Australia gets drunk, wakes up in North Atlantic
AUSTRALIA GETS DRUNK, WAKES UP IN NORTH ATLANTIC
Tired of Being Isolated and Ignored, Continent Isn't Bloody Moving
Sydney, 800 miles S. of Nova Scotia (SatireWire.com?) After what
witnesses described as an all night blinder during which it kept
droning on about how it was always being bloody ignored by the whole
bloody world and would bloody well stand to do something about it,
Australia this morning woke up to find itself in the middle of the
North Atlantic.
"Good Lord, that was a booze up," said a bleary-eyed Australian
Prime Minister, John Howard, speaking from his residence at
Kirribilli House, approximately 600 nautical miles east of Cape
Hatteras, North Carolina.
According to Australians and residents of several countries
destroyed or lewdly insulted during the continent's nearly
7,000-mile saltwater stagger, the binge began just after noon
yesterday at a pub in Brisbane, where several patrons were
discussing Australia Day (Jan. 26) and the nation's general lack of
respect from abroad.
"It started off same as always; coupla fossils saying how our Banjo
Patterson was a better poet than Walt Whitman, how Con the Fruiterer
is funnier than Seinfeld, only they're Aussies so no one knows about
'em," recalled witness Kevin Porter. "Then this bloke Martin pipes up and
says Australia's main problem is that it's stuck in Australia, and
everybody says 'Too right!' "Well, it made sense at the time,"
Porter added.
By 2 a.m., powered by national pride and alcohol, the
3-million-square-mile land mass was barging eastward through the
Coral Sea and crossing into the central Pacific, leaving a trail
of beer cans and Chinese take-away in its wake.
When dawn broke over the Northern Hemisphere, the continent
suddenly found itself, not only upside down, but smack in the
middle of the Atlantic, and according to most of its 19 million
inhabitants, that's the way it's going to stay.
"We sent troops to Afghanistan. You never hear about it. We have
huge government scandals. You never hear about it. It's all 'America
did this,' and 'Europe says that,'" exclaimed Perth resident Paul
Watson. "Well, we're right in the thick of things now, so let's just
see if you can you ignore us."
Officials on both sides of the Atlantic conceded that would be
difficult. "They broke Florida," said U.S. State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher. "And most of Latin America is missing."
Meanwhile, victims of what's already been dubbed the "Australian
Crawl" are still shaking off the event.
"Australia bumped into us at about midnight local time," said Hawaii
governor Ben Cayetano. "They were very friendly - they always seem
friendly - but they refused to go around unless we answered their
questions. But the questions were impossible. 'Who is Ian Thorpe? Do
you have any Tim Tams? What day is Australia Day?'"
"Fortunately, somebody here had an Unimportant World Dates calendar
and we aced the last one," Cayetano added.
Panama, however, was not so lucky.
"Australia came through here screaming curses at us to let them
through," said Ernesto Carnal, who guards the locks at the entrance
to the Panama Canal. "We said they would not fit, so they demanded
to speak with a manager. When I go to find Mr. Caballos, they sneak
the whole continent through."
When Caballos shouted to the fleeing country that it had not paid,
Australia "accidentally" backed up and took out every nation in the
region, as well as the northern third of Venezuela. They then made
up a cheery song about it.
By late morning today, however, not everyone in Australia was quite
so blithe. "We've still got part of Jamaica stuck to Queensland,"
said Australian army commander Lt. Gen. Peter Cosgrove. "I think we
might have declared war on it. I don't bloody remember. Maybe it's time
to go home."
Cosgrove, however, is not in the majority, and at press time, U.S.,
African, and European leaders were still desperately trying to
negotiate for Australia's withdrawal. But the independent-minded
Aussies were not making it easy. In a two-hour meeting at midday, Australian
representatives listed their demands: immediate inclusion in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a permanent CNN presence in all
6 Australian states, a worldwide ban on hiring Paul Hogan, a
primetime U.S. television contract for Australian Rules Football,
and a 4,500-mile-long bridge between Sydney and Los Angeles.
U.S. negotiators immediately walked out, calling the Australian
Rules Football request "absurd."
Copyright © 2002, SatireWire.
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