Rex Tillerson's State Department is Watch Operation Condor Onlinea cold and humorless vacuum, in which laughter suffocates, and smiles are forbidden.
And we know this how? Because there was an April Fool's joke, that the State Department did not like. Like all April Fool's joke, it was innocuous and silly. Unlike all April Fool's jokes, however, it was subject to the cold, calloused bureaucratic soul of the Department of State in 2017.
SEE ALSO: Trump falsely claims that nobody knows if global warming is realOn April 1, a blog that tracks happenings in Foggy Bottom published a fake "leaked cable." President Donald Trump's administration has been big on talk of cost-cutting, so the blog—Diplopundit—figured they'd poke fun at some cost-cutting measures at State.
The fake cable listed some of the ways embassies had cut down on spending. One embassy was using sheep to pick at their lawns, instead of hiring folks to cut the grass. Another was using the toilets less. And one embassy's thermostat was set to some excruciatingly cold temperature so as to reduce the money spent on heating. The cable also suggested that embassies should buy wine promoted by the White House.
Lol, unless you're Mark Stroh, the acting spokesperson for the State Department.
Stroh sent an email to Diplopundit about an hour after the fake cable went up. He called the cable "false, a forgery," and asked for it to be removed. The blog recounts all this in a post later that night, and says they took a while to respond to Stroh because they were "out doing errands, and then we watched the most recent episode of Scandal."
Stroh did notlike this, either. Four hours after his initial email, he sent another one, asking that Diplopundit take down the fake cable, in all-caps, "IMMEDIATELY." Instead, Diplopundit published both of Stroh's emails.
Sometimes April Fool's? Actually good, if, for nothing else, exposing the party-poopers and humorless among us.
Topics Social Media
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
It’s About to Get Really Girly by The Paris Review
Deep Emotion, Plain Speech: Camus’s The Plague by Laura Marris
The Distance from a Lemon to Murder: A Conversation with Peter Nadin by Randy Kennedy
Jottings, 2022 by Diane Williams
Corpsing: On Sex, Death, and Inappropriate Laughter by Nuar Alsadir
The Face That Replicates by Katy Kelleher
Memories of the Kennedy Administration by Peter Terzian
Have a Carrot: Picture Books by The Paris Review
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。