I like to think that I am a relatively smart woman.
The grades listed on my formal education transcripts say that I am.

*However* there are some things in life I just don’t get.

Here is a list… if you can explain to me why these things occur, I’d love for you to skool me!
In no particular order:

How is it that our Yale and Harvard educated U.S. president, despite having said the word oh, say, a billion times over the past 8 years, cannot pronounce the word “terror” correctly? The way Mr. Bush says it, it sounds like “turd.” Since when in the word “terror” pronounced “tuurrrr-urr?” And why haven’t one of his 50,000 aides corrected his speech yet? It’s sad that Heidi Klum better enunciation skills than our own president.

When will the US budget be balanced in a way that doesn’t expand the national debt? Why doesn’t our government make more of an effort to do so? Washington DC is populated by some of the most brilliant minds in the universe. Many of our elected officials have earned advanced degrees from prestigious institutions of higher learning. So why is it so hard to abide by the simple rule “don’t spend more than you earn?”

Is there really a “Kennedy” curse? Or, is this family more prone to tragedy because wealth and power provide access to “riskier” situations like flying a plane or becoming an assassin’s target? Or is it just that we hear about tragic circumstances that befall influential people more readily than those of “common” folks?

Why would have Prince Charles preferred Camilla over vivacious Diana? Even the “grass is greener” explanation just doesn’t make sense here.

Why, after the whole I’m-as-crazy-as-a-loon head-shaving incident, can’t Britney Spears get a decent set of extensions? Her old ones look like she has never washed them, and the new ones do nothing to camouflage her washed out puffiness. In fact, I think she is the new Courtney Love. ’Nuff said.
Speaking of bad behavior, why do Olympic athletes take steroids and act shocked when they get caught despite mandatory drug testing? Here’s a recap of the notable Olympians who have tested positive: Ben Johnson (most notorious not for his 100m dash time, but for bringing the use of steroids to light), Marion Jones (who will most likely be stripped of her three gold and 2 silver medals won in 2000 and may even face prison time), Bulgarian athletes Vanya Stambolova (European 400m womens’ champion) and high jump silver medalist Venelina Veneva, and most of the Greek weightlifting team who blamed their failed tests on a bad batch of ‘supplements’ from suppliers in China! Hmmmm. Anyone else note the irony of that claim since the Olympics take place in Beijing this year?

2008 Beijing Olympics

If you think that no one participating in the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics will test positive for using performance-enhancing substances, you would be mistaken. 80% of athletes surveyed at the Sydney Games admitted taking at least one substance and another 20% admitted five or more, and one ‘junkie’ admitted taking 26 different concoctions. Who do you predict will get caught during this year’s summer games?

Quick: Name the only two industrialized countries that don’t provide guaranteed paid medical or maternity leave for new mothers! Why, that’d be the United States and Australia of course! Out of 168 nations, 163 had some form of paid maternity leave. Aside from these two, Lesotho, Papua New Guinea and Swaziland are the only others on the list. (Can you even find those other nations on a map??? I can’t!)

Though five U.S. states offer some form of mandated paid leave, the remainder of mothers nationwide do not receive any guarantees of paid leave. The exception to this is the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) which gives 12 weeks of job-protected leave for people employed by companies with 50 employees or more. However, this leave is not paid. How ridiculous!

Why don’t we celebrate the philanthropy of billionaires more? Bill Gates, his fortune worth an estimated $32 BILLION, established the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to fight poverty and improve health and education around the world. In 2006, the foundation donated $287 million to help find a vaccine for AIDS. Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway’s chief executive, is committed to donating most of his $31 billion fortune to the Gates foundation, making it the biggest philanthropic contribution ever made.

In September, George Soros, the Hungarian-born financier and committed supporter of democracy around the world, said he would give $50 million over five years to help fight AIDS and poverty in Africa. Part of his donation will go toward providing HIV/AIDS treatment in 33 villages in ten sub-Saharan countries. Sir Richard Branson, the publicity-friendly entrepreneur behind Virgin Group, started an AIDS treatment center and pledged to donate up to $3 billion of profits from Virgin’s train and airline businesses to fight global warming.

James Sorenson, the genius inventor, left his entire $4.5 billion fortune to help disadvantaged children, schools and medical facilities in Sorenson’s home state of Utah. Blackstone co-founder Peter Peterson gave $1 billion to his own foundation, which hopes to raise awareness on America’s out-of-control federal deficit. David Rockefeller, the only living grandchild of Standard Oil founder John D. Rockefeller, gave $100 million to Harvard, the largest gift the school has ever received from an alumnus.

In 2006, gifts from 12 individuals totaled almost $35 billion. Why don’t these individuals get more positive press for trying to change the world?

How is it that America’s Most Wanted has captured 1021 criminals to date, and the US military can’t find Osama Bin Laden?

Michael Vick

Why are there so many professional athletes in jail? Some notables in the NFL Jailhouse Hall of Shame: Perhaps the most hated, vilified, and best known felon to make my list is Former Atlanta Falcon’s Pro Bowl quarterback Michael Vick. Vick is currently serving a 23 month sentence for running an illegal dogfighting ring out of his mansion.

Stupidity and criminal activity must run in the family… Michael’s younger brother Marcus Vick- a former Virginia Tech standout - was convicted of marijuana possession, contributing to the delinquency of a minor by having sex with an underage 15 year old girl when Marcus was 17. Later, in 2006, Marcus Vick pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct in connection with an incident in Suffolk, VA where a gun was pulled on patrons of a local McDonald’s! Though he briefly played for the Miami Dolphins, Marcus has been busy off the field. Since that time, the younger Vick has been arrested four times and is currently charged with DUI, misdemeanor eluding police, reckless driving and driving on a suspended license. Marcus Vick is awaiting his day in court.

Adam “Pacman” Jones had a lengthy rap sheet before entering the NFL, and has been arrested 6 times SINCE joining the Tennessee Titans. He has multiple convictions for assault, drug possession, and felony vandalism.  Most recently, Pacman was involved in a Las Vegas strip club incident last year that left three people shot and one man paralyzed. Just a few months later, Sadia Morrison - who was with Jones during the Vegas incident - was found dead in New York under suspicious circumstances. Coincidence?

Some other notable NFL criminals: St. Louis Ram Leonard Little was convicted of DUI and involuntary manslaughter for killing a woman in 1998. He was arrested again in 2004 for DUI. Former Carolina Panther Rae Carruth is currently serving a nineteen- to twenty-four-year sentence for conspiring to kill his pregnant girlfriend, Cherica Adams, and their unborn baby. Adams died of multiple gunshot wounds in 1999.

Some other names and cases you may have heard about: Former Green Bay Packers’ tight end Mark Chmura was arrested on allegations of third degree sexual assault on the girl that babysat for his two children (he was later found not guilty) and for providing underage teenagers with alcohol at a post-prom party.  Baltimore’s own hometown hero - the Ravens’ 9 time Pro Bowler Ray Lewis - was charged with double murder following a stabbing that left two man dead at a Buckhead club after the 2000 Super Bowl in at Atlanta. (He later accepted a plea bargain and testified against his former friends. Lewis plead guilty to a lesser charge of obstruction of justice, received 1 year probation and record $250,000 fine by the NFL.)

And the litany of “fallen heroes” continues:After Lisa “Left Eye” Lopez of TLC burned down their house after a fight, Former NFL star and Toronto Argonauts receiver Andre Rison became infamous. Just a few years later, Rison’s off-field woes continued, when Rison was sentenced to jail for failing to pay $107,000 in back child support. Tampa Bay Storm Arena League linebacker Darion Conner got fifteen years for drunkenly running over and killing bicyclist Jonathan Michael Conklin in September 2004. In 2006, Michigan State defensive back Cole Corey was sentenced to two to ten years for sexual assault and rape. An offensive tackle and a defensive end for Texas A&M were indicted for felony robbery.

In 2006, at least 35 NFL players were arrested on charges ranging from disorderly conduct to felony burglary. Not all were convicted, but how many NFL players have a criminal record stemming from prior convictions?

Certainly, football is not the only sport to see its share of “fallen heroes.” A 2004 survey found that a whopping 40% of NBA players listed on the 2000-2001 roster had a criminal record! Every major sport has been tainted by the stain of bad behavior. Obviously, money and fame does not exempt one from making bad decisions, but does, in fact, provide access to better lawyers. What would the outcome have been for these former “stars” if they were forced to use public defenders at trial? Would that have deterred them from committing these heinous crimes in the first place?

All in all, these are just a handful of the issues that I question and struggle with. What are yours? What makes you scratch your head and wonder why? Leave me a comment so we can open the discussion (and maybe even get some answers along with some spirited debate!)

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This is the first time I've nuggled this topic :-)