TATA management knows a bargain when they see one - their recent acquisition of Land-Rover and Jaguar was purchased at half the original price paid by Ford. Although, it may be that they haven't woken up to the smell of 21st century coffee.
The western world is moving quickly on from the days of super-charged beasts and farmyard tanks - the overblown cost of fuel, increased taxes on engine size and the threat of a congestion charge virus spreading outwards from Komrade Ken's Kapital is forcing most of the population to consider down-sizing their mode of transport - or even, in the most extreme situations, attempting to fit their over-sized rumps onto the uncomfortable, unyielding leather triangle of a bicycle seat (now there's an invention just waiting to happen).
It may eventually turn out that the only population willing to purchase either of these two iconic motors will be members of the billion-strong Asian Club who have to travel to work on dusty roads, keeping their distance from a bus with more people on the roof than inside, dodging horse-drawn two wheeler tongas, or being cut up at the junction by three-wheeler auto rickshaws.
Meanwhile, in Britain, the average Mr. Smith dreams of the day that the £1250 Nano arrives at our shores.
Sunday 30 March 2008
Wednesday 26 March 2008
The Auld Alliance - Wake Up England
The speech of Mr. Sarkozy - "le gush" - sounded almost too good to be true. Maybe the phrase "beware Greeks bearing gifts" should be amended to "beware French speaking compliments" - if bought down to a personal level most people would cynically ask themselves "what does he want?"
The melting ice cap of 9600 BC created the North Sea barrier, allowing us to forge our own future through self-determination, relatively uninfluenced by the rest of mainland Europe and we have, until now, utilised the geographical separation very successfully.
For me the most significant words of this afternoon's verbal "love-in" were spoken not by our French neighbour, but by Mr. Michael Martin, speaker of the house of commons.
Was he speaking as a member of the British Parliament or as someone who has watched Mel Gibson cry "Freedom" far too many times - and does he actually realise what the term "Auld Alliance" means to those south of Hadrian's Wall?
England, the birthplace of true democracy, is sleepwalking to oblivion. The distrust felt towards those who have always eyed this land with jealousy and envy couples with the sense of self-preservation generated by hundreds of years of practical experience, is being systematically erased by others from outside our borders - and any arguments to the contrary are considered to be politically incorrect and inappropriate for 21st century globalisation.
Wake up England! Listen carefully to the Scottish accent that began proceedings earlier today - the sentiment behind the carefully crafted speech was "Och aye, ma French friend - let's rid ourselves of this minor irritation called England once and for all!"
The melting ice cap of 9600 BC created the North Sea barrier, allowing us to forge our own future through self-determination, relatively uninfluenced by the rest of mainland Europe and we have, until now, utilised the geographical separation very successfully.
For me the most significant words of this afternoon's verbal "love-in" were spoken not by our French neighbour, but by Mr. Michael Martin, speaker of the house of commons.
Was he speaking as a member of the British Parliament or as someone who has watched Mel Gibson cry "Freedom" far too many times - and does he actually realise what the term "Auld Alliance" means to those south of Hadrian's Wall?
England, the birthplace of true democracy, is sleepwalking to oblivion. The distrust felt towards those who have always eyed this land with jealousy and envy couples with the sense of self-preservation generated by hundreds of years of practical experience, is being systematically erased by others from outside our borders - and any arguments to the contrary are considered to be politically incorrect and inappropriate for 21st century globalisation.
Wake up England! Listen carefully to the Scottish accent that began proceedings earlier today - the sentiment behind the carefully crafted speech was "Och aye, ma French friend - let's rid ourselves of this minor irritation called England once and for all!"
Monday 24 March 2008
There Goes the Neighbourhood
What an Easter that was, moving house is no fun in the best of weather, but still, all went well and the kids are now warming themselves by the fire, looking forward to their new life in the Warwickshire countryside. It's much healther than the last place, Hackney, East London - we had to move from there because it was needed for the 2012 Olympics - but being good European citizens, it was the least we could do, the Olympics is for all of Britain, not just London - well, that's what they told us. However, I'm a little concerned about our new neighbours, and the effect that they might have on the kids. The jovial loose-lipped landlord of the pub was telling me that their lifestyle was a little "unusual" - to say the least. She's on her second husband, although she doesn't live with her latest - it's a "pretend" marriage. Their house is just where they conveniently bump into each other to exchange warm sweaty greetings, if you know what I mean. Apparently she's got a decent job in the city with lots of perks - and from the look of the house I can see where all the extras go - although it's a little bit too extravagant for my taste. He's a different kettle of fish altogether, much older, well connected and according to the landlord, over-friendly with some big Italian laundering business. He went on to say that the police were after him for sticky-fingered law-breaking and that he definitely deserves a stretch inside - and the depressing thing is that we moved here to get away from that sort of thing. I just hope that my kids don't get unduly influenced when they see them flaunting their materialistic trappings of dubious financial activities - they're good kids, they deserve a chance to grow up amongst law-abiding people in a decent Christian community.
Labels:
gipsies,
gypsies,
gypsy camp,
labour party,
olympics,
politics,
tessa jowell
Friday 21 March 2008
BETTING ON GOOD FRIDAY
It's Good Friday, a time of reflection and this year, a time for a bet. Winter bids us farewell with a chilling slap on the bum and slam of the door, forcing the wildlife in the garden to think twice about the unavoidable urge to start mating, a misplaced icicle can kill the most powerful ardour.
I'm betting that a few overweight Christians are checking out the price of chocolate eggs, and that there's even a tiny dissenting voice in the Pope's head saying "I'd rather stay in bed."
My bet is also that somewhere, hidden in a locked vault, is proof of the true meaning of Easter (Eostre, goddess of dawn), the prehistoric astrological design that gave us the original epic symbolic narrative that today we all call the Passion of Christ.
It's a great story, but then again so is Gilgamesh and The Argonautica, so is the Illiad and the Battle of Thermopylae - all four of which are taken from the same graphic layout as the Christian story, and will no doubt prove to be extremely lucrative as the collection plate passes along the unquestioning minds of the misguided congregation.
I'm betting that some people who began to read this blog will now cease and move on - but I'm hoping that just a few will remain to seek further information - because knowledge is power.
Here's a list of my Good Friday bets, and the "Crucifixion" image from 10,000 years ago.
A - I'm betting that the Christ figure is truly a personification of the front of the centaur, the human hero figure of the cosmos - and that the alignment of Vega (the point of the arrow) and the rising Sun falling on December 25th is not purely coincidental. I'm also betting that St. John the Baptist is a personification of the rear of the centaur, covered in hair, linked by blood, standing in water, bending down in subservient pose before his true master.
B - I'm betting that the wooden cross actually refers to the bow and arrow carried by the centaur, and ...
C - I'm betting that the nails through the hands section is allegory of the overlapping wing of the dragon and the end of the bow.
D - I'm betting that Calvary, the green hill on which the cross was placed, refers to the tail section of the dragon, and also ...
E - I'm betting that the city wall is actually the ecliptic circle, the path of the sun. This particular symbolism was also used 3000 years earlier in the epic of Gilgamesh.
F - I'm betting that the gash to the torso actually refers to the rectum of the dragon (those prehistoric artists were nothing if not thorough).
G & H - I'm betting that the thieves on either side of the cross refers to the two vultures facing each other - this symbolism was also used by the Greeks, because vultures equal thieves, equals thieving vultures. It was used before in The Argonautica and also as the Stymphalian birds in the labours of Hercules. The gospels are not that original.
I - I'm betting that the crown of thorns refers to the crocodilian form of the dragon's head, complete with sharp teeth, thorns.
J - I'm betting that the sign placed on the cross refers to the flame of the dragon, and finally ...
K - I'm betting that the thunderclouds that gathered at his eventual demise refers to the fireballs and smoke from this ancient cruciform beast.
No, I won't be going to church this year.
I'm betting that a few overweight Christians are checking out the price of chocolate eggs, and that there's even a tiny dissenting voice in the Pope's head saying "I'd rather stay in bed."
My bet is also that somewhere, hidden in a locked vault, is proof of the true meaning of Easter (Eostre, goddess of dawn), the prehistoric astrological design that gave us the original epic symbolic narrative that today we all call the Passion of Christ.
It's a great story, but then again so is Gilgamesh and The Argonautica, so is the Illiad and the Battle of Thermopylae - all four of which are taken from the same graphic layout as the Christian story, and will no doubt prove to be extremely lucrative as the collection plate passes along the unquestioning minds of the misguided congregation.
I'm betting that some people who began to read this blog will now cease and move on - but I'm hoping that just a few will remain to seek further information - because knowledge is power.
Here's a list of my Good Friday bets, and the "Crucifixion" image from 10,000 years ago.
A - I'm betting that the Christ figure is truly a personification of the front of the centaur, the human hero figure of the cosmos - and that the alignment of Vega (the point of the arrow) and the rising Sun falling on December 25th is not purely coincidental. I'm also betting that St. John the Baptist is a personification of the rear of the centaur, covered in hair, linked by blood, standing in water, bending down in subservient pose before his true master.
B - I'm betting that the wooden cross actually refers to the bow and arrow carried by the centaur, and ...
C - I'm betting that the nails through the hands section is allegory of the overlapping wing of the dragon and the end of the bow.
D - I'm betting that Calvary, the green hill on which the cross was placed, refers to the tail section of the dragon, and also ...
E - I'm betting that the city wall is actually the ecliptic circle, the path of the sun. This particular symbolism was also used 3000 years earlier in the epic of Gilgamesh.
F - I'm betting that the gash to the torso actually refers to the rectum of the dragon (those prehistoric artists were nothing if not thorough).
G & H - I'm betting that the thieves on either side of the cross refers to the two vultures facing each other - this symbolism was also used by the Greeks, because vultures equal thieves, equals thieving vultures. It was used before in The Argonautica and also as the Stymphalian birds in the labours of Hercules. The gospels are not that original.
I - I'm betting that the crown of thorns refers to the crocodilian form of the dragon's head, complete with sharp teeth, thorns.
J - I'm betting that the sign placed on the cross refers to the flame of the dragon, and finally ...
K - I'm betting that the thunderclouds that gathered at his eventual demise refers to the fireballs and smoke from this ancient cruciform beast.
No, I won't be going to church this year.
Labels:
Betting,
Bookmakers,
Crucifixion,
Easter,
Good Friday
Sunday 16 March 2008
CITY OF CULTURE - 2008
Oh no, here we go again, let's have a minute's silence or burn an effigy somewhere. I heard on the radio today that Liverpool Council was considering banning films that contained cigarette smoking. Why is it that when I hear the 2008 City of Culture mention, an image of a Petri Dish jumps into my mind?
What's coming next in the capital of emotional incontinence? It's well known that the locals are already pretty adept at recycling hub caps and car radios - so how about, with global warming in mind, banning films that contain references to methane-producing cattle? Let's face it, when the sea-level rises the hallowed streets of 60s pop culture are in the front line for a twice-daily soaking - Penny Lake is in my ears, 'cos it's high tide.
Hell, I never considered the detrimental effect that the violent pipe-smoking old salt Popeye had on my kids - or the Havana sniffing Bilko.
Taking their nanny-state proposal forward by a couple of years, does this mean that the BBC will never again be allowed to broadcast a really cheap black and white Sherlock Holmes movie, or the enigmatic Clint Eastwood in "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly"? And will trans-atlantic container ships loaded up to the poop-deck with tins of corned-beef be refused entry into the harbour?
Will we never again be allowed to watch rubber-faced Jim Carey in "The Mask" because of his really annoying catchline "Smoking!" ??? -- Okay, so there are some benefits to this proposal.
What's coming next in the capital of emotional incontinence? It's well known that the locals are already pretty adept at recycling hub caps and car radios - so how about, with global warming in mind, banning films that contain references to methane-producing cattle? Let's face it, when the sea-level rises the hallowed streets of 60s pop culture are in the front line for a twice-daily soaking - Penny Lake is in my ears, 'cos it's high tide.
Hell, I never considered the detrimental effect that the violent pipe-smoking old salt Popeye had on my kids - or the Havana sniffing Bilko.
Taking their nanny-state proposal forward by a couple of years, does this mean that the BBC will never again be allowed to broadcast a really cheap black and white Sherlock Holmes movie, or the enigmatic Clint Eastwood in "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly"? And will trans-atlantic container ships loaded up to the poop-deck with tins of corned-beef be refused entry into the harbour?
Will we never again be allowed to watch rubber-faced Jim Carey in "The Mask" because of his really annoying catchline "Smoking!" ??? -- Okay, so there are some benefits to this proposal.
Labels:
2008,
city of culture,
films,
Liverpool,
smoking ban
Friday 14 March 2008
PARLIAMENT - A COLLECTIVE NOUN
Dear Sir - As a founding member of the Dyslexic Association of Twitchers (Dys-Ass-Twits) I would like bring to your attention the number of Crooks (Corvus frugilegus) that have taken up residence in the centre of our capital city.
I personally, have witnessed these greedie, noisy creatures queuing up for free flights to and from the countryside - often returning to their lofty abodes late at night carrying objects of desire, free additions to their already crowded residences, purloined at the expense of their rural cousins and other lesser creatures.
It is well known that once a crookery is well established it can only be removed by direct and decisive action against the core of members who inhabit and benefit from the innermost nests of the colony - as with many other hornytheological groups, there is a well-defined pecking order.
It is my opinion that a conservation order should be attached to the internationally-famous buildings immediately below this damaging gathering of guano-dropping parasites - and therefore clearing the way for police enforcement of the required eviction order necessary to preserve the fabric and future integrity of this establishment.
Thursday 13 March 2008
Alistair and Rowan - Separated at birth
I opened the dusty file and checked the documents, there was no doubt that these two were brothers. The paperwork was almost irrelevant, it was as clear as the ridiculous grin on both of their faces.
Even though they had never met there were remarkable similarities in their colourful past that hinted at a genetic link and a predetermined behavioural pattern.
Both had been brought up in very privileged circumstances, educated at various private schools leading unswervingly to a top university education. Both of them had rebelled against the direction taken by their fathers, and both had strong family links to the world of politics.
There was a note pencilled at the bottom of the page, an explanation of the premature loss of cranial pigmentation to one of the brothers - the details were unclear but the words "traumatic experience," "flock of sheep" and "rarified highland air" were still easily discernable.
One of the brothers had risen to the top of his chosen profession and become a well-known household name, putting his signature to many important scripts and televised events - the other had also often been seen on prime-time television, but had assumed the role of a bumbling idiot.
At that moment there was a knock on the door - I quickly replaced the file into the cabinet and quietly closed the drawer. An East Lothian accent asked, "Would ya like a wee dram afore ye go?" I declined and left hurriedly.
Even though they had never met there were remarkable similarities in their colourful past that hinted at a genetic link and a predetermined behavioural pattern.
Both had been brought up in very privileged circumstances, educated at various private schools leading unswervingly to a top university education. Both of them had rebelled against the direction taken by their fathers, and both had strong family links to the world of politics.
There was a note pencilled at the bottom of the page, an explanation of the premature loss of cranial pigmentation to one of the brothers - the details were unclear but the words "traumatic experience," "flock of sheep" and "rarified highland air" were still easily discernable.
One of the brothers had risen to the top of his chosen profession and become a well-known household name, putting his signature to many important scripts and televised events - the other had also often been seen on prime-time television, but had assumed the role of a bumbling idiot.
At that moment there was a knock on the door - I quickly replaced the file into the cabinet and quietly closed the drawer. An East Lothian accent asked, "Would ya like a wee dram afore ye go?" I declined and left hurriedly.
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