Why Didn’t the U.S. Give Him a Birthday Surprise?

Castro turned 76 yesterday, but, if the U.S. were more on the ball, the headline should be “Would Have Turned 76”. Every day a communist dictator still lives, baby Jesus cries.

On hand for the celebration was Congresswoman Maxine Waters, who coddled up to the evil murderous dictator praising the made up virtues of the oppressive government. Now, I want to be careful, because calling for the death of an elected (U.S.) leader is not cool. I’m calling for her execution for treason after the due process of law. The victims of Castro deserve no less.

So is it a Combination of “Hedge” and “Money”?

There is a good column on foxnews.com today about the growing threat of China, but what took my interest was yet another reference to China’s leaders calling us a hegemon. Even though hegemon sounds something like pokemon, I looked it up and it actually is an English word. It’s just that I never heard anyone other than the Chinese use it. What in the world is it with China’s obsession with the word hegemony? It’s always hegemony this and hegemon that from them. When did this happen? Did one day a communist leader encounter it on his word-a-day calendar and used it all the time because he thought it made him sound smart? Everyone there seems to accuse us of hegemony; it’s like if you live in China and know three words of English, one of them is hegemon. But, here in America, if someone knows a hundred thousand words of English, one of them most likely ain’t hegemon. I still don’t know what it means.

It would be kind of neat, though, if the Jamaicans accused us of hegemony. “Hey, you Americans, stop being such a hege, mon. Drink Red Stripe!”