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Some scholars believe that the “seventy-two virgins” that these barbarians believe await them in paradise should actually be “seventy-two white raisins.” I like to imagine the exchange when they get there:
“Right, here we are, in keen anticipation Of our reward, six dozen virgin rapes.” “I’m sorry, lads, there’s been a mistranslation, But here’s the promised seventy-two white grapes.” |
The Crux of Cruz
His mouth movin’ and brain snoozin’ Cruz’s taskin’ Prez and askin’ if Prez’s cruisin’ for a bruisin’ when accusin’ Cruz of sinnin' by bullyin’ moms and kin if Syrian and not Christian. http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2016...y-face-n465576 http://suindependent.com/cartoon-ted-cruz-debate-obama/ |
Houston, Where's The Apollo 11 Tapes?
Most parents keep the tapes that catch their child Take his first steps, yet NASA's lost, misfiled Their first moonwalk—even those brains lost track! Thus Man takes giant leaps, then stumbles back. http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog...-footage-.html |
Extremely Pinged Poem Sighted!
Poem Pong I post and wait And wait and wait You post a crit You think is fit I read your words think some are turds You think it’s weak I think you reek I craft new rhymes You call them crimes You fault the measure I think is treasure I post a rant You say recant I find your crit Is all legit!! I then revise Revise revise Five versions strong That ping and pong From crit to draft To me gone daft I know it’s best To let it rest I love the game: Always the same It’s just a poem Not yet my totem Note: The Ojibway scholar Basil H. Johnston defines dodaem, or totem, as "that from which I draw my purpose, meaning, and being." |
Graveyard Ants
Sexton of Mt. Repose Cemetery Battles Severe Ant Infestation - Local newspaper item
The mouse grows old in winter's cold And thirsts in summer's heat; But graveyard ants lead lives that can't Be beat by man nor beast; Beyond the graveyard gate they wait For another human feast. The junkyard dog treads a starving slog Through the life that's dealt to him; But the graveyard queen's as epicurean As Farouk or Diamond Jim; When a stiff's interred, she gets the word, And moves her fam'ly in. To end his toils, the lobster boils To grace a diner's plate; But the graveyard ant knows the diner can't Avoid his final date With destiny ... and you and me Will share his grisly fate. |
On Thursday night Hilary Benn, son of the radical Tony Benn who had eloquently opposed the bombing of Iraq, led sixty six Labour MPs into voting against their party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and the opinions of their party's members in a vote for the Tory government's policy of bombing Syria.
The Tory dominated media have deluged his 'performance' with praise - others are less happy. Many have seen it as a pitch to unseat Corbyn and claim his job; other party members are beginning to call for the de-selection of the sixty six as Labour candidates at the next election and have been accused of bullying and undue pressure. 57 of 59 Scottish MPs, including all the 56 members of the Scottish National Party voted against. The following is with apologies to Burns, who penned the original in 1785 as a letter to Rev Tom McMath enclosing a copy of Holy Willy's Prayer. WORDS WELL WEIGHED? It was, perhaps, a might too trusting That folk, far from Westminster’s bustling, Should tangle with a Party lusting, Still, for lost power And think Benn’s son, on Corbyn’s husting, Would not turn sour. But we’re made sick while his grimaces, His pop-eyed canting, slip-shod phrases, Self-praising ‘ham’ and practised faces, Prate pseudo-conscience And greed for place and pelf disgraces Wisdom with nonsense. Benns past, abused worse than a beast, Retained more honour, at the least, Than turncoats, surplus as this ‘priest’ Of blood-borne humbug, Whose party’s faith’s now lies deceased, A Tory hearth-rug. Mind him? All good folks’ friend in need, A decent man in word and deed? Let not his name and honour bleed In issue scurvy, And let’s recall his humane creed Not this unworthy. Had we Aneurin’s scathing words, We’d cast this carrion to such birds As prey on these expiring herds Of mindless cattle, Tracked not but truths, but simply turds Of lying prattle. Though Corbyn’s not the man he should be, Nor can he, now, be what he could be, By sixty six, I’d rather that we Stood firm in defeat, Than under butcher colours hid be By such a cheat. When honest folk betrayal claim, In honest anger taking aim At those, whose bomb strikes soon will maim And spread despair, Bombasts complain, quite without shame, “Pressure’s unfair”. Such claim to raise the people’s flag And talk democracy, yet drag Far peoples through the mire and brag They’ll, “Do their bit”; Yet when the dying comes, they’ll lag - Oh, how unfit! All hail the anti-fascist cause, But let it not be claimed by ‘blaws’ Whose wind-bag rectitude applauds George Orwell’s Spain, But failed to save their own fourth clause - And would again. Though foully smeared and falsely stained I’d rather stand with those defamed To hear my nation’s voice proclaimed ’Gainst pointless slaughter. My nation’s party not ashamed Of what we fought for. In spite of Blair, despite this Benn, (What awful sentence that’s to pen) Let’s strive that hearts and minds open To change of course; Then, when our nation’s free again, There’s still remorse. |
The media are not Tory-dominated. About half the newspapers are Tory and the other half not. It is true that no-one reads the leftist ones but that's how it goes.
The Broadcast media are all left-leaning. Leaning jolly far I would say. Name me Tory among that bunch. |
John, the BBC news has a right-wing bias. It consistently gives proportionately more air-time to Tories. I can find you studies if you like, but I've shown you those before.
EDIT: Apparently, in the run up to the election, most TV news channels (BBC, Sky, Channel 4 & Channel 5) gave more time to the Tories than to Labour. This disparity was strongest with Channel 4 & Channel 5. ITV was the exception, where Labour got a fraction more time. (Source: based on study by Cardiff University) |
Last time I looked John there were no - zero - "leftist" mass circulation newspapers in Britain.
The Daily Record tends towards the Labour Party, but not as much as at one time; the Guardian is sometimes pro-Labour and sometimes pro-LibDem but publishes a number of right-wing commentators as well; the Indy is 'indy' and sometimes backs Labour; and in Scotland The National supports the SNP; and er.... that's it. That leaves firmly in the Tory column - The Times, The Telegraph, the Financial Times, The Sun, The Daily Mail, The Express, the Star, the Metro, the London Evening Standard and the main Scottish papers (The Herald, Scotsman, Glasgow Evening Times), the main regional papers such as the Yorkshire Post, Western Morning News, Aberdeen Press and Journal etc. plus all the Sundays, - the Sunday Times, The Observer (though occasionally critical is more Tory than not), The Sunday Telegraph, the Sunday Mail, Sunday Express, the Sun on Sunday (son of the unlamented News of the World) and Scotland on Sunday with the sole exception of The Sunday Herald (broadly pro-SNP). The list isn't exhaustive but the point is clear. If the latest figures from the industry on readership (print and web-based) are consulted the figures for the Tory leaning press are more than 350% of all the rest combined - and that is without taking into account the lesser regional and local papers. The Tories do dominate the mass-media in the UK.... and Matt is also, academically, perfectly correct about the BBC. Only Channel 4 News comes anywhere near a 'balance'. Of course, how all this looks through Kentish lenses I couldn't say. |
Should this argument not be taking place in verse?
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