Latest Issue
Volume 33, Issue 1:
The HEURISTIC! Squelch

Teddy Roosevelt: Trust Buster

A Look Back at Our Rough-Riding, Tough-Talking 26th President And His Long History of Busting Trusts: Emotional Trusts

1903
At a summer retreat for politicians and industrialists, Roosevelt is paired up with oil baron John D. Rockefeller. In one of the ice-breaker activities, Rockefeller lets himself fall backwards, trusting that Roosevelt will catch him. Roosevelt instead steps aside and lets Rockefeller crash to the floor. “Bully!” he exclaims.

1906
On his 48th birthday, financier J. P. Morgan comes home to find all the lights are out. Inside, his family, co-workers, and lifelong friends wait in the dark to surprise him. At the door, Morgan is intercepted by an inebriated Teddy Roosevelt, who bellows, “It’s a surprise party! Didn’t you notice all of the carriages parked outside? Bully!”

His wife bursts into tears. “But President Roosevelt,” she says, “You promised not to tell!”

“Poppycock!” guffaws Roosevelt, and boxes Morgan about the shoulders.

1875
In 10th grade, Teddy Roosevelt has a “cool” teacher for his World Civilization class. He lets his students call him by his first name, always volunteers to chaperone school dances, and uses the honor system for grading. Every student gets to choose their own grade based on what they feel they earned over the course of the semester. Even though Roosevelt missed an entire month of school hunting big game in Africa, and did not do a lick of makeup work, he still claims that he deserves an “A.”

Much to the chagrin of the other students, the teacher changes his grading policy the very next year.

1902
To facilitate the expansion of the American Navy, Teddy Roosevelt negotiates with Colombia in order to build a canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. After Colombia’s Senate rejects the land sale, Roosevelt backs a revolution in Panama, then makes a deal with the new government there. When Colombian leaders object, Roosevelt advises them to speak softer, and acquire bigger sticks. Further protests are silenced with the arrival of American troops, and a resounding “Bully!”

ASUC Fights Fire with Paper

ASUC senators this week passed a bill requesting that UC Berkeley students “please stop getting caught in fires,” along with formally condemning those who do. Actually dying in fires is particularly frowned upon in the hard-hitting bill, which offers more lenient disapproval for those who successfully escape fires by jumping out second-floor windows.

“Home fires in Berkeley are becoming all too common this year.” said ASUC President Alex Ding, who felt the student government should do its part to prevent further blazes. “The ASUC stands united as an organization firmly opposed to tragedy,” Ding added, lauding the bill as a welcome return to relevant Senate business which directly benefits students.

Chronicles of a Persian Childhood

A Persian upbringing instills in a child a sense of family, a commitment to education, and strong moral values. Unfortunately, this upbringing is also full of brutality, humiliation, and constant mockery. To survive childhood, a Persian child must endure sufficient abuse to form both a physical and emotional callous. In fact, most Persians reach adulthood unable to express their emotions through anything but satirical writing.

Stage 1: Early Trauma

My earliest memory was from when I was three. I suspect that most people have a sweet first memory – breaking a pi+A|ata, or riding a pony on their birthday. My first memory, however, begins with a cordial gathering of Persian friends in a New York park. I, clad in my bright blue bathing suit with a snazzy red racing stripe, was frolicking along the shore of the river. Without warning, a “family friend” decided to teach me the fundamentals of swimming.

“He’ll learn to swim like this,” he exclaimed, and I was catapulted into the raging river. As I bobbed up and down, futilely waving my helpless three-year-old arms, I could just barely glimpse the satisfaction on his face as he stood on the shore, chuckling with my parents about what a strong swimmer I was becoming.

Stage 2: Pain and Humiliation

The extent to which a child’s body can be stretched and manipulated was thoroughly tested by my Persian upbringing. Any random stranger who met the requirements of being both Persian and older than me had free reign to pinch, stretch, or poke most regions of my prepubescent body.

One strange physical challenge came when one of the “family friends” would take my delicate wrist and bite down until pain numbed my entire body. I was left with multiple quarter-inch teeth marks in a circular arrangement just above my hand. Invariably, the explanation for such brutality was, “You see, now you have a watch.” And then laughter.

But I had never truly worn a watch; I only had a throbbing bruise that gave me no clue as to the time of day. I do not remember when or how I received my first “watch,” but the conglomeration of all those memories is enough to give me an aversion towards actually wearing a timepiece on my wrist.

Still worse than this was a custom known as “Bol-bollesh talahst,” which loosely translates to “His balls are gold.” No matter how many times this happened to me, I never really got used to it. A relative would utter the phrase, “His balls are gold,” and then lunge violently at my groin area. I guess this boosted my scrotal self-esteem, but I have an unfortunate reflex reaction in certain intimate settings as a result.

Stage 3: Continuous Mockery Throughout Life

Along with the physical abuse and personal discomfort that comes with a Persian childhood is an equally important dimension of embarrassment and humiliation. If my friends were visiting, ones who respected and admired me, my parents would choose that time to discuss my history of bed-wetting. If I said the house was cold and perhaps we should turn on the heat, my dad would respond by telling me “biah tueh kooneh man beekhab,” or “come sleep in my ass.” And then laugh.

Recently, when I was home for a visit, our dinner conversation centered around my lack of success with women. My parents spent nearly an hour laughing about how my twelve year old brother would probably get married before me. As the mockery continued, I was tempted to bite down on my own wrist, in hopes that it might distract me from the emotional pain.

Conclusion:

Just as a concerned shopper wants the most durable and affordable Teflon pan, the Persian community is equally concerned with the durability of its children. Those children that are slow to adapt to raging rapids, bruising, bleeding, and mental anguish will probably not live past the age of seven.

In a way, I’m looking forward to having children of my own. I plan on keeping many of the older traditions intact, but I’ve contemplated some new ones, such as the ability of a five year-old to adapt to speeds of over 60 mph while strapped to the hood of an automobile. It is important for the next generation to adjust to the fast pace of today’s society at an early age, one painful, traumatic, emotional scar at a time.

Whiteout in Wyoming

Monday, February 21st
I flew separately from the family on our vacation to Jackson Hole. On the plane, I am stuck between Babushka one and Babushka two, who seem to be doing crosswords in Russian. I flip through the Skymall catalogue, mentally scoffing at anyone who orders from it. Connecting with the family in Denver, Mother mentions she bought a drop-down screen for the back door on Skymall. “It’ll be perfect for the family,” she notes.

Some knowing people whisper “There’s Air Force Two,” and in fact, Dick Cheney’s plane is sitting on the tarmac. “Is he the President or the Vice-President?” my brother asks. “Vice-President,” my Dad replies. “Oh yeah, because it’s Air Force Two and not One,” my brother replies.

In the airport, I jokingly mention to my dad that I have yet to see any minorities. We both look around and see lots of white people. “Lets make a bet,” he says, “first person to see a minority wins a dollar.” I agree.

Tuesday, February 22nd
Our house is right on the slopes of Jackson Hole. We tend to go all out for rooming, since for the past four years we’ve had a blizzard wherever we go skiing. It blizzarded in Kirkwood, Park City, Vail, and partly at Whistler. It didn’t blizzard in Mammoth because it rained.

It is, in fact, snowing, and we find that a giant cloud has settled over the mountain. You’ll go up to a certain point on the mountain, and the giant fog bank will cut off all visibility. “We should get above it,” my dad says. “If we get above it, we’ll have to ski into the cloud,” I point out. “Yeah, but we still need to get above it.” he replies.

On one of the lifts there is a tree below us decoratively covered with bras. I’m struck by the many colors and styles, but right in the middle there’s a pair of boxers. “I wish someone would take the boxers out. It kind of wrecks the tree,” my brother critiques. I agree. We go to dinner at a rib joint. Minority count: 0.

Wednesday, February 23rd
It is blizzarding. My spirit is broken. I stay in bed and watch a Pokemon marathon while the family goes out. Unfortunately, they’re all reruns. They have me keep one of the walkie-talkies, so I get to hear their conversation. “I can’t see you guys!” “We’re standing next to the big sign.” “So am I!” “Oh, there you are. I didn’t see you with the fog.” “That’s not us.” I decide I am a Weather God. There is no other explanation for how clouds follow me to major ski resorts.

After lunch, I head out with everybody. In accordance with my Weather God theory, the wind kicks up and the storm gets heavier. My brother and I decide to go home. “We should take that route,” I say, pointing to an area slightly to the right of a double-black cliff. “OK,” says my brother, and jumps off the cliff. Feeling some obscure family loyalty, I follow him. Forty minutes later, I emerge, carrying my skis and covered in snow. That day, we see no minorities.

Thursday, February 24th
Today we go snowmobiling. Sitting in the lodge, my dad and I watch the door as the first minority of the week walks in. His name is Will. He’s Asian. We will be snowmobiling with him and his fiancee, Amy. She’s white. Since we saw him simultaneously, nobody collects on the bet. We consider rock-paper-scissors to settle the matter, but discard the idea. After snowmobiling, the family goes to dinner. “You know, Berkeley has made you a lot weirder,” my mom remarks. My brother then walks up to me, cocks a leg, and lets fly with a fart. The family laughs.

Friday, February 25th
I go home early. The plane ride is unexceptional, and the clouds follow their beloved back to Berkeley. My cab driver’s name is Ahmed. I tip him extra.

What am I going to do with myself?

Frank was a 22 year old recent Cal graduate, and he didn’t know what he was going to do with himself. The summer after graduation had struck him like a thunderbolt, and when he regained rational thought he noticed it was already June 10, 2001. No job, no money, no plans, doubtful future. He almost regretted not backpacking around Europe with some friends of his till he remembered his intense hatred of backpacks. As always, when faced with a great crisis in his life, he went out to the wood to be with nature, “to figure things out.” Typical of the prevailing ideas about drugs and nature, he ate some pot brownies to speed up the figuring out process. An ocarina hung ironically from a Buddhist prayer necklace. He had a sassy t-shirt on that said, “Buzzword.”

Sitting out on bump on a log in the woods, playing a shrill “I’m Just Watching the Wheels Go Round and Round,” he noticed a stray and mangy dog approaching. A wild dog, he was convinced of it. He wondered, If there aren’t any wild dogs now, wouldn’t that mean humans had to have caught them all? What a strange and pointless thing to do, to catch all the dogs just so we could have them all. At this point an attractive young lady passed by jogging, and Frank was momentarily distracted enough to look up. Why did I bother looking up at all? It’s not as if she’d stop and talk to me, she’s jogging. In fact, she’d probably be offended for objectifying her as a sex object. Disenchanted with the world, he started the hike back to his bed, realizing the pointlessness of being out in the visible world. He preferred quiet and private doses of regimented cynicism.

Waking up with a big pot hangover, Frank noticed it was 5:00 pm. Another day gone by without finding a job. The initial plan to help the government with a census (“civil servant”) proved more frustrating than anything; he kept missing the daily examination test, or forgetting his passport, or coming out of his driveway to see a huge tree cutting truck blocking the entire one-car lane of the street he lived on. Or he’d wake up twenty minutes before the test, tired and slightly stoned, futilely get in the car, hurry to Oakland with no chance of getting there on time, and then, somewhere on Telegraph stuck in lunch-hour traffic, feel the need to express his rage by screaming, FUCKING-A while pounding on the wheel. But of course, he never really hit the part of the wheel that made any noise. Here was a deliberate, polite young man. Of all the ridiculous and contradictory emotions, Frank specialized in impotent rage.

Tired of lying around the house, Frank went for a drive. The reality of 5:30 pm traffic on College Avenue kicked in. All these cars piled like a caterpillar trail in a self-inflicted dead end spiral, face to ass, face to ass, without a damn thing anyone could do. Why can’t we have more size efficient cars? Better laid out streets? Money, money, it always came down to money – transparent as a “Chevron cares about the environment” commercial on these two-lane traffic jam streets, the perfect embodiment of mankind’s vainglorious struggle. His dreams, vague ambitions and desires – how could he pick just one? Was there even a point, in this big money clenched fist ass-fuck of a world? How could he justify the money game when he gave up? When that ever-seeking source of resignation welled up and consumed his pride? The thoughts passed quietly, he felt a mild rage but mostly tiredness. Useless tears (i.e. tears) came to his eyes. A hot girl walked by in a tank top and short shorts, sunglasses and with a blue Slurpee, and without thinking Frank called out “Fiiiiine.” She turned her head, and embarrassed he looked away, The window was open. So he sat there, a blushing twelve-year-old with a humiliating erection. This is life.

Top Ten Ways to Disguise an Erection

  1. Penis Protection Program
  2. In a t-shirt that reads “This is not an erection”
  3. Give it a mustache and overcoat
  4. Cast it alongside mega-hunk Mel Gibson
  5. Drill a hole through the back of your backpack and hold in front of you
  6. Pin the head back with the elastic on your underwear
  7. Swing it from left to right really, really fast
  8. Put it in a vagina
  9. In camouflage fatigues behind a bush in the dark
  10. Behind a larger erection

Top Ten New Ethnic Clubs on Campus

  1. Invade me, I’m French

  2. Frisk my anal cavity for drugs, I’m Colombian

  3. Devalue my currency, I’m Japanese
  4. Kindly remove the war hammer I’ve embedded in your spine, I’m Mongolian
  5. Give me your fucking land, I’m American
  6. Help me to clean my windmill, plant my tulips, and make my cheese, I’m Dutch
  7. Force me to melt my housewares into rebar, I’m Chinese
  8. Split me into 300 tiny, warring states, I’m German
  9. Erect a fence around me, I’m Mexican
  10. Kiss me, I’m Irish

Top Ten Impossible Carnival Games

  1. Knock over three skyscrapers with a softball
  2. One of those games with a squirt gun and either galloping horses, or inflating balloons…
  3. Throw a dart and inflate the balloon
  4. Toss water into a dish floating on a pool of quarters
  5. Digest the corn dog
  6. Run over four pedestrians at once
  7. Shoot teeth out of the mouth of a clown that drinks five glasses of milk a day
  8. Actually whacking-a-mole
  9. Don’t look at the tits
  10. Bobbing for air

Top Ten Beatles Songs Popular in Nazi Germany

  1. Paperback Burner

  2. I Wanna Seize Your Land

  3. When I’m 64 Pounds
  4. Back in the USSR, Where We Lost Half of Our Land Forces
  5. Yesterday (Allied Forces Seemed So Far Away)
  6. Strawberry Fields Until the Allies Invade
  7. With a Little Help from the Japanese
  8. Yellow U-Boat
  9. A Hard Day’s Night of Broken Glass
  10. Hey Jew’d

Top Ten Hackneyed Movie Taglines

  1. A controversial film by Oliver Stone
  2. Where man is the endangered species
  3. Part x. Part y. All x
  4. By the producers of The Air Up There
  5. She?s the best cop in the world, he?s a dinosaur
  6. In the world of the future…
  7. Cum sluts cumming all over each other
  8. A Disney perversion of a classic fairy tale
  9. Starring Tom Hanks
  10. Her first mistake was falling in love