SHARE
flag
the grid

News of the Weird


News Of The Weird


THE COST OF WAR


May 10, 2007
To fund a new Iraqi economy and government after the March 2003

invasion, the U.S. Federal Reserve shipped 484 pallets of

shrink-wrapped U.S. currency, weighing 363 tons, totaling more than $4

billion, and, according to a House of Representatives committee staff

report in February, most of the cash was either haphazardly disbursed

or distributed to proper channels but with little follow-up tracking.

By March 2007, The Times of London

found bank records revealing that two unremarkable Baghdad

small-business men (appointed to the defense ministry) eventually

deposited over $1 billion in private accounts in Jordan, and that U.S.

efforts to buy state-of-the-art equipment for the Iraqi Army were

seriously undermined because middlemen purchased only cheap, obsolete

Polish munitions and pocketed the savings.





CULTURAL DIVERSITY



On Jan. 31, several hundred Japanese husbands recognized the second

annual Beloved Wives Day to upgrade Japanese men's notorious, deeply

ingrained indifference to their spouses. Among the husbands' vows: be

home from work by the unusually early hour of 8 p.m.; actually look

into the missus's eyes and say "thank you;" and try to remember to call

her by her name (instead of, as many apparently do, merely grunting at

her). Divorce in Japan remains relatively rare, but marital

estrangement has been rapidly increasing in recent years.





HOLY THIEVES!



A professional burglar was arrested in the village of Klevan,

Ukraine, in February according to a report from the German news agency

DPA after he broke into a church to steal gold fixtures, fell asleep,

got locked in the weekends-only facility for five days, and survived on

the only liquid available: sacramental wine.





SAFETY FIRST!



Britain's Health and Safety agency headquarters reportedly posted

signs in various locations in the building warning workers not to

attempt to move chairs and tables by themselves, but to call for

porters (for which 48 hours' notice was required). In April, London's Daily Mail

reported, not surprisingly, that the agency's workplace injury record

was very low. And the head teacher at Bramhall High School in

Stockport, England, decreed recently that students, who wear neckties

to class, must use clip-on ties, in part because of the risk of

choking.





CREME DE LA WEIRD



In March, police in Trenton, N.J., arrested four men in separate

incidents and learned that they fancy themselves as "diplomats" from

the Abannaki Indigenous Nation and claim immunity from the laws of the

"so-called planet Earth" (and Mars and Venus, too). One allegedly

possessed an unidentified "controlled substance," and the others were

driving cars with made-up "diplomat" tags. The four showed no

ostensible ties to the Abenaki Indigenous Nation, a tribe that first

appeared in North America in the 17th century and which is still

present in the northeastern U.S.





LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS



Anthony Perone, 20, pleaded guilty in March in Connecticut in

connection with two stalking letters he admitted mailing to a woman he

had fallen for in the third grade but who apparently had spurned him.

The rambling, incoherent letters explicitly threatened death, and

Perone had intended to send them anonymously. But he lived with his

mother and had given each envelope to her to mail, and, unknown to him,

she had thoughtfully added his name and address before posting them. MTW

print
Print
email
Email Link
Comment
Feedback
share
Share
Reader Feedback Submission
Use this form to submit Reader Feedback.
* required value
Your Name*

Town

Email (not shown on website)

Subject

Comment*

Verification*


Calendar Search
Event
calendar icon
Zip Code Proximity
of
Entertainment and lifestyle news for Maui, Hawaii and the surrounding Islands. Maui Time Weekly is Mauis only independent and locally owned newspaper. Mail this link to a friend
Web Analytics