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Dave Barry's 2010 Year in Review

Let's face it -- 2010 was a disaster. A month-by-month reminder of just how

awful it was.

By Dave Barry

The Miami Herald

Saturday, 01.01.11

Let's put things into perspective: 2010 was not the worst year ever. There

have been MUCH worse years. For example, toward the end of the Cretaceous

Period, the Earth was struck by an asteroid that wiped out 75 percent of all

the species on the planet. Can we honestly say that we had a worse year

than those species did? Yes we can, because they were not exposed to Jersey

Shore.

So on second thought we see that this was, in fact, the worst year ever.

The perfect symbol for the awfulness of 2010 was the BP oil spill, which

oozed up from the depths and spread, totally out of control, like some kind

of hideous uncontrollable metaphor. (Or, Jersey Shore.) The scariest thing

about the spill was, nobody in charge seemed to know what to do about it.

Time and again, top political leaders personally flew down to the Gulf of

Mexico to look at the situation first-hand and hold press availabilities.

And yet somehow, despite these efforts, the oil continued to leak. This

forced us to face the disturbing truth that even top policy thinkers with

postgraduate degrees from Harvard University - Harvard University! - could

not stop it.

The leak was eventually plugged by non-policy people using machinery of some

kind. But by then our faith in our leaders had been shaken, especially since

they also seemed to have no idea what to do about this pesky recession.

Congress tried every remedy it knows, ranging all the way from borrowing

money from China and spending it on government programs, to borrowing MORE

money from China and spending it on government programs. But in the end, all

of this stimulus created few actual jobs, and most of those were in the

field of tar-ball collecting.

Things were even worse abroad. North Korea continued to show why it is known

as "the international equivalent of Charlie Sheen." The entire nation of

Greece went into foreclosure and had to move out; it is now living with

relatives in Bulgaria. Iran continued to develop nuclear weapons, all the

while insisting that they would be used only for peaceful scientific

research, such as - to quote President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - "seeing what

happens when you drop one on Israel." Closer to home, the already strained

relationship between the United States and Mexico reached a new low

following the theft, by a Juarez-based drug cartel, of the Grand Canyon.

This is not to say that 2010 was all bad. There were bright spots. Three, to

be exact:

1. The Yankees did not even get into the World Series.

2. There were several days during which Lindsay Lohan was neither

going into, nor getting out of, rehab.

3. Apple released the hugely anticipated iPad, giving iPhone

people, at long last, something to fondle with their other hand.

Other than that, 2010 was a disaster. To make absolutely sure that we do not

repeat it, let's remind ourselves just how bad it was. Let's put this year

into a full-body scanner and check out its junk, starting with...

JANUARY

...which begins grimly, with the pesky unemployment rate remaining high.

Every poll shows that the major concerns of the American people are federal

spending, the exploding deficit, and - above all - jobs. Jobs, jobs, jobs:

This is what the public is worried about. In a word, the big issue is: jobs.

So the Obama administration, displaying the keen awareness that has become

its trademark, decides to focus like a laser on: health-care reform. The

centerpiece of this effort is a historic bill that will either (a) guarantee

everybody excellent free health care, or (B) permit federal bureaucrats to

club old people to death. Nobody knows which, because nobody has read the

bill, which in printed form has the same mass as a UPS truck.

The first indication that the health-care bill is not wildly popular comes

when Republican Scott Brown, who opposes the bill, is elected to the U.S.

Senate by Massachusetts voters, who in normal times would elect a crustacean

before they would vote Republican. The vote shocks the Obama administration,

which - recognizing that it is perceived as having its priorities wrong -

decides that the president will make a series of high-profile speeches on

the urgent need for: health-care reform.

In other economic news, Toyota announces a huge recall following reports

that its popular Camry model is behaving unpredictably - accelerating,

decelerating, downloading Internet porn and traveling backward in time to

unstable historical periods. This is expected to benefit Toyota's

competitors, especially troubled GM, which is hoping to score big with the

new "Volt," a revolutionary vehicle capable of traveling nearly six miles

before its 19,500 triple-A batteries must be replaced.

But January's biggest story, watched with growing alarm by observers around

the world and threatening to force the United Nations to intervene, is the

tense confrontation between Conan O'Brien and Jay Leno over who gets to be

on NBC at 11:35 p.m. and tell jokes until the viewing audience falls asleep

at 11:43. After a brutal struggle, Leno triumphs; O'Brien, vowing revenge,

flees into the hills above Los Angeles with a small but loyal band of

agents.

In other entertainment news, the runaway movie hit is Avatar, a futuristic

epic about humans who travel to an alien planet to mine a precious mineral

that they believe will give them the power to emit believable dialogue. This

being a James Cameron movie, they fail.

Speaking of alien planets, in...

FEBRUARY

...Iran triumphantly announces (we are not making this item up) that it has

launched into sub-orbital space a rocket carrying a rodent, two turtles and

several worms. Iranian state television reports that the nation's space

program is "peaceful," and that the rodent (we are still not making this up)

is named "Helmz 1."

In U.S. politics, President Obama, responding to the mounting public concern

about jobs, invites Democratic and Republican congressional leaders to the

White House for a historic daylong summit on: health-care reform. Despite

their deep philosophical differences, the two sides are able, after hours of

sometimes-heated debate, to hammer out an agreement on when to break for

lunch. They fail to make any progress on health care, although in his

closing remarks President Obama notes that the historic summit produced

"only minor furniture damage."

In business news, Toyota suffers yet another blow when a U.S. Department of

Transportation study links the Camry to both diabetes and the JFK

assassination. The CEO of Toyota appears before a congressional committee

and offers a sincere and heartfelt apology for his company's problems. At

least that's what his translator claims; it is later determined that what

the CEO actually told the committee was, quote, "you have an eggplant in

your bottom."

Speaking of apologies: Tiger Woods delivers a nationally televised speech in

which he says he is very, very sorry and has sworn off having sex with as

many as eight different hot women per day. His golf game immediately goes

into the toilet.

In other sports news, the Vancouver Winter Olympics begin on an uncertain

note when it is discovered that Vancouver - apparently nobody realized this

ahead of time - is a seaside city with a mild climate, so there is no snow.

This hampers some of the competition, as for example when the Latvian

cross-country ski team gets bogged down in mud and is eaten by alligators.

Despite these setbacks, the games are deemed a big success, at least by the

Canadians, because they won in hockey.

In Super Bowl XMLLMMXVIIX, the underdog New Orleans Saints defeat the

Indianapolis Colts, setting off a celebration so joyous that people on

Bourbon Street are still throwing up.

Speaking of celebrations, in...

MARCH

...Democratic congressional leaders, responding to polls showing that the

health-care bill is increasingly unpopular with the public, manage, with a

frantic, last-minute effort, to pass the health-care bill, or at least a

giant mass of paper that is assumed to be the health-care bill. This leads

to a triumphant White House signing ceremony, the highlight of which is Vice

President Joe "Joe" Biden dropping the f-bomb moments before being hustled

off by aides to have an important meeting with somebody important.

Everyone at the ceremony agrees that the new law is historic and will become

hugely popular with the American people once they have the opportunity to

hear a few dozen more high-profile speeches about it from President Obama.

But opposition is "brewing" in the form of the Tea Party movement,

consisting of regular Americans who are fed up with costly big-government

programs except for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. They are

determined to elect a new breed of representatives who are not career

politicians, or even necessarily sane.

In international news:

* Greece asks the International Monetary Fund if it can borrow 17

billion euro for "cigarettes."

* Somali pirates, becoming increasingly brazen, seize the Staten

Island Ferry.

* Iranian hero space rodent Helmz 1 is captured attempting to

scurry across the Lebanese border into Israel. Iran claims this is a

peaceful mission, but the Israelis note that Helmz 1 is wearing

a tiny backpack filled with enough explosives to - in the words of one

military analyst - "put somebody's eye out."

On a more hopeful note, on March 27 people in more than 4,000 cities around

the world turn off their lights in observance of Earth Hour, saving an

estimated 45 million megawatts of electricity - enough to power one of Al

Gore's houses for nearly three days.

But the environment suffers a big setback in...

APRIL

...when the Deepwater Horizon rig explodes in the Gulf of Mexico after being

struck by a runaway Toyota Camry. BP initially downplays the magnitude of

the problem, claiming that the resulting oil leak is smallish and might go

away on its own or even prove to be, quote, "nutritious for oysters." Soon,

however, large patches of crude oil are drifting toward land, and it becomes

clear that this is a major disaster - a challenge that we, as a nation, will

have to meet, as we have met other challenges, with a combination of photo

opportunities, lawsuits and tweeting.

Elsewhere on the disaster scene, Iceland's Eyjafjallajökull (literally,

"many syllables") volcano erupts, sending huge clouds of ash into the

atmosphere and forcing airlines throughout northern Europe to ground all

flights. Greece, although not directly affected, announces that it will take

six months off, just in case; France, as an added precaution, surrenders.

In domestic news, Arizona passes a controversial new law designed to crack

down on illegal immigrants; this draws a sharp rebuke from the Mexican

government, currently headquartered in Tucson.

President Obama outlines his bold vision for the U.S. space program, calling

for a manned mission to establish comprehensive health-care reform on Mars

by 2030. The president also signs a historic arms-reduction treaty with

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev under which both countries will destroy

one-third of their older nuclear missiles by upgrading them to Windows

Vista. In a related development, Iran purchases $78 million worth of used

nuclear-missile parts on Craigslist.

Speaking of growing menaces, in...

MAY

...the pesky Deepwater Horizon oil spill dominates the news as BP tries a

series of increasingly desperate measures to plug the leak, including, at

one point, a 167,000-pound wad of pre-chewed Juicy Fruit. President Obama,

eager to show that he is on top of the situation, develops severe forehead

cramps from standing on the shore and frowning with concern at the water.

Meanwhile, Congress holds televised hearings that establish, beyond any

reasonable doubt, that Congress is very upset about, and totally opposed to,

large oil spills. Despite these heroic efforts, the leak continues to grow,

and by the end of the month is threatening suburban Des Moines.

On the terror front, New York City police, alerted by Times Square street

vendors, discover a smoking SUV packed with explosives - a violation of many

city ordinances, including the ban on smoking. Fortunately, the car bomb is

disarmed, and a suspect is later captured at Kennedy Airport by sharp-eyed

TSA officers trained to spot suspicious behavior.

Ha ha! Just kidding, of course. The suspect is captured by U.S. Customs

agents at the last minute after boarding a Dubai-bound plane filled with

passengers who, like the suspect, had all been carefully screened by the TSA

to make sure they were not carrying more than three ounces of shampoo.

In other air-travel news, the boards of directors of United and Continental

approve a merger that will create one of the world's largest airlines, with

a combined total of 700 planes, 88,000 employees, and nearly two dozen

packets of peanuts.

But the big financial news is the May 6 stock market "Flash Crash." The Dow

at one point is down nearly 1,000 points, including a drop of 600 points in

five minutes, resulting in what financial analysts say is the largest mass

purchase of emergency replacement underwear in Wall Street history. The SEC

investigates the crash and later issues a 350-page report concluding: "You

know that eTrade baby? In the commercials? With the grown man's voice?

That baby is REAL."

Abroad, thousands of people riot in the streets of Athens to protest a

report by the International Monetary Fund concluding that Greece should

"think about maybe getting a part-time job."

In sports, yet another major-league pitcher pitches yet another perfect

game, and the baseball world wets its collective pants, because there is

nothing more exciting to a true baseball fan than a game in which one of the

teams can't even manage to get on base.

The excitement mounts in...

JUNE

...as the Deepwater Horizon oil leak continues to gush, with each day

bringing alarming new media reports claiming that it is an even worse

environmental disaster than had been reported the previous day. The furor

culminates in a New York Times story stating that eventually all the oil in

the world will leak out through the hole in the Gulf floor and cover the

entire planet with a layer of oil 27 feet deep, which, according to The

Times, would be "potentially devastating for polar bears." BP attempts to

stop the leak using a high-tech robot submarine, only to see the effort fail

when the sub is seized by Somali pirates. In Washington, the CEO of BP

appears before an angry House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations,

which votes unanimously, after 7 1/2 half hours of testimony, to give him a

noogie. Still, somehow, the oil keeps leaking.

Rolling Stone magazine publishes a controversial article in which Gen.

Stanley A. McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, is quoted as

saying that the Beatles' version of Twist and Shout is better than the Isley

Brothers.' President Obama has no choice but to relieve the general of his

command.

Abroad, U.S. intelligence intercepts a top-secret cable from Iran to North

Korea, apparently written in code, stating: "Thanks for selling us the

buclear beapons." In response, the U.S. threatens to impose harsh new

sanctions that, in the words of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, "will

make the previous harsh sanctions that we threatened to impose seem like

only moderate threatened sanctions, and this time we are not kidding

around."

On the world economic front, thousands of rock-throwing rioters take to the

streets of both Athens and Rome to protest punishing new austerity measures

under which they would no longer be provided by the government with free

rocks.

In consumer news, Apple finally releases the long-awaited iPhone 4, which

incorporates many subtle improvements, the cumulative result of which is

that it can neither make nor receive telephone calls. It is, of course, a

huge hit.

In sports, the World Cup gets underway in South Africa; despite fears of

violence, the massive event is totally peaceful, except for the estimated

13,000 people who leap to their deaths from the tops of stadiums to escape

the sound of the vuvuzelas. The early tournament highlight (which we are

not making up) is provided by the French team, which, after getting off to a

bad start, goes on strike.

Speaking of bad, in...

JULY

...the Deepwater Horizon oil spill officially becomes, according to the news

media, the worst thing that has ever happened, with environmental experts

reporting that tar balls have been sighted on the surface of the moon. Just

when all appears to be lost, BP announces that it has stopped the leak,

using a 75-ton cap and what a company spokesperson describes as "a truly

heroic manatee named Wendell." Although oil is no longer leaking, much

damage has been done, so this important story remains the focus of the

nation's attention for nearly 45 minutes, after which the nation's attention

shifts to Lindsay Lohan.

In other national news, Congress passes and President Obama signs into law a

financial-reform act designed to curb Wall Street excesses by mandating the

death penalty for anybody caught wearing a watch costing more than a house.

Having guaranteed that the financial community will behave in a responsible

manner, Washington returns to the important work of running up the deficit.

On the foreign economic front, anger builds over plans by the governments of

both Greece and France to raise the retirement age, which means workers

would have to continue striking for several years longer before they could

start collecting pensions. In protest, everybody in both nations goes on

strike.

In the World Cup final, Spain defeats Holland, only to have the trophy

snatched away by the North Korean team, which, despite a U.S. threat of

"really, really harsh sanctions," turns it over to the Iranian team, which

was not even in the tournament. Eerily, all of this was predicted by a

psychic octopus named Paul, who is immediately hired by Goldman Sachs.

But the big sports story is the decision by LeBron James, announced in a

one-hour television special watched by a worldwide audience estimated at 127

billion, to take his talents to South Beach and play for the Miami Heat,

where he will join Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Michael Jordan, the late Wilt

Chamberlain and Jesus to form a dream basketball team so supremely excellent

that it cannot possibly lose, not even one single game, EVER, in theory.

Miami erupts in a joyous weeks-long victory celebration. During the

excitement Fidel Castro dies, an event that goes unreported in The Miami

Herald, which has devoted all its staff resources to a nine-part series

speculating on whom LeBron will select as his dentist.

The month ends on a troubling note as the United Nations Security Council

votes unanimously to send a peacekeeping force to quell Mel Gibson.

Speaking of troubling, in...

AUGUST

...concern over the direction of the U.S. economy deepens when Federal

Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, in what some economists see as a sign of

pessimism, applies for Canadian citizenship.

In other economic news, the first family, seeking to boost Gulf tourism,

vacations in Panama City, where President Obama, demonstrating that the

water is perfectly safe despite the oil spill, plunges in for a swim. Quick

action by the Secret Service rescues him from the jaws of a mutant 500-pound

shrimp sprouting what appear to be primitive wings. The first family hastily

departs for Martha's Vineyard to demonstrate that the water is also

perfectly safe there.

Speaking of getaways: JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater becomes a

national sensation when he curses out a passenger, deploys the evacuation

chute, grabs two beers and slides out of the plane. He is immediately hired

as director of customer relations by the TSA.

In the month's most dramatic story, 33 copper miners in Chile are trapped

2,300 feet underground following a cave-in caused by a runaway Toyota Camry.

The good news is that the men are still alive; the bad news is that the only

drilling equipment capable of reaching them quickly belongs to BP. Informed

of this, the men elect to stay down there for the time being.

In legal news, Elena Kagan is sworn in as the newest Supreme Court justice,

having established, in three days of testimony before the Senate Judiciary

Committee, that she went to either Harvard or Yale. Elsewhere, a federal

jury deadlocks on 22 of 24 charges against former Illinois Gov. Rod

Blagojevich, convicting him only of, quote, "being some kind of enormous

rodent." Outside the courtroom, Blagojevich tearfully thanks his supporters,

then robs a convenience store.

In New York City, the big issue is a proposal to build, two blocks from

Ground Zero, a Muslim community center that proponents claim will promote

dialogue. Even in the purely conceptual phase it promotes a huge amount of

dialogue, to the point where National Guard troops may need to be called in.

Another heartwarming interfaith story erupts in...

SEPTEMBER

...when Terry Jones, pastor of a tiny church in Florida, declares that he

will proceed with plans to burn a Koran on 9/11. The media, recognizing that

this is not really news, ignore him, and the matter is quickly forgotten.

But seriously: Jones becomes a major international story, comparable in

magnitude to all of the Kardashians combined. President Obama speaks out

against Jones' plan, as do members of Congress, the military and virtually

every American religious leader; abroad, there are fatal riots. Finally,

after a great deal of soul-searching TV exposure, Jones decides not to burn

the Koran, explaining, "I finally figured out that I'm just an

attention-seeking jerkwater idiot." The news media vow never again to

encourage this kind of mindless hysteria. Abroad, the rioters agree to stop

taking everything so darned seriously.

Getting back to reality: The 2010 election season enters its final days with

polls showing that Congress enjoys the same overall level of voter

popularity as hemorrhoids. Incumbents swarm out of Washington and head for

their home districts to campaign on the theme of how much they hate

Washington, in the desperate hope that the voters will return them to

Washington. President Obama, basking in the glow of the health-care reform

act, offers to campaign for Democratic candidates, only to find that many of

them have important dental appointments and are unable to join him on

whatever day he is planning to visit. Adding zest to the Republican stew is

the presence of many "Tea Party" candidates, including Delaware Senate

hopeful Christine O'Donnell, who at one point in her campaign releases a TV

commercial that begins with her stating, in a calm and reassuring tone, that

she is not a witch.

Meanwhile in Chile, an attempt to deliver food to the 33 trapped copper

miners ends in a tragic accident involving what mining officials describe as

"an incredibly courageous Domino's driver."

Speaking of tragic, in...

OCTOBER

...the U.S. economy suffers another blow as the Federal Bureau of Never

Expecting Unemployment To Be As High As It Actually Is reports that, for the

37th consecutive month, unemployment is unexpectedly high. "Darned if we

didn't get fooled again!" exclaims a bureau spokesperson, adding, "We expect

it to be lower next month." Meanwhile Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke,

speaking from his new office in Toronto, announces a plan to drastically

increase the U.S. money supply by "quantitative easing," a controversial

process involving what Bernanke describes as "a major job for Kinko's."

The economy remains the big theme as the congressional elections enter the

home stretch, with incumbents from both parties declaring their eagerness to

go back to Washington and knock some sense into whatever incompetent morons

are in charge. Polls show that the voters are in a very cranky mood, which

tends to favor outsiders such as the Tea Party candidates, although

O'Donnell definitely hurts her chances in Delaware when, during a televised

debate, she turns her opponent into a toad.

President Obama, continuing his quest to find candidates willing to accept

his help, winds up campaigning in what White House spokesperson Robert Gibbs

describes as "some very key student-council races." Meanwhile Sarah Palin,

raising her stature as a potential 2012 GOP presidential contender, weighs

in on the issues with a number of important tweets.

On the legal front, the Supreme Court, as it does every October, begins a

new term, which is hastily adjourned when the justices discover that their

robes have bedbugs.

In the month's most dramatic story, the 33 trapped Chilean miners are all

brought safely to the surface, only to be sent right back down because they

failed to bring up any copper - which, as the mining company points out,

"was the whole point of sending them down there in the first place."

Meanwhile in France, millions of workers again take to the streets to

demonstrate, in no uncertain terms, that they are French.

Elsewhere abroad, terrorists in Yemen attempt to send mail bombs to the

United States, confirming the long-held suspicions of U.S. intelligence that

there really is a country named "Yemen." The plot, which involves explosives

concealed inside printer cartridges, is foiled, but as a precaution the TSA

decides to prohibit air travelers in the Unites States from carrying

anything capable of printing, including pens, pencils, and children in

grades 2 through 5.

In sports, the National Football League, seeking to reduce violence, imposes

stiff fines for defensive beheading.

Speaking of gory, in...

NOVEMBER

...the elections turn out to be a bloodbath for the Democrats, who lose the

House of Representatives, a bunch of Senate seats, some governorships, some

state legislatures and all of the key student-council races. Also a number

of long-term Democratic incumbents are urinated on by their own dogs.

President Obama immediately departs for a nine-day trip to Asia to see if

anybody over there wants to hear about the benefits of health-care reform.

Speaking of health: Some air travelers express concern about radiation from

the TSA's new high-resolution scanners, especially after screeners at O'Hare

are seen using one to make popcorn. TSA chief John Pistole insists that the

scanners are completely safe "as long as you move through quickly." He also

assures passengers that their body images "are not saved for any purpose

whatsoever, such as entertainment at the TSA Christmas party." Nevertheless

some passengers refuse to be scanned; they are required to undergo a manual

procedure that is known, within the agency, as "the full gerbil."

World tension mounts as North Korea, in what is widely seen as a deliberate

act of provocation, fires artillery shells at Denver. Meanwhile, in another

indication of the worsening global debt crisis, the directors of the

International Monetary Fund vote to have Ireland's legs broken.

The U.S. economy also continues to struggle, as the unemployment rate,

catching everybody by surprise, turns out to be higher than expected for yet

another month. The lone bright spot is provided by the president's

deficit-reduction commission, which, after months of work, releases a draft

of a tough plan that, if Congress can muster the backbone to enact it, would

reduce the deficit by trillions of dollars and put the nation on the path

back to fiscal sanity. This is a welcome bit of comic relief in the

stressed-out capital; everybody enjoys a hearty bipartisan laugh, then gets

back to maneuvering for the 2012 elections.

In other entertainment news, Bristol Palin's bid to win Dancing With the

Stars falls short when the judges throw out 147 million votes from Palm

Beach County. She winds up finishing third, behind actress Jennifer Grey and

Vice President Biden.

In sports, President Obama's upper lip is injured in a basketball game when

he is hit in the mouth by an elbow believed to have been thrown by North

Korea.

International tension continues to mount in...

DECEMBER

...with the continued release by Wikileaks of classified cables leaked from

the State Department, which apparently has the same level of data security

as an Etch-a-Sketch. The cables reveal a number of embarrassing diplomatic

secrets, such as:

The last three rounds of Middle East peace talks have consisted entirely of

delegates playing Twister.

* The Republic of Tajikistan and the Republic of Uzbekistan frequently, as a

prank, exchange places in the United Nations, and nobody has ever noticed.

* High-ranking officials of Scotland, speaking in private, admit that they

don't understand what the hell they're saying either.

* In 2007, Hungary paid $170 million to Russia for pictures of Sweden naked.

In domestic politics, a partisan debate rages over what to do about the

expiring Bush tax cuts. The Democrats, suddenly alarmed about the deficit,

want to raise taxes on people making $250,000 a year - or, as the Democrats

routinely refer to them, "billionaires." The Republicans want to extend tax

cuts for everybody, but compensate by cutting federal spending at a later

date using an amazing new spending-cutting device they have seen advertised

on TV.

Finally, President Obama and the Republican leaders reach a compromise under

which income-tax rates will stay the same for everybody, but the death tax

will be expanded to include people who are merely hung over. Also, in a

concession to the Iowa congressional delegation, the federal government will

continue to fund a "green energy" program under which corn is converted into

ethanol, which is then converted back into corn, which is then planted to

grow more corn. This will cost $5 billion a year, but it is expected to

create or save literally dozens of Iowa jobs.

President Obama, trying to sell the compromise, appears ambivalent, saying

that "it is less than ideal," but also pointing out that "it totally sucks,"

adding, "I hate it." Despite this smooth sales pitch, many Democrats are

unhappy. There is even talk of a primary challenge to Obama in 2012, a

notion dismissed as "nonsense" by Hillary Clinton, who speaks to reporters

while traveling on what aides describe as routine State Department business

in New Hampshire.

In another potential setback for the president, a federal judge in Virginia

rules that the health-care reform act violates the constitution's tonnage

clause. On the environmental front, delegates from 193 countries at the U.N.

Climate Change Conference in Cancún, Mexico, pass a resolution stating that

they should not have had those last four rounds of margaritas.

Time Magazine, in a controversial decision, names, as its Person of the

Year, Iranian space pioneer Helmz 1. In television news, Fidel Castro makes

a surprise guest appearance on The Walking Dead.

Speaking of entertainment: As the year finally draws to a close, all eyes

are on Seaside Heights, N. J., where MTV plans to ring in the new year by

dropping a ball containing Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi, one of the leading

bimbos of Jersey Shore. Millions eagerly tune in, only to find that the ball

has been attached to something that makes it drop slowly. A bitterly

disappointing end to a bitterly disappointing year.

But at least it's over, right? And we can take comfort in the fact that 2011

cannot possibly be worse. Unless, of course, this newly discovered asteroid

- maybe you read about it - continues on a trajectory that...

Try not to think about it. Have another margarita. Happy New Year.

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