• 🇬🇧󠁿 🇸🇪 🇿🇦 🇮🇪 🇬🇭 🇩🇪 🇪🇺
    European & African
    Drug Discussion


    Welcome Guest!
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

This is the neeewwwwws!

Status
Not open for further replies.
"A MAN jumped into a fast-flowing river because he couldn't take his wife's nagging anymore."

"However, later that night, police found the man who had managed to swim about 2km across across the broad river.

"I felt I was dying, but even that's better than my wife's nagging," he reportedly told the police."

http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,25912783-5013016,00.html

This is genius!
 
Last edited:
The greatest 20th century beneficiary of popular mythology has been the cad Churchill

By Kevin Myers

Thursday September 03 2009

IT was mildly entertaining to hear a spokesman for the Russian government declare on the 70th anniversary of the start of the Second World War that the peoples of Russia of Poland had at that time stood together against the evils of the Third Reich. The good burgers of Warsaw must have choked on their vodka when they heard that one.

For what the Poles know of Russia in 1939 was its complicity in the destruction of their country, followed by the murder of over 20,000 of its army officers by NKVD executioners, on general warrants signed by the Soviet foreign minister, the Russian VM Molotov.

To be sure, the Russian people themselves were not consulted on any of this, and cannot be held responsible for what their Soviet masters did, but the official Russian statement, about the essential historical brotherhood of the Russian and Polish peoples, is now probably part of the emerging mythology of Russian nationhood.

You'll be hearing a lot about the Second World war over the coming months: take most of it with a pinch of salt. That's because most popular knowledge -- including that of journalists -- is no more than largely empty legend, largely held together by a couple of historical facts. The greatest 20th century beneficiary of this popular mythology has been the man who this day 70 years ago was called in from the political hinterland where his inconstancy and his ineptitude had properly placed him: Winston Churchill.

The effective destruction of his prior record by the events which unfolded over the six years from September 1939 must constitute one of the greatest historiographical acts of amnesia and revision of all time.

When later contemplating the epitaph on his headstone, Churchill said: "Why not, simply, 'Soldier'?"

Here's why. In 1916, Churchill used his many contacts in high places to wangle his way out of the trenches, during his brief time on active service with the Royal Scottish Fusiliers, to a safe civilian billet in London. Private soldiers were being put before the firing squad for enacting their own personal interpretation of this ambition. Once back in Britain, he remained true to his caddish self. Concerned about the threat to his family of the Zeppelin attacks on London, he bought a country house at Lullenden, in Surrey, where the nasty Germans couldn't get at him.

It was around this time that he uttered these imperishable words to the House of Commons: "My only purpose is to help defeat the Hun, and I will subordinate my own feelings so that I may render some assistance."

And this from the man who had just fled the trenches. Shortly afterwards, he boasted laughingly to friends that he often used precious petrol -- issued to him for ministerial purposes only -- for social trips. He soon moved political heaven and earth (successfully) to prevent his parkland at Lullenden from being ploughed up to produce food, even as the U-boat threat came close to throttling Britain.

As Lloyd George -- no slouch himself in the ego-department -- acidly commented: "You will one day discover that the state of mind revealed in (your) letter is the reason why you do not win trust even where you command admiration. In every line of it, national interests are completely overshadowed by your personal concern."

Quite. As he was to show in 1923, when he secretly accepted £5,000 -- the equivalent of perhaps millions in today's money -- from Burmah Oil to lobby the British government to allow Burmah to collar Persian oil resources.

Churchill was reappointed First Lord of the Admiralty 70 years ago today, and over the next few months he presided over a series of naval disasters unprecedented since he had last been First Lord of the Admiralty 25 years before.

THESE fresh calamities cost the Royal Navy more lives and ships than the US Navy were to lose at Pearl Harbour. Yet you won't read this in any biographies of Churchill, because the power of popular mythology on 1940 has mesmerised even professional historians.

All great men are also crooks and rogues. Churchill's great wartime ally, Roosevelt, was not an exception to the general rule that he who climbs to the top of the tree has used the the corpses of finer men as footholds.

To take up from an earlier column, he embedded corruption in his Democratic Party when he took Joe Kennedy (and Joe Kennedy's $20,000) to his bosom as part of his grand campaign to seize the presidency.

For Ireland, the real war came with Britain's very first blow, when Flt Lieutenant William Murphy of Mitchelstown, Co Cork, aged 23, was shot down and killed in the opening RAF air raid on the German naval port of Wilhelmshaven, 70 years ago tomorrow.

And I'd prefer to hear about simple men like Billy Murphy than grandiloquent and egotistical liars like Churchill and Roosevelt. Why? Because the real truth of war is about the boy-dead who were finer by far than their leaders.

For this is the tale of warfare, as old as the tale of Troy: the man who wins the laurels, isn't half the man of the boy.

- Kevin Myers

http://www.independent.ie/opinion/c...ology-has-been-the-cad-churchill-1876680.html
 
Wicked post Jude :) Good read indeed. I knew he was a bit of a slimeball (Churcheh) but not an utter cuntsickle!
 
Straw joins debate alongside BNP

Justice Secretary Jack Straw says he has agreed to take part in a debate alongside the British National Party on the BBC's Question Time programme.

Mr Straw told the BBC he would join a panel which will include BNP leader Nick Griffin, the Tories and Lib Dems, in London on 22 October.

He said the BNP were defeated when Labour "fought them hard".

Labour does not share a platform with the BNP normally but said it would take on its "disgusting politics".

The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats had already said they would take part in the programme.

Speaking on the Politics Show in the North West, Mr Straw said: "Wherever we have had BNP problems in my area and when we have fought them hard, we've pulled back and won the seats back.

"And that's what we have to do. We've got to make the argument for people and I am delighted to do so."

The BBC had already confirmed that it may invite Mr Griffin, who was elected as an MEP in June, to appear on a future edition of the Question Time, saying it was bound by the rules to treat all political parties with "due impartiality".

Policy reviewed

No BNP representatives have yet appeared on the BBC's flagship panel show.

But the corporation reviewed its position following the far-right party's success in last June's European elections, in which Mr Griffin was one of two BNP candidates to be elected as an MEP.

A Labour spokesman said the party had reviewed its policy of refusing to share a platform with the BNP.

The spokesman said: "Following the BBC's decision to allow Nick Griffin to appear on Question Time, the Labour Party has agreed we should take on the disgusting politics of the BNP by participating in the programme.

He added that future programmes would be treated "on a case-by-case basis".

Meanwhile, Tony Kearns, assistant general secretary of the Communication Workers' Union, said it was a "disgrace" the BBC was going ahead with offering the BNP a Question Time seat.

He urged government ministers and MPs to join protests against the decision.

Should be fun to watch =D I hope for a royal rumble of a ripping-in-to ;)
 
BNP Leader is 'Question Time' guest

bnp.jpg


British National Party leader Nick Griffin is to take part in a televised debate with Justice Secretary Jack Straw on BBC1's Question Time, it has been confirmed.
The announcement came after Mr Straw became the first senior Labour politician to say that he was willing to appear on the show with Mr Griffin.
The BBC have confirmed the two men are among the panellists booked for a recording of the show, hosted by David Dimbleby, in London on October 22.
The BBC sparked controversy earlier this month when it announced that it would be willing to feature representatives of the BNP on Question Time after the party won two seats in the European Parliament in elections in June.
Labour reviewed its long-standing approach of refusing to share a platform with the far-right BNP and Gordon Brown made clear he was ready to allow a minister to take on Mr Griffin, now an MEP for the North West of England.
But Cabinet ministers such as Peter Hain and Alan Johnson said they would not go on Question Time if the BNP leader was invited.
Mr Straw told BBC1's The Politics Show North-West edition: "Wherever we have had BNP problems in my area and when we have fought them hard, we've pulled back and won the seats back. And that's what we have to do. We've got to make the argument for people and I am delighted to do so."
Anti-fascists campaigners reacted with anger to the news and called for huge demonstrations to be mounted outside the BBC TV studios when the programme is made.
Tony Kearns, assistant general secretary of the Communication Workers' Union said it was a "disgrace" that the BBC was going ahead with offering the BNP a seat on Question Time despite a huge outcry in recent weeks.
Other members of the panel have not yet been confirmed.

http://news.uk.msn.com/uk/article.aspx?cp-documentid=149944723
 
That's going to be fun(ny) ^_^ Tee hee!

Oh yea, and what's this about Brown and painkillers?
Apparently there's been loads of internet talk (which I haven't seen but am now adding to if that's so) and rumours around Westminster.
Wouldn't surprise me. If I was hated by the whole country I'd need to numb my reality like I do already. There's also mentions of Antidepressants too. Again, if I was hated by the whole country...
But so what? He said himself that loads of people use pills to make it through the day. He can be on pills if he needs to be. Bloody papers making a huge deal over everything 8)
 
Officers who baby-sat for each other may face prosecution



Under new rules DC Leanne Shepherd's reciprocal arrangement with her colleague to look after their children has become illegal


The government has ordered a review of the case of two police officers who were told they had to stop looking after each others' children or face prosecution.

Detective Constable Leanne Shepherd, from Milton Keynes, was warned by Ofsted that she could be prosecuted if she did not end the "illegal" reciprocal arrangement with her friend, DC Lucy Jarrett.

The women, both 32, have taken turns looking after each other's daughters twice a week for the last two and a half years while they worked a ten-hour shift at Aylesbury police station in Buckinghamshire.

However, the pair were reported to Ofsted by someone – thought to be a neighbour – and an investigation was launched. New legislation means that people who baby-sit for more than two hours at a time or on more than 14 days a year should be registered and follow childminder rules, including undertaking first aid training and following the so-called "nappy curriculum" for under-fives.

According to the education watchdog, the rules apply in cases where parents receive a "reward" for the child care – which can include money or simply free baby-sitting in return. Ofsted is now in discussions with the Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) about the interpretation of the word "reward".

The schools minister, Vernon Coaker, said: "The legislation laid out by the Childcare Act 2006 is in place to ensure the safety and wellbeing of all children. However we need to be sure that the legislation does not penalise hard-working families."

DC Shepherd said she had received a surprise visit from an Ofsted inspector who said she had received reports that an illegal childminding business was being run. Despite explaining that the arrangement was between two friends who were helping each other out, DC Shepherd was told that she was breaking the law and had to stop immediately. "I was stunned, completely devastated. I spent the whole day crying because I couldn't see how I could continue working," she told the Mail on Sunday. The legislation has been widely attacked and a petition to scrap the rules governing reciprocal child care on the Number 10 website has gathered more than 2,000 signatures. An Ofsted spokesman said: "Generally, mothers who look after each other's children are not providing childminding for which registration is required, as exemptions apply to them, for example because the care is for less than two hours or it takes place on less than 14 days in a year. Where such arrangements are regular and for longer periods, then registration is usually required."

Close relatives of the child such as grandparents, siblings, aunts or uncles are exempt from the rules, he added. DC Shepherd, who is separated from her husband, said the arrangement worked well for all parties, particularly as she and her colleague did demanding jobs that often required overtime.[/QUOTE]

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/sep/28/government-orders-review-babysitting-police

Stories like this make me want to live in a different country.
 
Agreed jude, what an utter waste of everybody's time that is. Same with that dinner lady getting the sack for telling a kid's parents about her being bullied, common sense doesn't exist any more!
 
The Royal Navy says it has seized its biggest haul of cocaine, estimating its street value at £240m ($380m).

The Portsmouth-based frigate HMS Iron Duke seized more than five-and-a-half tonnes of the drug from a 138ft fishing boat off the coast of Colombia.

The Royal Navy and US Coastguard jointly intercepted the boat after it was spotted by a navy helicopter crew.

Armed Forces Minister Bill Rammell praised the operation for "damaging the trade in this vile substance".

He said cocaine "only serves to poison our communities".

Whitehall officials have said the bust took place in international waters off the north coast of Colombia, according to BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner.

The 212 bales of cocaine, weighing about 26kg each, were seized in an area known for trafficking.

Cdr Andrew Stacey said the ship's crew was "delighted".

He said: "This was our third successful drug bust in as many months but this surpasses anything we've had and anything the navy had previously.

"It is the largest drugs bust by value, and by volume, in terms of cocaine. It is a massive blow for the narcotics industry."

Cdr Stacey told the BBC that the crew - along with an armed helicopter and inflatable boats - had intercepted the boat, MV Cristal, in a "high-speed pounce" on 15 September.

They spent 24 hours searching it before the drugs were found hidden beneath the ship's regular stores.

A concrete floor had to be broken up with sledge hammers and metal panels had to be unbolted before the stash was discovered and removed, he said.

The drug smugglers' boat was later sunk by gunfire.

Cdr Stacey said several drug runners of different nationalities had been arrested but no more details could be revealed.

He said he could not confirm for operational reasons whether intelligence had directed the Iron Duke to the vessel, but likened the Royal Navy's patrols to those of a "bobby on the beat" who notices when "something's not quite right".

Another British ship, RFA Fort George, was also involved in the joint operation between the Royal Navy and the US Coastguard.

HMS Iron Duke's primary task, while on a six-month deployment, is to reassure and assist the people of the UK Overseas Territories during the hurricane season.

The warship, which was launched in 1991 and cost £140m to build, is also on stand-by to take part in anti-narcotics operations.

The latest seizure is the third major counter-narcotics success for HMS Iron Duke off South America in recent months.

In raids in July and August, the warship was involved in two operations which seized cocaine with an estimated street value totalling £39m.

Prince William served on HMS Iron Duke in July 2008, during which the crew seized more than £40m of cocaine in the Caribbean.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8277483.stm
 
Ban common sense and menthol cigarettes tbh.

If only there was more common sense used by the lawmakers, councils & schools etc..

As for the babysitting story, it never fails to amaze me how much the powers that be want to keep tabs on everyone, even for the pettiest thing.
 
Egypt anger over virginity faking
By Magdi Abdelhadi
BBC Arab Affairs analyst

Group of Arab women
Pre-marital sex carries a strong social stigma in many Arab societies

A leading Egyptian scholar has demanded that people caught importing a female virginity-faking device into the country should face the death penalty.

Abdul Mouti Bayoumi said supplying the item was akin to spreading vice in society, a crime punishable by death in Islamic Sharia law.

The device is said to release liquid imitating blood, allowing a female to feign virginity on her wedding night.

There is a stigma about pre-marital sex in some conservative Arab societies.

The contraption is seen as a cheap and simple alternative to hymen repair surgery, which is carried out in secret by some clinics in the Middle East.

It is produced in China and has already become available in other parts of the Arab world.

The device is reported to be on sale in Syria for $15.

Professor Bayoumi, a scholar at the prestigious al-Azhar University, said it undermined the moral deterrent of fornication, which he described as a crime and one of the cardinal sins in Islam.

Members of parliament in Egypt have also called for banning import of the item.

Linky

------------------------------------------------

Think the proposal for the death penalty is a bit harsh :| Wonder how widespread the use of these devices are.
 
what's all this about banning menthol tabs anyway? keep yer fucking paws off my marlboros. PC gone mad that is. :!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top