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:


Phony Foie Gras. Looks like the now disgraced appetizer, but smells like betrayal. Delectable first course for misguided majorities.



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.


Pass The Check. New alternate form of payment. Foist the cost of your ill-considered choices onto millions of women not invited to the table.




Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Future residents

of hell!

KryBaby KAV. Faced with highly credible evidence of criminal assault, this guy whimpered his way to Senate confirmation.  As any bad child should know, crying and whining can only lead to a bad end.  Which, by the way, is the region of the body where Bratty Brett will one day feel the heat.


Ice Queen Coney.  Having an actual heart is no guarantee of avoiding banishment to the basement, but it couldn’t hurt. Unfortunately, Cool Coney lost hers somewhere on the way to exiting Momma’s womb. (Likely in a hurry because she has no respect for them.) Arrivederci, Amy.

Kneeling Gorsuch.  Sorry, Neil. Maybe the guys who stole your seat for you should be down here instead (No worries. You’ll see them, regardless.), but that’s not taking heat off you. And News Flash!  Ruling on the side of lethal injections and bump stocks, gets you nowhere but downstairs. So stop praying for mercy and face the flames.


Undoubting Thomas.  Lied at his confirmation, struggled mightily to do no good since. The guy who actually believes in very little except his own infallibility will have no trouble affirming the fact that, no matter how he’d like to rule on it, Hell hurts.  Sorry, the vote to send you to the coals was not even close, Clarence.


Alito Alight. The clear and present danger of “Bad Tony” is that he’s actually intelligent.  Unfortunately, last we looked, there’s no way to con your way out of a conflagration.  And being the smartest guy in the room doesn’t count for much when all of Lower Earth is on fire.  Sayonara, Sammie.


Johnny Hot Cakes. Oh, man did this one hurt!   Say it ain’t so, Mr. Roberts. Just when we started to believe you might offer some sanity in our troubled times, you forced the Big Guy up top to send you down. You can’t “nice guy” your way out of this one. But, even so, maybe we’ll let you off with just Purgatory, where not having a permanent seat is probably good for you.




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 ThomasIn 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.


Allowed Texas 363 Alternate Electors. Why not?  In Aghast Citizens vs. Grabner, the Court cited Article 2 of the U.S. Constitution that electors be appointed “…as the Legislature thereof may direct…” in ruling that the state was within its rights to replace electors selected by voters with its own quickly dragooned list of “loyal stooges.”  The Court further ruled that the Article’s stipulation that a state’s electors  equal the number of its Senators and Representatives was open to broad interpretation. “The number allowed is ‘…as may be entitled…’” wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh in the majority opinion. “We cannot definitely opine that the state of Texas may not at some future date have 363 representatives, even more, allegedly serving in Congress."


Rainbow Ban Upheld. Hurray!  In the heroic ruling in Common Sense and Decency vs. Self Righteous Wastrels, the Court supported a Texas law outlawing any display of the multi-striped visual that had become a symbol of tolerance and unity in the nation’s LGBTQ community. Penning for the majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote: “This nefarious signal has become an eye-trapping optic, wrongly misleading our nation’s impressionable youth that a meaninful portion of our population is LGBTQ.  A kid believing this might then conclude that some pretty weird thoughts they’re having are actually OK." In a sidebar, Justice Samuel A. Alito added: “The right to display any banner or paint stuff with any colors you like is nowhere stated in our Constitution.”


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.”