It
is a fact of life that bad things happen. Sometimes
they happen when you least expect them, such as,
while driving to work, waiting for your lunch order,
or sleeping near a box of markers. When you encounter
these bad vibes, remember to look up and note your
surroundings, to be sure that you do not take down
anything else with you.
Bad luck was started in the early 1600s when Maria
XI tripped over her royal sandwich maker and knocked
Sir Walter Raleigh into a regiment of troops practicing
their secrete “domino” formation. This
single event has cascaded throughout history, spreading
and propagating the negative force. In modern times
Bad Luck has become so common that it has condensed
into large clouds and slow moving systems of luck,
which can be predicted and mapped by modern meteorological
study. Modern Luck Forecasters have the sworn duty
of accurately predicting the good to bad ratio for
a given region on local television. From this the
populous can have an accurate idea of what their
“chances of getting away with it are”.
Last year 20,000 people were caught unaware by a
luck storm and ended up being squashed by a beluga
whale or eaten by a Bengal tiger. Through better
forecasting methods and research, these disasters
of luck can be predicted earlier and, maybe, one
day prevented.
When you find yourself in a large pocket of bad
luck known as a Simultaneous Hysterically Ironic
Thunder Storm, The Axis of Stevil asks that you
keep in mind the world around you and not transfer
the S.H.I.T.S. on to anything else. When bad luck
ends with you, it flushes the S.H.I.T.S. from the
environment making the world a happier more enjoyable
place. As a last bit of advice, remember, if you
are GOING to F it up, SAVE A WHALE!