge telling him to stop tearing down the White House.

During the Vietnam War, there were people who suggested we just declare victory and go home. We may find out how that strategy works, because I’ll bet Dear Leader won’t say “April Fools!”

However, April 1 seems honored in this

Juxtaposition of the Day

This April Fools joke is that the closing of the Strait of Hormuz is Iran’s fault, a theory that reminds me of a time my father came home from a school board meeting in some bemusement. Seems they’d dealt with a kid who was being suspended, and who explained that he’d been giving this other kid a swirly — sticking his head in the toilet — and when the kid pulled his head out, he shook it and got the filthy water on the bully, who naturally then had to beat him up.

Similarly, after the US and Israel bombed Iran and killed a couple of thousand people, the mullahs had the unbelievable nerve to shut down the Strait of Hormuz, so naturally we had to bomb them some more.

April Fools! We were gonna bomb them some more anyway!

For a more humorous April Fools gag, do this. No, don’t.

Whether or not you look it up, it’s going to come to you. Goris sidesteps the obvious gags, but others already have not. Yesterday was Kristi’s last day on the job and I don’t much care what her husband does, or if she even has one, since nobody mentioned the guy while she was jetting around with Corey.

In France, April Fools is “April Fish,” and, in this case, we should have bigger fish to fry.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images

Four months ago, Agent France Presse ran this photo of White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, her young son, and Waddle the White House turkey, but Karoline (center) didn’t find it flattering, so the White House asked AFP to remove the photo from its files.

Which they did, perhaps because there could be other occasions upon which Leavitt would be photographed next to a big fat turkey and it could cause confusion. Or something.

Shame on AFP and Getty for knuckling under on an issue of press freedom. On the other hand, WGASA?

Meanwhile, among the intentional foolery:

I tried to buy shoes locally this past week, but we’re a small city with small chain stores that don’t get a lot of inventory. I could find what I wanted, but not in my size, so I did the unforgiveable and ordered them from Jeff Bezos.

As she says, Amazon began as a book seller, back when I lived where the nearest bookstore was not only 40 miles away but included an expensive ferry ride. And Jeff wasn’t Jeff yet, so giving him money didn’t fill me with guilt.

If I went there for some other reason, I’d stop in at the wonderful independent bookstore and I never walked out without an armload. But then a Borders opened up and a Barnes & Noble, and they drove the indy out of business.

That’s not happening only to bookstores, either, making that last panel less of a random observation and more of a grim prophecy.

We used to see videos of people walking into fountains or careening off walls while they gazed at their phones, but I hadn’t seen one of those in a very long time when this Duplex ran.

Since I know people are more melded to their phones than ever, it makes me think that we’ve evolved the ability to read and watch where we’re going simultaneously.

Our great-grandchildren are going to look like chameleons, with independent eyes pointing in two directions at once.

But our descendants will be martial arts experts who can play the violin. I watched Golden Boy the other day, in which William Holden is a violin virtuoso who needs to make money as a boxer, based on the idea that he truly loved music but was desperate to help his family and become famous.

I can’t feel too sorry for anyone who ends up with Barbara Stanwyck in the end, but the more important dynamic is that we used to have an economy where in most homes, one parent — nearly always the mother — could afford to stay home while the kids were young, and if the kids were taking lessons, it’s because they wanted to, not because they needed a place to park after school.

Wallace’s mom stays home while Dad is a lobsterman, which works for them but it’s good they’ve already got their house and boat, because it’s hard for a young couple to get by on one paycheck. For that matter, it’s getting hard for young couples to get by on two.

Wallace and Rose and their crew are sure going to have to hit the ground with a plan when their time comes.

Along those same lines, baseball has a problem, because two kids can play catch, but you need a decent crowd to actually play baseball. We had modified games with complicated ground rules and ghost runners that would let four or five kids get something going, but you needed a decent crowd to play a real game.

In the 50s and 60s, you could do it, but part of the growth of soccer is how few kids you need to have a good time. When my boys were kids in the 70s, four was a crowd and more than that was unheard of.

The kids who played baseball then were doing Little League in place of karate and music classes, and playing sports with adults around isn’t nearly as joyful as playing on your own.

My mom was childhood buddies with Mark Harris, who wrote Bang the Drum Slowly and other baseball novels. When he died, they scattered his ashes on the lot in New Rochelle where they’d played pick-up ball as kids.

And where she developed skills she brought to college.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 19

  1. it’s been probably fifty years since I’ve heard the words ‘ghost runner.’

    1. Obviously, you don’t watch current MLB games. In case of ties, the visiting team gets a ghost runner placed at second base at the beginning of the tenth inning (the batter who made the final out in the ninth inning. Then the home team gets on in the bottom of the tenth, and so on until someone scores the winning run in the normal manner. The runner isn’t charged to the poor pitcher who allows him to score, which seems fair since he had nothing to do with allowing him to get on base to begin with, but makes that runner a statistical “ghost.” And games usually no longer go on and on till the city curfew shuts them down, suspended to be picked up the next day, which was evidentally paramount to owners to permanently get rid of.

      On another matter, Noem’s husband attended her final congrssional hearings, a sad cuckold who had to sit there and have congressmen and senators ask her about her sleeping with Corey. Thankfully, CSPAN’s directors never seemed to give him a close-up.

      1. We call those Manfred Runners. As a baseball purist I hated the rule. After watching the last couple of years I’ve grown to like it.

    2. The term, although not official, is also currently used in reference to the runner automatically placed on second base at the beginning of each half-inning after the regulation nine.

  2. Goris’ take about Noem’s home life is just perfect—the Internet has already taken care of about every joke that can be made, and already distributed the story enough that you can just get on your socials and it comes up pretty quickly all by itself.

    Of course, Madame is asking for her privacy in this most trying time — maybe she’ll figure out that treating every person (and dog) in her orbit like dirt kinda makes it hard to wring sympathy out of them.

    It’s still possible to avoid using Amazon but I find that I have to work at it usually by ordering directly from the (slightly less big multi-million dollar) companies.

    1. Yes, or, if I can, I order directly from the manufacturer if I have no local retailer. It helps, too, that Amazon and Home Depot are my only real boycott targets, and while I prefer indy stores, I’ll go to a chain if the indy has failed me by not having the product when I need it.

    2. I refused to buy from Amazon, till my son reminded me that here in Australia workers get proper breaks and decent wages. Amazon has to abide by union rules. For some reason I still avoid it if I have a choice, money still flows to Bezos.

  3. Steve Goodman was an incredible human being. One of the best live performers I’ve ever seen, full of energy and joy. That he did so much with his life after his leukemia diagnosis was inspiring…and I know other people have done like things, but I didn’t know them. RIP, Steve…thanks for all of your contributions that added joy to my life.

    1. Geez I miss Steve Goodman still. Hopefully he and John Prine are livin’ it up together. 🤞🧡🎸

  4. Steve was about 50 years ahead of his time with “The twentieth century is almost over”.

  5. My mom worked at Waldenbooks at the local mall for several years, back when Waldenbooks and malls were a thing. Even Borders has been out of business for some time.

    We still have Barnes & Noble, but when I went looking for a copy of the book I wanted they only had two of the series (out of 22 books) and neither of them were it.
    So yeah, there’s a reason online shopping is so appealing, because you don’t have to leave your home AND you can find pretty much anything you could possibly think of.

    I’ve certainly almost run into a few phone zombies when out on my constitutionals, but thankfully at least I’m watching where I’m going.

    Today’s post is also a nice reminder that softball season is coming up, and I’m part of a group that actually puts a team together. But there’ no denying the days where a bunch of neighborhood kids could play full games with full teams are long gone. Heck, they were already gone even when *I* was a kid.

  6. When I was a kid in the 60s we played baseball all the time. The neighborhood had enough kids to field two teams. Sometimes the rule was foul ball when hit to right field when we didn’t have enough players to cover it. Sometimes the team at bat had to field the catcher.

    1. We played opposite field was an out, and pitcher’s hand. Taped and nailed broken bats back together.

  7. About the Cubs:
    There were prophesies and stories that a Cubs victory in the World Series would bring the apocalypse

    When did they win the Series for the first time since 1908?
    November 2016

    We were warned

  8. Glad the unflattering photo of Press Secretary Leavitt was removed. She’s not only smart, sharp and a dedicated wife and mother, but quite attractive-looking as well. Would be interesting to compare worms-eye photos of Psaki and Jean-Pierre.

    1. Granted, the “Thanksgiving turkey” photo is far from hard-hitting news, but neither is it a catalog shot or personality poster. It may seem a small price to pay to keep on the good graces of a whiner who can make your job difficult, but dropping it was still a breach of press freedom.

      And I’d add that nobody would have ever reproduced the shot if she hadn’t whined and drawn attention to it. Hands up, those who saw it last November.

      1. Quick reminder: If obfuscated, the truth can’t set you free. A half-truth is a whole lie. Massaging the narrative only perpetuates unreality to the benefit of deceptive egotists.

    2. Oh please. Her photo in Vanity Fair was a heck of a lot more unflattering (thanks to her lip filler)—in the turkey one she just looks like the majority of women her age. But then looking like a normal human woman of one’s own age seems to be verboten in MAGA circles.

      The fact that the only thing you’re trying to throw glitter on here is Leavitt’s neck wattle and not *every other way* your Dear and Glorious Leader is screwing the pooch right now is something I kind of ironically find encouraging.

  9. Thanks for the mention of your Mom and Mark Harris. He is one of the best baseball fiction “arthurs” in my opinion…referred him to some of my sports-loving boys in my junior high Language Arts classes. (A couple of his works are even available on Kindle)

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