As
promised, here are a couple more holiday funnies:
Chrismukkah
Continuing the current trend of
large-scale mergers and acquisitions, it was announced today at a press
conference that Christmas and Hanukkah will merge. An industry source said that
the deal had been in the works for about 1300 years.
While details were not available
at press time, it is believed that the overhead cost of having twelve days of
Christmas and eight days of Hanukkah was becoming prohibitive for both sides.
By combining forces, we're told, the world will be able to enjoy consistently
high-quality service during the Fifteen Days of Chrismukkah, as the new holiday
is being called.
Massive layoffs are expected, with
lords a-leaping and maids a-milking being the hardest hit. As part of the
conditions of the agreement, the letters on the dreydl, currently in Hebrew,
will be replaced by Latin, thus becoming unintelligible to a wider audience.
One of the sticking points holding
up the agreement for at least three hundred years was the question of whether
Jewish children could leave milk and cookies for Santa even after having eaten
meat for dinner. A breakthrough came last year, when Oreos were finally
declared to be Kosher. All sides appeared happy about this.
A spokesman for Christmas, Inc.,
declined to say whether a takeover of Kwanzaa might not be in the works as
well. He merely pointed out that, were it not for the independent existence of
Kwanzaa, the merger between Christmas and Chanukah might indeed be seen as an
unfair cornering of the holiday market. Fortunately for all concerned, he said,
Kwanzaa will help to maintain the competitive balance. He then closed the press
conference by leading all present in a rousing rendition of "Oy Vey, All
Ye Faithful."
What to give an optimist and
a pessimist
A family had twin boys whose only
resemblance to each other was their looks. If one felt it was too hot, the
other thought it was too cold. If one said the TV was too loud, the other
claimed the volume needed to be turned up. Opposite in every way, one was an
eternal optimist, the other a doom and gloom pessimist.
Just to see what would happen, at
Christmas time their father loaded the pessimist's room with every imaginable
toy and game. The optimist's room he loaded with horse manure.
That night the father passed by
the pessimist's room and found him sitting amid his new gifts crying bitterly.
"Why are you crying?"
the father asked.
"Because my friends will be
jealous, I'll have to read all these instructions before I can do anything with
this stuff, I'll constantly need batteries, and my toys will eventually get
broken." answered the pessimist twin.
Passing the optimist twin's room,
the father found him dancing for joy in the pile of manure. "What are you
so happy about?" he asked.
To which his optimist twin
replied, "There's got to be a pony in here somewhere!"
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