There is a book that was recently published called Short Flights. The book is an anthology of aphorisms contributed
by various writers, edited by James Lough and Alex Stein.
My brother Hart was one of the invited contributors. His definition of an aphorism:
“A joke that went to college.”
Which gives you a preview of what’s store.
Relinquishing this platform to my brother, I shall today
offer a sampling of his aphorisms.
I think they’re terrific.
You might see that as favoritism.
My response to that perception?
It is not favoritism if you’re good.
Okay, here we go.
Aphorisms
By Hart Pomerantz
Law school taught me
to take two situations that are exactly the same and show how they’re
different.
A president near the end
of his second term resembles an old stripper who has removed all her clothes
and still has twenty minutes left in her act.
Man’s need for answers
far outweighs his need for truth.
Never trust a country
whose army marches without bending its knees.
Should you be
considered an original thinker if you discover a new method of stealing ideas?
It is unfortunate that
no school teaches us how to fail properly.
In prehistoric times
whenever there was thunder, religion soon followed.
He was a type A minus
personality.
The less the
difference between people the greater the animosity.
All professions invent
their own jargon in order to charge you for the translation.
The rug must be held
responsible for its fringe.
Good stuff.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to read
ReplyDelete"The beard must not be held responsible for its point." --Aaron Aardvark, Esq.
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