136 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
Article 128 of rec.humor.funny:
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Path: santra!tut!draken!kth!mcvax!uunet!attcan!think!bloom-beacon!watmath!looking!funny-request
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From: amlovell@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Anthony M Lovell)
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Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny
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Subject: Original weird story
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Keywords: original, smirk, wealth stereotypes, swearing
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Message-ID: <2976@looking.UUCP>
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Date: 20 Mar 89 00:30:06 GMT
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Sender: funny@looking.UUCP
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Lines: 120
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Approved: funny@looking.UUCP
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Reply-Path: gatech!princeton!phoenix.Princeton.EDU!amlovell
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This has gone the rounds in talk.pol.misc and was zilched (can you believe
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it?) in rec.guns. Twas also in rec.humor some weeks back - original
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(This one is not quite ROT13, but it is close, so be warned.)
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I was looking for a friend's apartment in Trenton and was highly lost.
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I'd taken the bus and had no idea where I was going - what I did know
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was that gentrification had not reached this portion of the city. The
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neighborhood was completely devoid of pasta vending shops with ferns in
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the windows. There were yellow caution signs on the roadside that read
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"Caution Rough Neighborhood".
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Being a Republican, I didn't stop off somewhere to ask for directions,
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but instead stayed the course. I soon found myself in a dark, remote
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alleyway. A shadow separated itself from the trash lining the walls,
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and it was wearing a gang jacket.
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"Yo! Got any spare change, man?", he inquired brusquely.
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"Heh heh. I was going to ask you the same thing." I gulped in an
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effort at offhandedness.
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It failed miserably and more figures suddenly appeared from points
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around the compass I wasn't carrying. They were all gang members.
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You could practically SEE the exclamation point appear over my head. I
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started to hum. Right away, this tipped them off that I was not taking
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this encounter well at all, because I wasn't humming with my mouth.
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Rather, my whole frame had begun to resonate like a tuning fork.
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"Maybe he's got some spare BILLS!" exclaimed one as he took out an
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alleycat I could have sworn was too large to be concealed. The mass of
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them closed in on me. Unless they instituted affirmative action
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principles in their gang recruiting, I guessed that they were not about
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to initiate me into their little clique. I was audibly perspiring.
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I saw they had crossed the line. It was time to take action to defend
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myself - to stand up for RIGHT in a fit of violent derring-do. I
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gulped once more at the lump in my throat and pulled out my 9mm
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Schnauzer, Ruger. In one fluid, practiced motion, my thumb switched the
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safety from the "Heel" position and I let off a warning shot.
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"ARF!" said Ruger. A large, even integral number of eyes widened in
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surprise as the toughs stopped their advance to ponder this unexpected
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development. "Drop the cat!" I demanded, but the cat was already
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scampering away yowling.
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As an aside, I'd better take a little time to explain the history of
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the Schnauzer and Ruger in particular. The Schnauzer was first developed
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in the Krupp Kennels in Hamburg back in World War I to answer a
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developing need for a small dog for use in the trenches where larger
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dogs such as the battle-proven Rottweiler could prove too cumbersome.
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The British already had such a weapon in their Dobie (pronounced "doughboy")
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and the Germans had nothing to counter it. The 9mm auto-Schnauzer was the
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first effective response. Small, mean, and outfitted with a dripping set
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of large ivories, a Schnauzer was highly devastating at short ranges
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and could clear a bunker in about ten seconds if you could squeeze him
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in the fireport. Even after the war was lost, the Schnauzer proved to
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be a popular instrument of home and personal defense. Hitler's Beer
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Hall Putsch might have been a success if he hadn't been obliged to check
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his Schnauzer at the door as no dogs were allowed in the bar. Snubnosed
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and jam proof, it was widely copied by breeders from around the world
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and remains a popular model among collectors today.
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I'd had Ruger since he was a pup - he was my first dog. I remember
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Mom didn't want to have a dog in the house at all. But Dad gave him
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to me and taught me how to clean him and handle him safely. It
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took some time to overcome my fear of such a dangerous possession, but
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soon enough I was out in the woods killing chipmunks and squirrels with
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Ruger. I wrote articles for dog magazines whenever I could and went to
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shows with Ruger and was QUITE an enthusiast. He was always at my side,
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faithful and ready to defend me if the time for such ever arose. I even
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slept with him at the foot of my bed.
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The echoes of that warning shot reverberated from the alley's walls
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and I could see the resolve of my would-be attackers melting before my
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eyes. (It was such a feeling of POWER!) I kept Ruger's muzzle pointed
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at the roughneck who had issued the most direct threats. I was shaking
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as much as they were.
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"The jig is up!" I cried, immediately disappointed in myself for
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scarfing that corny line for such a pregnant moment. I made a mental
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note to alter that little bit of this saga if I lived to relate it at
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the weekly NDA meeting in Princeton. "I think we're going to take a
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little walk down to the station, my friends." Hee hee - "Don't mess with
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me, you doody-bunchers," I thought to myself as I revelled in the awesome
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control I'd established over these crooks. I swear I had what seemed to be
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the entire East Coast chapter of Satan's Pimps quaking at my disposal.
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But then something terrible happened.
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The humiliation of the proposed trip was too much for the ringleader to
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consider. Before I could react, he presented a scruffy Pit Bull and
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said, "Waste the fucker, Tyrone!" My life flashed in front of my eyes
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without commercial interruption as Tyrone tensed to spring...
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and JAMMED! The mangy little fluffball sat down and scratched his gonads.
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I yelled out "Freeze!" and had them kick the cur over to me. I
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examined him for a minute. It was just SO typical. Pit Bulls are
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giving dog owners a bad name and it's no wonder. Real dog owners
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call them Saturday Night Specials - they're cheap, simple (I mean
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SIMPLE), and dangerous. Tyrone here was unkempt and probably without any
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license whatsoever. Poor folk use them for protection or to commit tiny
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street crimes (this story being a case in point). They never brush them or
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clean them [Tyrone's scratching was probably parasites] and so you're
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just ASKING for a jam. As often as not, the owner himself winds up
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being bitten. I took the dog - he was going to impounded and destroyed.
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With disgust I noticed that this dog had a scar showing he'd been fixed
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to be fully automatic. Playing with fire, there, pal.
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So it all came out in the wash. You know the story - Tyrone was
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destroyed and the slimy punks were probably on the street later that
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night. If the No-Dogs-Allowed lobby had taken Ruger from me, who knows how
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this might have turned out?
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to funny@looking.UUCP
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Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
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Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
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