There is a joke going around that goes something like this: Did you hear that Qusay and Uday are ed-day?
Clearly the humor is a play on the uncanny fact that the names of Saddam Husseins sons sound an awful like Pig-Latin verbiage. I pondered this notion as the sounds of laughter faded away from my most recent telling of the joke. I wondered, is there more to it? Could there really be a Pig-Latin connection to the Hussein family?
And what of the shadowy third son we have heard about in news reports. Does anyone really know what his name is? I think I do.
The third son disappeared from public view shortly after the first Gulf War in 1991. Is it a coincidence that shortly after that in 1995, halfway around the world a company was started in California with a Pig-Latin sounding name? Have you ever wondered why there is so much Saddam Hussein related memorabilia sold on E-Bay? Could it be that someone is proud of their father the tyrant? Could it be that lost and forgotten son, Ebay Hussein?
Youve probably noticed that there are many different spellings of Arabic names depending on which news source you are reading. The truth is that there is no consensus how to write Arabic words in English. If we are going to investigate Arabic names we must therefore use phonetic spellings. Saddams sons then become Koosay, Eebay, and Ooday.
Now if we translate those names from Pig Latin back into English we have Skoo Bee Doo. Is this a veiled reference to the cartoon dog from the 1970s, Scooby Doo? Can it be anything but that?
Well consider this. Scooby Doos final year of first-run shows was 1977. It was also in 1977 that Saddam Hussein came to power in the ruling Baath Party.
Coincidence? You decide.
Fine thanks!! :-) A nicer lurker can't be found.
Thanks for the ping, ms. feather!
ROTFLMAO!!!! Y'all have been having entirely tooooooo much fun without me and I'm laughing so hard, I can't think straight enough to come up with something to add.
I'm hangin' on to this gem!!
Wasn't this thread a hoot! LOL. We had lots of fun, laughing AND groaning. :)
I'm glad you decided to take the dare. Had some great laughs with this thread.
Where can you find Saddam Hussein? Try eBay
By Mary Anne Ostrom
Mercury News
Nobody can find Saddam. But he's all over eBay.
By Friday evening, 3,358 items popped up on a ``Saddam'' search of the online auctioneer. They ranged from the usual T-shirts, buttons and coffee mugs to the only-in-cyberspace variety.
Got $750, and you can claim the rights to Web site domain name ``damnsaddam.com.''
For a cool $1,800, be the first on your block with a lithograph of Saddam Hussein believed to be drawn and autographed by the late Jerry Garcia. Yes, the Grateful Dead's Garcia.
Or if you can top a bid of $426, a silver fork purportedly from a Saddam palace is yours. Vouching for its authenticity, the seller writes ``that it slipped in my pocket on my last visit in Baghdad.''
When it comes to commercializing current events, eBay beats everyone on the Web, attracting hawkers, hypsters and hoaxers to create frenzied bidding on items both real and imagined.
One listing offered the head of the giant Saddam statue that was toppled in a Baghdad public square, with a note that any prospective buyer must accept a few scratches. That was a Chicago-area man's attempt at humor. Not to be outdone, a group of office workers in Arkansas auctioned a chance to ``ride the head of Saddam Hussein through Baghdad!''
Not a fan of hoaxes, eBay pulled both listings down. The San Jose auction firm also yanked a listing that touted Saddam's presidential yacht, complete with a photo of a sleek ship. Saddam's yacht, in fact, is now only a burning hulk in the wake of the war.
Maybe it's hard to fathom, but Grateful Dead historian said the Garcia litho appeared legit: Back during the 1991 gulf war, ``Jerry watched TV and Jerry doodled,'' said Dennis McNally. Posted since Thursday, Jerry's rendition of Saddam, with a slightly psychedelic twist, had no bidders by late Friday.
Toilet paper stamped with Saddam's face, however, was moving fast.
EBay's popularity among the masses plus the media's fascination with bizarre bidding stories have helped make the auction platform into something of a political platform during eventful times in history.
``EBay is a wonderful place to get a lot of attention,'' said Tom Lease, a war supporter who set a minimum $750 bid a week ago for his damnsaddam.com domain name. No takers so far, but Lease is not disappointed. He's got the press coverage he had hoped for, with traffic to his political site growing to 100 hits an hour Friday.
The most popular Iraq-related listing on eBay is for ``Saddam dinars,'' a now virtually worthless currency used in Iraq. One brand new 5-dinar bank note, remarkably, had a $41 bid.
``Currency with Saddam's picture will never be produced again. Hurry before they are gone,'' urged the listing.
Some potential buyers said they wanted to have something to show their kids.
But cashing in on Iraq has left a bad taste in other quarters.
Lease says he was sabotaged by a mysterious bidder, who, using the eBay identity ``dontmakemoneyfromwar,'' appeared to have met Leaf's $750 reserve price but turns out not to have a working e-mail.
The bidder, according to eBay's public records, only started using that identity on March 28. And the only bids are for top-dollar items connected to Saddam, including the $426 fork and an autographed photo of Saddam Hussein kneeling on a prayer rug. Bidding has gone from $200 to $3,050 in a few days on the photo.
EBay spokesman Kevin Pursglove was not familiar with the mysterious bidder but said bidding on items and then refusing to pay violates eBay policies.
By Friday night, another eBay user,
roundsie90@msn.com, had become the top bidder on about 120 Saddam-related auctions, raising suspicions among eBay sellers about that user's motives.
Roundsie90@msn.com could not be reached for a response.
Authenticity likely will become a bigger issue in coming days, acknowledged Pursglove. He suspects real items from the fallen empire of Saddam will find their way onto eBay.
The owner of the Saddam autographed photo says he hopes the bids are legitimate, even if he admits he has no proof that the signature is in fact Saddam's on the item, which he says he bought after the first Gulf War from a dealer.
``How do you know? Have you ever seen his signature?'' he asked.