Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Wednesday, July 13, 2022
MORTON’S STEAKHOUSE INTRODUCES NEW MENU!
Morton’s Steak House chain has added new specials to their menu following a dispute involving one of their restaurants The controversy recently unfolded shortly after a group protested outside one of their locations while Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh dined there. Rather than face some of the populace he allegedly serves, the Justice retreated out the back door, and a Morton’s representative called the protestors’ constitutionally protected right to demonstrate “…an act of selfishness and devoid of decency.” The company’s "way, way higher up the food chain" Chief Operating Officer quickly served up an amendment to that comment by mandating the company’s comments in such cases should always be “No comment.”
Possibly concerned that members of the highest court in the land, and other elites, might now be reticent to feed at their establishments, Morton’s quickly introduced these new “Justice Served” items to their menu:
Lettuce Eat Cake. Iceberg lettuce and shredded law
school books served in a colorful hat. Perfect start to a self righteous-repast.
Coors Blight. Brewed malt beverage
addition to a fine wine list, giving deference to a certain Trump-appointed
Justice. Best served cold.
Thomas’s Tomato. Although he’s best seated in an
eatery dubbed Liar’s Lair, we’re sure Justice Clarence, given the opportunity,
would enjoy this heirloom red fruit traceable to the Middle Ages.
Alto’s Upside Down Cake. Alternate dessert that pretty much gets it wrong. Available daily.
Ice Cream Coney. Yet another mouthful of coldness.
Available in 26 flavors of vanilla.
Let Us Eat This Cake. Overpriced Twinkie in a takeout bag.
Conveniently stocked on kitchen shelf to latch onto as you hightail it out the newly
expanded back doors.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Future
residents
of hell!
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
SUPREME
COURT DECISIONS TO COME!
Availing our
innovative journalistic technology, The Forest’s Associate
Editor Lieno Tipe recently journeyed to the future and has reported back on
landmark decisions being delivered by our nation’s highly distinguished Supreme
Court within the coming years. Or sooner! We are delighted to share a few
of these brilliant legal machinations with you today. (An exclusive for our
readers only!)
Freed Virginia Thomas. In QAnon et, al. vs Sanity, Law and Decency, the Court ruled in favor of plaintiff that Virginia Thomas, spouse of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, had been incorrectly been imprisoned for conspiracy to defraud the government, inciting insurrection, making false statements to the FBI and 229 other counts. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote: “A significant portion of our Citizenry depends on our First Amendment giving them the right to say whatever they want. In cases involving resistance to government, the Court might expand such rights to attendant behavior. That is to say: if a citizen has a right to state something was ‘stolen,’ an action such as ‘taking back what was stolen’ might reasonably be considered speech and so equally protected.” In a narrow 5-4 decision allowing the release of Ms. Thomas, Justice Clarence Thomas sided with the minority.
Premarital Sex Prohibited.
In Normal Adults vs. Shamers, Shibboleths and Shotguns et, al., the
Court ruled a Texas Law banning intimate relations between unmarried
individuals remain standing. The 5-4 decision was reached shortly after
Justices Elena Kaganovich, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson explained
to Justice Amy Coney Bryant what premarital sex is. “No need to really
elaborate on this,” Justice Clarence wrote in for the majority. In a concurring opinion, Justice Samuel Alito added: “There is no
language in our Constitution guaranteeing a right to fornication.”
Overturned Marbury vs. Madison. In a
centuries overdue reversal, the Court in Nearly Every Law
Professor vs. Eris, God of Chaos et,al., threw to the winds the 1803 precedent
establishing the nation’s federal courts’ authority to overturn state laws and
lower court decisions deemed unconstitutional. As a result, the Court will no
longer review such cases. The current Court’s opinion, in it’s entirety, read:
“We’re busy enough as it is.” Legal scholar Laurence Tribe dubbed the new
decision “…significantly mind-blowing. If the Court continues down this path,
they might soon rule themselves out of a job. On further thought, not a bad
idea, maybe.”
Premarital Sex Prohibited.
In Normal Adults vs. Shamers, Shibboleths and Shotguns et, al., the
Court ruled a Texas Law banning intimate relations between unmarried
individuals remain standing. The 5-4 decision was reached shortly after
Justices Elena Kaganovich, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson explained
to Justice Amy Coney Bryant what premarital sex is. “No need to really
elaborate on this,” Justice Clarence wrote in for the majority. In a concurring opinion, Justice Samuel Alito added: “There is no
language in our Constitution guaranteeing a right to fornication.”
Overturned Marbury vs. Madison. In a
centuries overdue reversal, the Court in Nearly Every Law
Professor vs. Eris, God of Chaos et,al., threw to the winds the 1803 precedent
establishing the nation’s federal courts’ authority to overturn state laws and
lower court decisions deemed unconstitutional. As a result, the Court will no
longer review such cases. The current Court’s opinion, in it’s entirety, read:
“We’re busy enough as it is.” Legal scholar Laurence Tribe dubbed the new
decision “…significantly mind-blowing. If the Court continues down this path,
they might soon rule themselves out of a job. On further thought, not a bad
idea, maybe.”



























