APRIL 25, 2011

Trump Dogged By Rumors His Hair is Not From U.S.
So-called ‘Balders’ Movement Gathers Steam

NEW YORK (The Borowitz Report) – A threat to the fledgling
presidential campaign of Donald Trump emerged today, as a group of
activists charged that Mr. Trump is not eligible to hold the nation’s
highest office because his hair does not originate from the U.S.

The group, who call themselves “Balders,” claim that the hair-like
substance that crowns Mr. Trump’s head is from a foreign country,
which would mean that the candidate is less than one hundred percent
American.

“Time and time again, Donald Trump has refused to produce a
certificate of authenticity for his hair,” said Leeann Selwyn, a
leading Balder.  “This is tantamount to a comb-over of the truth.”

But if in fact Mr. Trump’s distinctive mane turns out to be of foreign
origin, such a revelation need not be fatal to his presidential hopes,
says Professor Davis Logsdon, who has studied the history of
presidential hair at the University of Minnesota.

“Remember, several of our greatest early presidents, like George
Washington and Thomas Jefferson, had hair that originated elsewhere,”
Mr. Logsdon says.  “The only thing that could kill Trump politically
is if his hair turns out to be from France.”

At a GOP event in Iowa, Mr. Trump made no reference to the Balders
controversy, and instead sounded an upbeat theme: “If I am given the
chance to do the same magic I did for NBC, America will be the number
four country in the world.”

In a piece of good news for Mr. Trump, a new poll showed a majority of
likely voters agreeing with the statement, “Donald Trump being sworn
in as President would be a great last scene in a Planet of the Apes
remake.”

[by Andy Borowitz]
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to