To: mandingo who wrote (7861 ) 5/29/1998 3:17:00 AM From: PartyTime Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18444
Party prefers Guinness. It's like food. Musician-types don't eat much. Not that they couldn't, of course. They might even like to. But when Party gets to Europe he'll drink Bud, with them (how ironic). When he gets to the Carib he'll confirm and reinvent the drink he once invented with the bartender last time he was there. (The same one? Probably not, but still a good drink.) The name of this drink? How To Make The World A Better Place. When he gets to Africa, he'll ask and learn: "What is a new and perhaps better drink?" Asia, as the economy recently has been, he and they will need something stiffer. But he'll drink with them too, whatever they have on the table. Maybe again make up something new. What concerns Party, more than Zulu, is what India and Pakistan are asking the world to buy. You can't drink that stuff. You see, it's not even like common shares. In fact, there's no sharing at all to such behavior. The drink is merely a sting of one to the other. I only wish our country, and the other nation many of us in America were conditioned to fear, didn't set the table on such a libation. And like it was when Party lost his virginity on the cliffs of Newport, it's still unfair to ask yet another generation to grow up in fear that they'll have no future. My Pakistanian and Indian friends? Please tell your countrymen and women to stop. There are other, much better and more needed things to do. Like sharing a drink, one with the other. Except for the inherent horrors of advertising, investing in Zulu might be a good distraction from nuclear bombs. Plus, if they'd stop igniting those things, others might--for the value of investing in the future--get into a position to have an opportunity to debate Jon Tara on whether or not even a Zulu investment is worthwhile. To me? It is! To him? It's not. But then again, he drops different bombs. Are his bombs so smart that they're intended? Only he can answer that question. I think the rest of us have a feeling of where we're gonna go. I only hope Pakistan, India and Jon Tara--note the credit I give him--are not too interruptive. Long on Zulu; short on bombs. Still I appreciate the true skeptic. Can Jon Tara truly hold that position? Will Pakistan and India stop the nuclear testing? Jon, can you describe the meaning, worth and purpose of the loyal opposition for us? And what do India and Pakistan's actions prove? Are either right? I don't think so.