I Feel Right at Home

Back when I was in high school and college, I went through a phase where I wanted to write very controversial things to spark debate and generate feedback.

It’s been 13 years since I last wrote for University of Maryland’s Diamondback, where I simultaneously earned some of the best compliments I’ve ever gotten and heard the worst insults – over the same article.

With Gunaxin, I don’t have the same type of forum or audience, but my ability to draw vocal, obnoxious feedback continues. While silly top tens lists are bound to get feedback, finding other ways to strike a nerve, while generating huge number of page views, is the jackpot for a blogger.

This time, it was for my article “Ten Wars That Will Happen in Our Lifetime.” Huge web traffic. It cracked the code of the new Digg. The comments?

Some of the funniest I’ve ever seen. By that I mean anonymous, obnoxious Internet dorks who feel this was the worst article ever written and I am a complete moron and should die in a fire. Seriously? That’s their contribution to the comments? I mean, at the very least refute some of my points (which VERY few people actually did).

Coming up with that list wasn’t too hard. We all know India and Pakistan will go at it again. Israel will fight Hezbollah. U.S. vs. Iran. U.S. vs. Iraq again. Afghanistan civil war. Capping it off with World War III was silly, but hardly the spark that set many people off. I think what may have upset people were saying things like India will nuke Pakistan, and other sensitive things. But ultimately, I prefixed the article by saying that this is a humor blog, not Time magazine.

Moving on.

Ten Wars That Will Happen in Our Lifetime

War is awful. But you know what else sucks? Constant tension of war, injustices done by those who need to be overthrown, and threats by politicians who deserve to be kicked in the groin.

We won’t get into the reasons behind the U.S. invading Iraq and Afghanistan. But not doing so would’ve had major costs, too. So, war may not be the answer, but neither is allowing evil people to stay in power.

The U.S. and the Soviet Union never went to war directly with each other. Had the U.S. nuked Moscow, you know, rained nukes on those Commies, that could’ve prevented the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 80s (which led to things that are still going on today), or that mess with Cuba. And if the U.S. bombed China when they became Commies, the Korean War and the Vietnam War might not have happened. Or, instead of reading my theories, you can read: What If?: The World’s Foremost Military Historians Imagine What Might Have Been, the author of which I’m sure isn’t a blogger. (Also check out Five Unfought Wars That Would Have Changed Everything, from Cracked.com.)

But if you don’t, then here are ten wars that will happen in our lifetime (written for the humor section on Gunaxin.com, not friggin’ Time Magazine).

1 U.S. vs. Iran

The Ayatollah wasn’t perfect, but the U.S. had good relations with Iran up until the 1979 revolution. Even Saddam Hussein went to war with these nuts, and the U.S. took Hussein’s side. Now we’ve got the puppet president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad building nuclear weapons, sponsoring terrorists, and daring nations to fight.

Given an ultimatum like Bush gave to Hussein, Ahmadinejad opts for bombs to fall on Iran’s government offices, air-force bases and nuclear labs.

The Victor: U.S.

The Good: No more worrying about Iran nuking anyone and much less aid to terrorists for other conflicts.

The Bad: A broken country, terrorism, anti-U.S. rhetoric from Iranians who are now free of this government, more problems and the need for another bombing campaign years later once they regroup and start threatening the U.S. again.

2 India vs. Pakistan

We’ll sum up the problems between India and Pakistan in one word: Kashmir. They’ve already fought three four wars over it (1947, 1965, 1971 and 1999). More will follow. The U.S. has relations with both sides, but the Pakistanis seem to appreciate it much less than India, and are looking for an excuse to say ‘Death to America.’ Let’s say that in the next war, India uses its nuclear weapons and ‘wins’ the battle for Kashmir.

The Victor: India.

The Good: Nothing good will come out of this. The British created a problem that will last for the next century. Sure, had the British did it ‘right’ there would still be problems, but this is what it comes to.

The Bad: Mass death and Pakistan will be obliterated. Then more terrorists.

3 Israel vs. Hezbollah

With Lebanon as a war-zone again, the next chapter of Israel vs. Hezbollah won’t be as pretty as the first. Now that Hezbollah, a terrorist organization, is stocked with even more dangerous weapons than they had in the 2006 war (mostly supplied by Iran), Israel won’t hold anything back in Lebanon this time. In fact, as a joke, Israel will code-name this operation “Operation Excessive Force.”

The Victor: Israel.

The Good: Hezbollah will be crippled.

The Bad: The real victim here are the people of Lebanon, who have suffered for years with terrorists using their home as a battleground. And though Hezbollah will be crippled, other terror organizations will pop up. There will also be more unrest in Gaza and the West Bank during the war. Lebanese and Israeli civilians will die.

4 North Korea vs. South Korea

This war technically never ended, and has been in a stalemate for the past 57 years. But now we’ve got the North making nuclear weapons and Kim Jong Il threatening everyone, it’s time to put an end to this regime. Also, this is one time when the United States looks to China and says, ‘Stay the hell out of this or we’ll stop buying your knick-knacks.’

The Victor: South Korea

The Good: No more threats from the North and the oppressed people are free!

The Bad: Mass death and the struggles of rebuilding the infrastructure of the North. The U.S. will tell China to fix it. But now that it’s opened, refugees will exit to China and the South, which will create challenges, as well.

5 Afghan Civil War

The U.S. will eventually have to pull out, and there is about a trillion dollars worth of mineral buried in Afghanistan, a country that doesn’t have a mining culture. Forget about the Taliban, terrorism, ‘Death to America,’ and the Taliban. Though the U.S. will support the Afghan government and allies, the bad guys will win and Afghanistan will return to its post-Soviet invasion ways, but worse.

The Victor: The warlords/drug traffickers and Taliban hired-help, who will then counterattack those who they fought with.

The Good: Though the bad guy will win, remember that this time it’s over minerals (and the heroin trade) instead of harboring Al Qaeda. This conflict will more closely resemble African conflicts over raw materials instead of religious doctrines. With more money and weapons, the warlords won’t allow the Taliban to take back control of Afghanistan. How is this good? It’s not. But it’s better than the alternative, which is the Taliban running things.

The Bad: Everything. Afghanistan is broken and will never return to its pre-Soviet ways. The USSR screwed up this country and they are to blame. If Russia wasn’t broken itself, it’s that country that should be fixing Afghanistan.

6 Iraq Civil War

America pulls out and a Civil War eventually erupts, turning Iraq into another Iran.

The Victor: The side the U.S. doesn’t want to win.

The Good: The U.S. will again know if it’ll need to invade again.

The Bad: Everything. Liberating people from an evil dictator is thankless. It creates bitter people toward those who rescued them and eventually a full-fledged enemy.

7 Iraq vs. Kurdistan

Kurdish separatists gain power and the new ‘bad’ Iraq invades, unleashing the same type of hell that Saddam put these people through. Deadly gas. And not the funny kind. By the way, this conflict can be blamed on Winston Churchill’s decision not to partition Iraq.)

The Victor: Iraq.

The Good: It is once again established that Iraq is run by evil people. How is that good? Certainty is good. That’s all.

The Bad: Mass death in an already unstable region. And the Kurds will somehow blame America.

8 U.S. vs. Iraq Part III

Now that the bad guys run Iraq again (this time in an Iran-like regime instead of a dictator’s regime), it’s time to bomb this country again back to the stone age, much like we did in the U.S.-Iran war mentioned above.

The Victor: U.S.

The Good: We once again flex our muscles and kiss them while showing Iraq who is better hung. Also, this time it’s a bit cheaper because we won’t be hanging out there and trying to fix the country for once.

The Bad: Some terrorism, anti-U.S. rhetoric from Iraqis who are now free of this government, and more problems and the need for another bombing campaign years later.

9 Mexican Civil War

The drug cartel issue in Mexico is destroying the country. Though legalizing marijuana in the U.S. would drive a serious stake into the heart of the killers, American leaders would rather back massive bloodshed than cave to the economists who propose this solution (come on, like they’d even bother listening to Hippie lobbyists or anyone else).

The Victor: The drug lords.

The Good: Nothing.

The Bad: Mexico is now run by criminals. The immigration issue with the United States continues to be a problem.

10 World War III

Iran, Iraq, North Korea, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria, Turkey, Libya, Sudan, Burma, Zimbabwe, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Equatorial Guinea, Cuba, Venezuela (Axis) (UPDATE: Russia too… They found out a bit late.)

vs.

United States, Israel, Japan, Taiwan, Tibet, India, Kurdistan, The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, France, Spain, Italy, South Korea ,Germany, Poland (Allies)

The Victor: The Allies.

The Good: Nothing.

The Bad: One billion dead.

Bonus

The War for the Holy Land

Well, this place has changed hands many times in the past several thousand years. I’d venture to say we haven’t seen the last battle for Jerusalem.

Ten Teams We Would’ve Like to Have Seen on ‘Hard Knocks’

HBO’s Hard Knocks, a reality show for preseason pro football teams, hasn’t reached its full potential. Why? Because they need cameras in every locker room of every team, every season, all season, edited and packaged for our viewing pleasure.

Rex Ryan cursing his way through the New York Jets’ camp this season is entertaining, and Chad Ochocinco raving about McDonald’s in Cincinnati last year was hilarious (and how funny would it have been to watch Terrell Owens jaw with Pacman Jones this season?). But think about every team that we haven’t seen that would’ve been worth it. That list would be huge, so here are ten memorable teams that likely would’ve made Hard Knocks even more popular than the games themselves.

1 2010 Washington Redskins

Every year at Redskins training camp is worthy of a reality show, but the filming of Albert Haynesworth’s multiple conditioning test failures would have sent ratings through the roof. Under no circumstance would the team allow something like that to be shot, but THAT is what reality television was made for.

2 2005 New Orleans Saints

After two preseason games, Hurricane Katrina forced the Saints out of the city. The whole season would’ve been worth chronicling.

3 2005 Minnesota Vikings

An alleged sex party occurred in Oct., 2005 on Lake Minnetonka with 17 members of the Vikings. Prostitutes were flown in for the party, and some of the players performed sexual acts in front of crew members. Forget HBO, this could have aired on the Playboy Channel.

4 1995 Cowboys

Just imagine, Jerry Jones wandering around and Jimmy Johnson Barry Switzer barking instructions at Deon Sanders, Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, Nate Newton and Michael Irvin in the preseason before winning their third Super Bowl in four years.

5 1986 New York Giants

This list wouldn’t be complete without at least one year of Bill Parcells, and with Lawrence Taylor running wild and the Giants winning the Super Bowl, this would be a memorable Hard Knocks for sure.

6 1985 Chicago Bears

Mike Ditka. Mike Singletary. Walter Payton. William Perry. This team is often said to be the best ever. Not because of those guys, but because of the dude in the sunglasses, quarterback Jim McMahon.

7 1982 Washington Redskins

The only thing that would make this boring is head coach Joe Gibbs, who wasn’t known for cursing or throwing temper tantrums. Watching a football team pray together isn’t must-see television. The Hogs, perhaps the best offensive line in history, could have had their own reality TV show, but this team also had John Riggins, Dexter Manley, and others who would’ve been a blast to watch (Art Monk not so much).

8 1976 Oakland Raiders

Any year the Raiders would be worthy of Hard Knocks. But there was something special about them in the 1970s, special enough for HBO to make a documentary in 2003 called Rebels of Oakland: The A’s, the Raiders, the ’70s. We’ll pick 1976 for Hard Knocks because John Madden and company won the Super Bowl.

9 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers

Already stacked with “Mean” Joe Greene, Terry Bradshaw, Mel Blount, Jack Ham, Franco Harris, Coach Chuck Noll selected four Hall of Famers in 1974: Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth, and Mike Webster. Needless to say, this team won the Super Bowl, then three more.

10 1968 New York Jets

Joe Namath and company embark on a journey that leads them past Johnny Unitas in the Super Bowl.

Famous Film Disguises That Should’ve Failed

There’s nothing like a disguise to get a film hero out of a dangerous situation. In four very famous movies, the heroes are in the belly of the beast, and all signs point to capture when low and behold, disguises get them out of trouble, at least temporarily.

These films use virtually the same plan, three of which involve a rescue. But none of them should have worked, and our protagonists should have been beheaded. Let’s look.

Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope

After arriving at the Death Star, Luke and Han ambush some stormtroopers, dress in their gear, and take Chewbacca prisoner as they walk through the Death Star to rescue Princess Leia.

The problem: Even Princess Leia doesn’t believe it. “Aren’t you a little short for a stormtrooper?” And what’s up with Han doing the courteous thing and motioning to see if anyone else needs to use the elevator? Stormtroopers wouldn’t do that. Dead giveaway.

Of course, these guys have been immortalized as merchandise.


Lord of the Rings: Return of the King

Frodo and Sam dress as orcs as they move through Mordor.

The problem: They’re what, three-feet tall? Wouldn’t the other orcs smell the Hobbits? And then there’s INSPECTION! Wouldn’t at least one of those orcs notice the two sneak away after causing a commotion?


The Wizard of Oz

The lion, the tin man and the scarecrow ambush some guards and wear their uniforms so they can enter the witch’s castle to rescue Dorothy.

The problem: Okay, obviously this one is supposed to be funny, but let’s at least acknowledge that this plan, which wasn’t even a plan because somehow they were ambushed and came out on top, would’ve failed miserably.


Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi

Somehow, Lando Calrissian, wearing a space football helmet, infiltrates Jabba the Hutt’s Skiff guard so he can keep an eye on Han Solo, who is frozen in carbonite.

The problem: Perhaps there’s an entire backstory to how Lando pulled this off, but for those of us who only watch the films and don’t read, this is outright implausible. A black man in a KKK hood infiltrating a Klan rally is more believable.

And then there’s this:

Princess Leia dresses up like the bounty hunter Boushh, brings a thermal detonator and Chewbacca to Jabba’s palace, and seems to fool everyone.

This is the best disguise out of all the ones already mentioned. However, it’s the only one that fails, and makes the least bit of sense. While Leia successfully gets Han out of the carbonite, she is then immediately discovered and taken prisoner, which further complicates the situation.

Since Lando is already there, why doesn’t he unfreeze Han? What was the purpose of putting Leia’s life in jeopardy? Sure, this plot point led to one of the best costumes in cinematic history, but if Leia never shows up, Luke would have still rescued Han, Jabba would have still been killed, and they would have gotten away.

Top 25 Celebrities Who Are Robbing the Cradle

There’s something fascinating about a person who dates or marries someone who is young enough to be their child. You know, the gross type of fascinating. That’s when we do the math and determine how old our future spouse would be, only to think… EWWW! Let’s look at the current celebrity couples with the largest age differences.

1 Ginger Baker and Kudzai Machokoto

42 years

The legendary drummer tied the knot with a Zimbabwean nurse this year.

2 Robert Duvall and Luciana Pedraza

41 years

 

3 Clint Eastwood and Dina Ruiz

36 years

Dirty Harry wed a newscaster.

4 Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn

35 years

I might one day become famous for not having the restraint to keep from punching Woody Allen in the face because he’s an annoying putz who married his (step)daughter.

5 Davy Jones and Jessica Pacheco

31 years

The Monkee married a Telumundo reporter after proposing outside a Krispy Kreme.

6 Eric Clapton and Melia McEnery

31 years

 

7 Edward James Olmos and Lymari Nadal

31 years

Detective Gaff from Blade Runner and Frank Lucas’s wife in the movie American Gangster. That’s who these two are.

8 Pete Townshend and Rachel Fuller

28 years

 

9 Kenny Rogers and Wanda Miller

28 years

 

10 Steve Martin and Anne Stringfield

26 years

Sorry, showing this photo was highly unnecessary.

11 Rush Limbaugh and Kathryn Rogers

26 years

Aren’t you glad it isn’t a photo of Rush at the beach?

12 Rod Stewart and Penny Lancaster

26 years

Maybe I should also do an article on biggest height difference.

13 Celine Dion and René Angélil

26 years

I’ve gotta hand it to Celine. She actually seemed to marry this guy for love.

14 Larry King and Shawn Southwick

26 years

These two almost fell off the ‘current’ list but they called off their divorce recently, and Southwick’s suicide attempt failed.

15 Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones

25 years

This is one I’m insanely jealous about.

16 Bruce Willis and Emma Heming

24 years

Ha, take that, Demi! Willis, Moore’s ex, has a much bigger bigger age difference than she has with Ashton Kutcher (15 years).

17 Donald Trump and Melania Knauss

24 years

More reason to hate this guy.

18 Chuck Norris and Gena O’Kelley

24 years

 

19 Malcolm McDowell and Kelley Kuhr

24 years

He’ll always be Alex DeLarge to me.

20 Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin

23 years

 

21 Frank Gifford and Kathie Lee Gifford

23 years

To think, he cheated on her.

22 Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart

23 years

And when Star Wars came out, we thought the age difference between Han Solo and Princess Leia was too much.

23 Aaron Johnson and Sam Taylor Wood

23 years

To me, this one is the most disturbing because Johnson, who was in the film Kick-Ass, isn’t even old enough to drink in the United States. Taylor-Wood is his director on Nowhere Boy, and recently gave birth to a daughter.

24 Wayne Newton and Kathleen McCrane

22 years

 

25 Kevin Costner and Christine Baumgartner

22 years

 

More notables…
Carol Burnett and Brian Miller, 23 years
Peter Gabriel and Meabh Flynn, 22 years
Warren Beatty and Annette Bening, 21 years
Nicolas Cage and Alice Kim, 20 years
Marilyn Manson and Evan Rachel Wood, 19 years
Howard Stern and Beth Ostrosky, 18 years
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, 17 years
Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher, 15 years
Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates, 15 years

Broken up…
Tony Curtis and Jill Vanden Berg, 45 years
James Woods and Ashley Madison, 39 years
Billy Joel and Katie Lee Joel, 32 years

Hugh Hefner was 61 years older than Crystal Harris, 54 years older than Holly Madison, 37 years older than Kimberley Conrad, etc., but we expect that from him.

And then there’s this…
Anna Nicole Smith and J. Howard Marshall III, 63 years