Britaine

hit counter


A blog by Frank Adey

Saturday, 25 December 2010

Christmas Day



After all these years of dreaming of a White Christmas, we've finally got one, and it's horrible. Temperatures are stuck below zero and transport is paralysed throughout Europe. I am spending Christmas alone (as I usually do) but this year I shall be making no attempt to find a pub with the usual pitifully limited opening hours. I am determined to stay indoors, and to venture no further afield than the garbage chute. So, a Merry Christmas to all my readers(if any)!

Saturday, 18 December 2010

In the Bleak Midwinter

The world outside my window is a composition in whites and greys as the snow drives in, silent and unstoppable. So, it's time for a warming chuckle from YouTube:


Tuesday, 14 December 2010

On the Twelfth Day of Christmas

This being the festive season I thought I'd post this little gem of a Christmas film from 1955. It was created by the multi-talented Wendy Toye, and the art direction is by Ronald Searle.




Friday, 10 December 2010

Bienvenue sur le Jeux Olympiques 2012!

English might be the most widely  spoken language on Earth, but it isn't good enough for the International Olympic Committee. It has ruled that French must take precedence over English at all ceremonies and medal awards; that all billboards must be displayed in French as well as English; and that the Union Jack must be flown fifth in precedence behind the Olympic flag, the London 2012 symbol, the United nations flag and the flag of Greece. Moreover, free hotel rooms must be provided for 40,000 Olympic officials, sports administrators and 'official guests'.
The last two Olympics left their host countries out of pocket after the show; hard to see the present beano causing a departure from the trend.
  Oh, and most of the media have picked up on the announcement that EU rules on the classification of explosives have been nodded into British law by our dozy politicians, with the result that Christmas Crackers ( a British invention, by the way) can no longer be sold to children under 16.  Merry Christmas!

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Frost and fog


The temperature is below zero, and likely to remain so for at least a week. I awoke yesterday to a remarkably dense freezing fog. Every twig and blade of grass was furred with white rime, and when the sun finally managed to leak through, it could be seen that the air was teeming with billions of tiny ice crystals. Meanwhile the Met office is still saying that 2010 could be the warmest year since records began. This is, of course meaningless; they are working in tiny fractions of a single degree centigrade, well within their own error margins - and they don't have the figures for November and December yet.
I presume that the statement was made as a propaganda device for the current Warmist's Sabbath in Cancun.

Sunday, 5 December 2010

Saturday, 4 December 2010

World Cup Woe?

So Britain's bid to host the World Cup has failed. Thank God, I say. Another massive expenditure of taxpayers' money has been averted. By 2018 we shall just about be climbing out of the financial hole into which the London Olympics will have dropped us. A pity no-one intervened to save us from that monumental waste of dosh.

Friday, 3 December 2010

Cancun Can Can

As bureaucrats, shysters and unclassifiable wonks converge on Cancun, Mexico, to flog the dead horse known as Anthropogenic Global Warming, this video gives us a foretaste of the horrors we shall all face in a warmer world.

Thursday, 2 December 2010

What's This? A new contender for Christmas No.1?

The debate over which single will make it into the top spot for Christmas has has been giving uninspired  hacks something to write about for years. This year, we may have an unexpected contender thanks to a television commercial by Littlewoods. It uses 'What's This?' from Tim Burton's 'Nightmare Before Christmas' by Danny Elfman as background music. Already I've come across a number of online queries as to what it is. Personally, I think it's great.

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Acronym Glut

I have long been concerned by what I call Acronym Glut, which occurs when a large number of meanings accumulate around the same set of initials. The commonest example is PC - standing for Political Correctness, Personal Computer or Police Constable, depending on context. Every acronym coined represents a little bit of meaning lost from the language. The fact is that, outside of chemical nomenclature, most acronyms could be replaced by the words which they represent, without too great an outlay of energy or time on the part of the writer. The greatest problem with acronyms is not that they may be ambiguous, but that they have no meaning at all to the outsider. Thus (and particularly in government or other large organizations) they create a ring fence around the doings of an inner elite.
Just to illustrate, here (mainly from Wikipedia) are the possible meanings accruing to the acronym CIF which recently stopped me in my tracks.

Ridiculous.

Thursday, 4 November 2010

Karl the Viking


When I was a man, I put away childish things, but not without a struggle. So I was happy to come across web references to 'Karl the Viking', a comic strip that kept me enthralled as a schoolboy. It made the weekly appearances of 'The Lion' comic unmissable. At the age of twelve I didn't realise that it was drawn by art legend Don Lawrence, nor that it was written by SF stalwarts Henry (Ken) Bulmer and Michael Moorcock. I just lapped it up thankfully. Apparently I was not alone in my appreciation; a four volume edition of the strips, produced a few years ago, now sells for £165.00 a copy.

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Nelson Turns in Grave - Official


What do you get if you crew a ship with two nationalities who don't speak each other's languages (and loathe each other) and stuff it full of nuclear weapons? You get the 'money-saving' agreement which Daft Dave has just signed with the French, and which begins the process of building of a European army. For God's Sake, get us out of Europe - fast.

Monday, 18 October 2010

Here Comes Winter


Herewith another photograph taken from my kitchen window, showing the first signs of winter. In the distance, a lake of white mist submerges the countryside; nearer to hand an iron grey frost has settled over the land. According to the pub pundits, the glossy red berries hanging heavily on every roadside bush foretell a bleak winter; according to the weather forecast, we may have the first snow this week.
And according to the diary, British Summer Time is still with us until October 31st.

Saturday, 16 October 2010

Instant Nostalgia



I'm reading a beautiful book by a chap called Mark Knowler. It is called Classic Brooke Bond Picture Card Collections, and reproduces twelve complete Brooke Bond picture card albums with every card in place. For me, it opened up a magic doorway to 1956, when I was nine years old and frantically trying to collect the Out Into Space series before they stopped issuing the cards (one in every packet of tea).  I never did get them all, but I had the half-filled album for years, with the cards messily glued in with rubber solution. Now, this book gives me a chance to see them all again. They are just as beautiful as I remembered them. And how interesting to see Mars depicted with 'canals', features that were seen, and mapped, by hundreds of widely separated astronomers - even though they never existed at all! There's a message there for the climate change boys.

Thursday, 14 October 2010

Ducking and diving


Sandwell MP Tom Watson has been questioning Arts Council England Chief Executive Alan Davey over the horrendous costs incurred during the constructon of the hideous 'arts centre' The Public (above). The building, erected in one of the poorest boroughs in England, went £49,000,000 over its already unjustifiable budget. The Wolverhampton Express & Star has printed the interview in full here, but for those too lazy to read it, here are a few highlights:





There's nothing like having the facts at your fingertips.

Sunday, 10 October 2010

Mean, Green advertisements


A little while ago I blogged about 'No Pressure' the disastrous video put out by 10:10. However, this isn't the first green ad to show a remarkable lack of judgement.Take the one above, showing hundreds of planes crashing into the Two Towers. The message was that the 9/11 atrocity was bad, but nothing compared to what nature can do (they refer specifically to the Boxing Day Tsunami). Needless to say there was an outcry from those who had suffered family losses in both disasters; WWF responded by saying that they knew nothing about the ad, a fib which swiftly exploded in their faces when the documents in which they had signed off the ad were produced. Tasteless - but wasn't the ad also pointless?
Then there's our next clip. which shows a hapless office worker being bullied and shunned for the sin of buying a 4x4. This one, too, was pulled from release almost immediately.




More recently, a grumpy juvenile hoody was recruited to threaten the punters:


Finally, an advert from 2006, which a little girl being hung as the block of ice beneath her melts.
Apart from being tacky, all these ads have one strange thing in common. They all stay a million light years away from discussing 'the science' on which their advocacy is supposedly based - because, I suspect, if they made such pseudoscientific claims within the context of an advertisement, they would immediately find themselves in court.

Thursday, 7 October 2010

Fog


Here's another snapshot from my kitchen window, intended to show What A Difference a Day Makes.
After a bright day yesterday, today finds the neighbourhood cloaked in fog.

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

Floral Spitfire

I almost forgot a final photograph from my tour of Birmingham yesterday. It is a Battle of Britain Anniversary tribute made entirely of flowers.

Conservative Party Conference

The conference was held in Brum this year, so I thought it might be fun to hop over there and study the milling throng. Besides, somebody might have been giving away freebies. Below are a few of the photographs I took.
Why is that girl dressed as a cow?  Because she is supporting a Friends of the Earth campaign called "Cheese for the Grater Good". She was also giving away tiny chunks of 'rainforest-free' cheese. As it turned out, one of those chunks of cheese (plus explanatory leaflet) was the only freebie I got - until the last moment, when somebody handed me a pack of the Top Trumps cards pictured below - created by their political pundit Adam Boulton. They are already selling on eBay for £2.00 a time.

Sunday, 3 October 2010

Adventures in booze

Getting a little tired of my usual tipple of cider, I tried something new. That's it above: Jeremiah Weed's Sweet  Tea Liquor, an American drink marketed exclusively by Wetherspoon's. You get a jigger of the liquor topped up with lemonade and ice. How does it taste? Well, like sweet tea, but as it is actually a tea flavoured vodka, it packs a punch which might well flatten the unwary. Notice the peculiar, but quaint, glass; the ads say it is 'served in the traditional jam jar'. A tradition, I suspect, which was invented by Wetherspoons.

And here's today's spelling mistake, courtesy of The Independent:

Saturday, 2 October 2010

"No Pressure" The Final Solution





Eco-fascism has come of age! Here's a preview of how climate skeptics will be dealt with when Der Tag finally arrives. The video - created by the rabidly climatist 10:10 campaign - has aroused such disgust across the web that the greenies have had to take it down from their site and from YouTube. Unfortunately for them, as fast as they take it down, concerned citizens stick it up again. Not unlike Whac-A-Mole.
Interestingly, not a murmur of this has yet reached the MSM (main stream media) unless you count the splendid James Delingpole's blog in the Telegraph.  Will the story be featured in the Sundays?
At any rate the crazies from 10:10 won't have lost money on the project. It was paid for out of taxpayers' cash, mainly through DEFRA.

October!


Why the exclamation mark? Because my birthday falls at the end of this month. For the young, birthdays are milestones; as you grow older, they become unpleasantly reminiscent of tombstones. This year, God help me, I shall be 63.





And, while I'm at the keyboard, here's today's spelling mistake, courtesy of Amazon.co.uk:

Thursday, 30 September 2010

Aima Indigo


The lady above is one Aima Indigo, a model operating out of London. I am featuring her photo because
a) She is an attractive lady, and
b) She is the first woman I have ever seen who is made more attractive by tattooing, rather than (as is usual) the reverse.

J.D. Beresford

I awoke yesterday morning with a name running through my head: J.D. Beresford.

Now, I frequently bring names and words back with me from dreamland. Sometimes they remain in memory long enough for me to Google them, just out of curiosity. Normally I draw a blank - but not with J.D.!
He turns out to have been a fantasy/SF writer who died in 1947. he was an influence upon (among others) Olaf Stapleton. And, as far as I can recall, I have never read anything by or about him in my life.
Odd.

Monday, 27 September 2010

Autumn approaching


Daybreak: the view from my window, veiled in misty rain. Over the last few days autumn has come into its own. There is a cold snap to the morning air, and the wind is fixed from the North. Does this herald a winter as cold as the last? Perhaps not. All the same, the signs from the Southern Hemisphere's winter (now retreating) are not good.

Friday, 24 September 2010

Stormy weather

I snapped the burgeoning storm clouds above at around 6.00 pm yesterday. What the picture doesn't convey is the speed with which the thunderheads were growing. The whole sky seemed to broil like a witches' cauldron. Within an hour we were treated to a violent electrical storm - the first this year. Impressive!

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Dogs having fun


In the centre of Wolverhampton town are a set of what used to be called 'dancing waters'  - fountains programmed to spurt in a variety of entertaining sequences. The local toddlers love these fountains,  running to and fro among them and shrieking with delight when they get showered with water. Well, it turns out that little humans aren't the only creatures that get a kick out of them - I snapped this picture of a couple of dogs behaving in exactly the same fashion.

Morning rainbow

Early on a dark, damp morning ... suddenly, the rays of the rising sun create a rainbow over the dingy rooftops of Wolverhampton. Taken from the window of my flat.

Saturday, 11 September 2010

Quackademia number 3: 10 strange courses


This post could be subtitled "How to Find Employment for Lecturers"
I lifted it from the Independent website, where it appears as one of those time-wasting 'slide shows'.
The lecturer of Zombie Studies is Arnold Blumberg. He wrote a book on zombie movies so is quite the expert on the topic, allowing students to watch classic zombie films and read zombie comics as part of the course.

In 2000, there was a big media backlash to Professor Ellis Cashmore introducing a module where students could study David Beckham at Staffordshire University. Football Culture is still a module within Sport, Media and Culture and the lecturer has since defended its inclusion, pointing out that Film Studies was once an absurd concept to employers.(Note to the Prof: it still is)

Known as one of the more traditional universities, Durham offers a unit in 'Harry Potter and the Age of Illusion' as part of Education Studies. Students can look at topics such as 'Muggles and magic: the escape from the treadmill and the recovery of enchantment' and 'Gryffindor and Slytherin: prejudice and intolerance in the classroom'.

Trekkies everywhere will be beaming at the news that Georgetown University offers a course in 'Philosophy and Star Trek'. Students can attempt to get their most pressing questions answered such as 'Is time travel possible?' and 'Could we go back and kill our grandmothers?'.

If you've got a penchant for all things phallic then Occidental College is the place to study. They offer a course entitled 'The Phallus' which allows students to look at everything from 'The whiteness of the phallus' to the 'lesbian phallus'.

A masters course in 'Psychology of Exceptional Human Experiences' allows students to look at Ghostbusters. The lecturer, Tony Lawrence, said back in 2006 "I went to see Ghostbusters when I was a kid and I thought that would be a great job. Of course the reality is a bit different, but that's when I became interested. We don't tell students what to believe but we help them investigate."

Queen's University Belfast offers an open learning course in 'Feel the Force: How to Train in the Jedi Way' which teaches the real-life psychological techniques behind Jedi mind tricks, as well as examining the wider issues behind the Star Wars universe, like balance, destiny, dualism, fatherhood and fascism.

Embedded within the MA in History at Nottingham University is 'The Robin Hood Studies Pathway'. Students can 'learn about the tales and ballads of one of England's most enduring medieval heroes.' They'll also get the chance to undertake an extended research project on a related work

Alfred University in New York offers "Maple Syrup - The Real Thing" as an honours seminar. The class looks into the profession of making maple syrup and how little has changed the production process.

The University of Glasgow offers students the unique opportunity of a fully-funded doctoral studentship on the 'History of Lace Knitting in Shetland'. On completion, the student will be registered as a postgraduate at Glasgow University and will benefit from the extensive doctoral training programme provided for all research students.

Saturday, 4 September 2010

Nothing changes.

Who said that? Cameron or Clegg? Neither. It was a quote (from 55 BC) by Marcus Tullius Cicero.
We don't seem to learn, do we?

Thursday, 2 September 2010

Designer DDT


Meow Meow, Spice, NRG-1 - the stream of designer drugs flowing from the laboratories of China seems (and probably is) endless. It seems to me, though, that the oriental chemists are missing out on a more lucrative (and genuinely needed) product.
I'm talking about DDT. The wonder drug, which eliminated malaria in the USA and Europe, was banned after claims were made (in Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring) that it could accumulate in the food chain and pose major ecological problems. Although the scare was debunked, it led to a world-wide ban on the use of the substance that is believed to have caused up to 30,000,000 unnecessary malaria deaths in the third world. The developed world hasn't lost much sleep over these (mostly infant) casualties, but things may be changing.
Bedbugs are back! The nasty little parasites are gaining a foothold in America and Europe. For the first time first-world commentators are calling for the return of DDT, but there is no sign of a change in the law yet.
In the meantime, the door of opportunity  has opened for China. Just give us something that is sufficiently similar enough to DDT to do the job, and different enough to evade the legal restrictions. You'll make a fortune!

Monday, 30 August 2010

Tender Loving Care?


All humans suffer sexual frustration at times, particularly the young, fever-fretted by high hormones and low self-esteem. What must it feel like when the path to fulfilment is blocked, perhaps permanently, by one’s own severe physical or mental deficiency?
  This is the problem which the TLC trust seeks to address by connecting disabled people to sex workers (i.e. prostitutes). For all that, I find myself out of sympathy with the project. Why?
Firstly, because Joe Public pays it for; so that those who would consider it immoral to patronise tarts themselves are compelled to pay for others to do so. Mainly, though, it is because it offers no ultimate satisfaction. I suspect that most of its clients want love and companionship, but are being fobbed off with mere sex. On their website, the Trust say:

Two stigmatized groups provide each other with triumph: sexually-deprived disabled people get laid, and sex workers gain a renewed pride in their work.

No mention of cash changing hands.

Personally, I don’t believe that prostitution brings anything but a sense of degradation to both the parties concerned. And here is a question to ponder; if the social workers that arrange these grim trysts are so concerned about their clients’ sexual rights, why don’t they ‘cut out the middle man’ and have sex with them themselves?

Saturday, 28 August 2010

Can I Be Arrested for this Poster?



Answer: possibly. I've just been skimming through the Olympic Games Act 2006, and it seems to empower the government to do just about everything short of nukeing parliament while the Games are in progress. In particular, Article 19 allows for the authorities to seize advertising (which seems, in their definition, to cover just about anything). So, here goes: put the cuffs on!

Friday, 27 August 2010

More Rubbish from the Papers

What? Is this public spirited lady being victimised for dumping litter in the bin? No, it was actually a CAT which she dropped in the litter bin. Another cock-up from The Mail.

The study warns nothing of the sort. It deals with the effect of forest fires on trees. When a tree is burned down, it ceases to absorb carbon dioxide. Naturally. The article also confuses CO2 with carbon monoxide. From the Independent.

Should be 'off' not 'of'. The Mail again.

Saturday, 21 August 2010

Piranha 3D


To the cinema to see Piranha 3D, a new cinematic gross-out. This is the sort of film of which they used to say 'they don't make films like that any more'. Well, now they do. Rarely have I  seen so much nudity and gore packed into 89 minutes. It is, obviously, in 3D - the cheap kind which is added after the film has been shot in 2D, and which betrays itself by the occasional appearance of the 2D 'ghost' of one characters seemingly appearing behind the 3D version. Most of the time, though, it is quite OK for purpose, and scores  a 3D first as one of the female characters vomits messily into the camera. The plot, insofar as there is one, concerns an earthquake which releases prehistoric piranha from a hidden cavern into a lake full of vacationing youngsters. From that point on all we have to do is sit back as the cast are converted systematically into groundbait. An unexpected bonus is an nude underwater  ballet by Kelly Brook and Riley Steele to the flower song from Delibes' Lakmé; it is erotic and at the same time beautiful.
  I almost forgot another cinema first; the titles contain a credit for The Association of Amputee Surfers.
 

Thursday, 19 August 2010

Today's spelling mistake

One more item for  my 'spelling mistakes where there shouldn't be any' collection. It comes from The Mail's website, and has been there since yesterday. And by the way, Amazon is still advertising the PAL DVD of Modesty Blaise with 'Dork' Bogarde.

Wednesday, 18 August 2010

Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved - Not!


"How Brilliant Computer Scientists Solved the Bermuda Triangle Mystery"
The headline is all over the web. The story behind it is that two scientists - using computer modelling - have cracked the problem of why ships and aircraft have vansihed in the so-called 'Bermuda Triangle'.
Turns out that it's all about methane. Certain seabed areas have huge deposits of frozen methane. From time to time the gas escapes in massive bubbles. If  a ship is above the bubble, it immediately sinks. If it is on the edge of such a bubble, everyone on board is suffocated - giving rise to incidents where ships have been found drifting with everyone on board dead. If the methane burp is sufficiently large, even aircraft can be knocked out of the sky.  There is only one problem with the explanation - it is pure, 24 carat hogwash. Had our two scientists done their homework, they would be aware that there has never been a reported instance of a ship found with everyone on board dead. Had they done even more research they would have discovered that there has never been a 'Bermuda Triangle' mystery. It was thoroughly debunked more that thirty years ago by a writer called Lawrence Kusche, in the book shown above. Kusche sieved through through every claimed disappearance in the region. None of them held water. Some ships had never disappeared at all. Some had disappeared in the Pacific, some had disappeared during hurricanes, which the writers had, oddly failed to mention  - and so on.
Yet, through the miracle medium of computer modeling, the impossible has been 'proved'. This will be of no surprise to those of us who regular follow the intriguing results of 'climate modeling'. Oh, and the paper this tripe was published in wasn't some fringe nut outlet, but the American Journal of Physics.

Beloit College Mindset List 2014

Every year Beloit College, in Wisconsin, produces a 'mindset list' which serves to remind tutors of the gap between their experiences and those of their oncoming batch of 18-year-olds.  The 18ers, for example, don't wear watches - they get the time from their phones. This year's newbies were born in 1992. A number of new sources have printed selections from the 2014 version, but I thought it worthwhile to track down the complete list, although some entries will be baffling for UK readers. It's fascinating- but doesn't it make you feel old!

1. Few in the class know how to write in cursive.
2. Email is just too slow, and they seldom if ever use snail mail.
3. “Go West, Young College Grad” has always implied “and don’t stop until you get to Asia…and learn Chinese along the way.”
4. Al Gore has always been animated.
5. Los Angelenos have always been trying to get along.
6. Buffy has always been meeting her obligations to hunt down Lothos and the other blood-suckers at Hemery High.
7. “Caramel macchiato” and “venti half-caf vanilla latte” have always been street corner lingo.
8. With increasing numbers of ramps, Braille signs, and handicapped parking spaces, the world has always been trying harder to accommodate people with disabilities.
9. Had it remained operational, the villainous computer HAL could be their college classmate this fall, but they have a better chance of running into Miley Cyrus’s folks on Parents’ Weekend.
10. A quarter of the class has at least one immigrant parent, and the immigration debate is not a big priority…unless it involves “real” aliens from another planet.
11. John McEnroe has never played professional tennis.
12. Clint Eastwood is better known as a sensitive director than as Dirty Harry.
13. Parents and teachers feared that Beavis and Butt-head might be the voice of a lost generation.
14. Doctor Kevorkian has never been licensed to practice medicine.
15. Colorful lapel ribbons have always been worn to indicate support for a cause.
16. Korean cars have always been a staple on American highways.
17. Trading Chocolate the Moose for Patti the Platypus helped build their Beanie Baby collection.
18. Fergie is a pop singer, not a princess.
19. They never twisted the coiled handset wire aimlessly around their wrists while chatting on the phone.
20. DNA fingerprinting and maps of the human genome have always existed.
21. Woody Allen, whose heart has wanted what it wanted, has always been with Soon-Yi Previn.
22. Cross-burning has always been deemed protected speech.
23. Leasing has always allowed the folks to upgrade their tastes in cars.
24. “Cop Killer” by rapper Ice-T has never been available on a recording.
25. Leno and Letterman have always been trading insults on opposing networks.
26. Unless they found one in their grandparents’ closet, they have never seen a carousel of Kodachrome slides.
27. Computers have never lacked a CD-ROM disk drive.
28. They’ve never recognized that pointing to their wrists was a request for the time of day.
29. Reggie Jackson has always been enshrined in Cooperstown.
30. “Viewer Discretion” has always been an available warning on TV shows.
31. The first computer they probably touched was an Apple II; it is now in a museum.
32. Czechoslovakia has never existed.
33. Second-hand smoke has always been an official carcinogen.
34. “Assisted Living” has always been replacing nursing homes, while Hospice has always been an alternative to hospitals.
35. Once they got through security, going to the airport has always resembled going to the mall.
36. Adhesive strips have always been available in varying skin tones.
37. Whatever their parents may have thought about the year they were born, Queen Elizabeth declared it an “Annus Horribilis.”
38. Bud Selig has always been the Commissioner of Major League Baseball.
39. Pizza jockeys from Domino’s have never killed themselves to get your pizza there in under 30 minutes.
40. There have always been HIV positive athletes in the Olympics.
41. American companies have always done business in Vietnam.
42. Potato has always ended in an “e” in New Jersey per vice presidential edict.
43. Russians and Americans have always been living together in space.
44. The dominance of television news by the three networks passed while they were still in their cribs.
45. They have always had a chance to do community service with local and federal programs to earn money for college.
46. Nirvana is on the classic oldies station.
47. Children have always been trying to divorce their parents.
48. Someone has always gotten married in space.
49. While they were babbling in strollers, there was already a female Poet Laureate of the United States.
50. Toothpaste tubes have always stood up on their caps.
51.  Food has always been irradiated.
52. There have always been women priests in the Anglican Church.
53. J.R. Ewing has always been dead and gone. Hasn’t he? 
54. The historic bridge at Mostar in Bosnia has always been a copy.
55. Rock bands have always played at presidential inaugural parties.
56. They may have assumed that parents’ complaints about Black Monday had to do with punk rockers from L.A., not Wall Street.
57. A purple dinosaur has always supplanted Barney Google and Barney Fife. 
58. Beethoven has always been a dog.
59. By the time their folks might have noticed Coca Cola’s new Tab Clear, it was gone.
60. Walmart has never sold handguns over the counter in the lower 48.
61. Presidential appointees have always been required to be more precise about paying their nannies’ withholding tax, or else.
62. Having hundreds of cable channels but nothing to watch has always been routine. 
63. Their parents’ favorite TV sitcoms have always been showing up as movies.
64. The U.S, Canada, and Mexico have always agreed to trade freely.
65. They first met Michelangelo when he was just a computer virus.
66. Galileo is forgiven and welcome back into the Roman Catholic Church.
67. Ruth Bader Ginsburg has always sat on the Supreme Court.
68. They have never worried about a Russian missile strike on the U.S.
69. The Post Office has always been going broke.
70. The artist formerly known as Snoop Doggy Dogg has always been rapping.
71. The nation has never approved of the job Congress is doing.
72. One way or another, “It’s the economy, stupid” and always has been.
73. Silicone-gel breast implants have always been regulated.
74. They’ve always been able to blast off with the Sci-Fi Channel.
75. Honda has always been a major competitor on Memorial Day at Indianapolis.
                                                                                                         

Monday, 16 August 2010

20WV/39513A/10 - concluded

Above is an extract from  a letter which I have just received from the Police. Seems like there is little chance of them catching the gang who stole my cash card (and £200 of my cash) back in May. I suppose it was a bit optimistic of me to suppose that they would be able to locate three dirty needles out of the mighty haystack of human souls that is Britain today. Still, thanks to my prompt reporting of the crime I have all my cash back and a new card, so all's well that ends well. I  hope that if I'm dumb enough to be caught out again,  it will by the ladies in the clipping below:

Followers