<p>wait, I’m Jewish and I thought the article was funny. Are you telling me I should be offended? I thought it was making fun of L & C for being unable to attract as high a percentage of Jewish applicants as Reed. A little offensive to non-Jews maybe, even.</p>
<p>There’s a bigger issue here. I’m pretty sure that I’m objectively correct in my reading of this (mostly - I’ll admit that I don’t really know anything about L&C, and so am guessing a bit). I find it amazing that all sorts of people with clearly defective satire-reception-units (you should ask for your money back) are 1000% convinced that this article was offensive to Jews. Can we all agree that the business of being ‘offended’ and ‘outraged’ is clearly still in it’s growth cycle in the US in 2009?</p>