Take it from Snee: Explaining U.S. branches of government to foreigners, children (Part 2)

Greetings, non-citizens and/or future voters! As you may recall, I recently explained to (at, whatever) foreigners and children how the United States’ political parties work. Since that was a rousing success – mostly because neither of you have command of my language to voice your objections – I’ve been tapped to now explain the three branches of our government.

The three branches are the executive, legislative and judicial branches. These were delineated all the way back in 1789, when a group of self-selected landowners (mostly lawyers) met to secretly and kind of/sort of illegally overhaul our existing government as outlined in the Articles of Confederation. This was the now legal framing of our famed Constitution. Maybe you’ve seen it in your tour through Ron Paul’s breast pocket?

To reflect this spirit of open contempt towards our law of the land, they intentionally set up a lawyer-driven three-way deathmatch between three equal branches. This cage fight is called “checks and balances,” which was based on the use of elbows and fleet footwork in Senate-floor cane brawls.

Because of the amount of information involved, and because every element of our government is ripe for jokes, I’ve divided this into a three part series. Last week, I explained the executive branch. This week, it’s the legislative branch. Continue reading Take it from Snee: Explaining U.S. branches of government to foreigners, children (Part 2)

Partying poltergeist

We face many threats in today’s world, and this blog does its best to keep you abreast on the latest happenings, but one area we don’t get to cover much is the danger that spirits pose to us–we mean ghosts, not liquor.

A 20-year-old woman in England is being kicked out of her apartment because she was framed by a poltergeist. Her landlords warned her about excessive partying and being inconsiderate to neighbors, but it wasn’t her fault. She told them that it was a ghost that would randomly turn on her music loud late at night. It’s reasonable to assume that the same specter was responsible for the beer and wine bottles thrown outside, or the setting of fire to piles of trash outside.