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Terrorism
traders take huge losses in single day of trading
Decision to close down Terrorism Futures
Market leaves investors holding the bag.
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| It
was mayhem on the trading floor when word came that the online
Terrorism Futures Market would be shut down after only one day
of trading. The CIA had little time to call off the coup and
assassination plots designed to create an alternate source of
revenue for the Agency. |
Des
Moines, IA.--Hubert
Willard, 67, former deacon of the Crestwood Baptist Church, lost
his life savings last week in search of a jihad jackpot on the Defense
Department's short-lived and much-maligned Terrorism Futures Market.
Willard
said he heard about the online futures exchange while having his
ritual sausage and biscuit breakfast sandwich at Vern’s diner.
“I
was looking through the paper during my morning constitutional and
saw the headline about the online futures market,” said Willard,
who now lives beneath an underpass on the outskirts of town. “I’m
darn good with a crossword puzzle and I’m a wiz at jumbles,
so I thought I’d probably be pretty good at predicting when
the president of Syria would catch a bullet to the head.”
Some of the possibilities the online market offered for sale were
the overthrow of the King of Jordan, the assassination of Yasser
Arafat, and a missile attack by North Korea. Bidders
would profit if the events for which they held futures occurred.
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| Hubert
Willard of Des Moines, Iowa got in over his head when he predicted
the second coming of Christ would coincide with the fall of
Baghdad. |
Logging
onto the web site, Willard entered his name and began to make
predictions on everything from the possible assassination dates
of Middle Eastern leaders to when a red heifer would be born in
Israel signalling the coming of Armageddon.
“I
got cocky," Willard said. I should have stuck to what I know,
which is chickens."
The
terrorism futures exchange drew fire from Republicans and Democrats
shortly after it was announced by the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) and was quickly shut down. However, during
the eight hours of trading that took place before it was taken offline,
Willard, countless CIA spooks, and thousands of foreign policy wonks
managed to lose their asses in the exchange.
"We
had already hatched a scheme to plant WMD's in Iraq," CIA operative
Hank Chalmers said. "It was going to be a bonanza for me. It
was a sure thing until the politicians got involved."
Aspiring
Palestinian suicide bomber Ahmed Saul Hamzi said he was planning
on making millions of dollars for his family by predicting the exact
time and place that he would blow himself up in a crowded Jerusalem
market.
"I
could have been in eternal bliss with my 70 virgins in heaven by
now and my family could be living like kings if only the futures
market would have stayed open just two more days," he said.
"This is just another example of why America is the Great
Satan."
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| Stock
traders were giddy with anticipation for the next unspeakable
human tragedy. |
Overcome
with forecasting fever, Willard cleared out his life savings and
invested the whole $43,000 lump sum into the market.
“I
knew there was no way that I could pay for it, but I just had a
gut feeling that Crown Prince Abdullah was about to bankroll a terrorist
plot against us American infidels,” he said. "I do read
the newspaper, you know. I had better than even odds that was about
to happen."
By
five o'clock in the afternoon, on the very day it opened, liberal
whining about the online terrorism futures market had grown to such
a shrill pitch that DARPA was forced to abandon the idea.
"I
am just outraged, outraged that this was even being considered,"
Sen. Tom Daschle (D-North Dakota) said. "I would even go so
far as to call this proposed trade in terror
outrageous."
But for those who hung their hopes on the exchange for a better
life, its closing was a setback. Willard sat beneath the underpass,
homeless and hungry, but still optimistic about his future.
“A fella' can make some pretty good pocket change if he knows
the right corner to stand on. Hey, that ain’t a rat is it?,”
he said licking his lips.
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