Sunday, December 30, 2007

Teenage mums rife in Britain

The government of Britain has admitted for the first time that sex education initiatives are failing to control teenage pregnancy rates.

Every year, almost 50,000 girls under the age of 18 years fall pregnant and the number who conceives is at its highest level since a multi-million-pound programme to curb teenage pregnancy was initiated almost a decade ago, Sunday Telegraph reported.

Britain therefore tops the league table of teenage mothers in western Europe, despite its record number of school-age abortions, the newspaper said quoting a report by the department of health posted on its website.

Smartest quotes of 2007

'Every woman should have four pets in her life. A mink in her closet, a Jaguar in her garage, a tiger in her bed and a jackass who pays for everything.'
— Paris Hilton

'My dear, I thank you. But although I still have the desire, I lack the device.'
— Peter O'Toole to a flasher in the lift of a New York hotel.

'I can't see it happening somehow. We don't airbrush to that extent.'
Hugh Hefner, responding to curvy Kelly Osbourne's wish to appear in the magazine.

"The president is really sorry he couldn't be here tonight. ... His book club is meeting."

Dick Cheney, at the 2007 Gridiron dinner

"A year ago, my approval rating was in the 30s, my nominee for the Supreme Court had just withdrawn, and my Vice President had shot someone. Ahhh, those were the good old days."

–George W. Bush, at the 2007 Radio-TV Correspondents' dinner

"I wish the Iranian people well, and only hope their experience with an inept, rigid ideologue president goes better than ours."
- Oliver Stone, after being refused from filming a documentary about Ahmadinejad in Iran

"Pot. It mightn't kill you, but it could turn you into a dickhead."
- The tag line in an Australian government ad to discourage teenage use of marijuana

"There were only two of them, but they made a whole frontage: huge, compelling, pneumatic. They burst out of tight red dresses--preferably red--or teased among feather boas, or flanked a dizzying cleavage that plunged to tantalising depths. These were celebrated, American breasts, engineered by silicon to be as broad and bountiful as the prairie. With them, a girl from nowhere--or from Houston, Texas--could do anything. The body behind them waxed and waned, sometimes stout as a stevedore's and sometimes almost waif-like, matching the little-girl voice; but the Breasts remained."
- The Anna Nicole Smith obituary in The Economist

The stupidest quotes of 2007

"I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man."
Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE) on Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL)

'Why is it good to die for one's country? Isn't it better to live in New York?'
Bar Refaeli, Israeli girlfriend of Leonardo DiCaprio, on her decision to avoid national service.

"Thanks for the question, you little jerk."

John McCain, after being asked by a high school student if he was too old to be president.

"Welcome to Scotland"
- Scotland's new slogan, which is what an ad agency came up with for a new "exciting" slogan after spending six months on the initiative and getting paid 125,000 pounds

"People use music as a utensil to better themselves."
- Jessica Simpson

"I want to be like Gandhi and Martin Luther King and John Lennon – but I want to stay alive."
- Madonna

"That's a wonderful side effect of leather pants: when you pee yourself in them, they're more forgiving than jeans."

Slash on the benefits of being a rock star

"I'm the Ali of today. I'm the Marvin Gaye of today. I'm the Bob Marley of today. I'm the Martin Luther King, or all the other greats that have come before us. And a lot of people are starting to realize that now."

R. Kelly

"[I] don't believe there's any difference between a monogamous and a polygamous relationship. Those are all just big words, like 'gymnasium.'"

Gene Simmons on open marriage

Bushisms Mk2007


"And there is distrust in Washington. I am surprised, frankly, at the amount of distrust that exists in this town. And I'm sorry it's the case, and I'll work hard to try to elevate it." --interview on National Public Radio, Jan. 29, 2007

"I fully understand those who say you can't win this thing militarily. That's exactly what the United States military says, that you can't win this military."

--on the need for political progress in Iraq, Washington, D.C., Oct. 17, 2007

"One of my concerns is that the health care not be as good as it can possibly be."

--on military benefits, Tipp City, Ohio, April 19, 2007

"My relationship with this good man is where I've been focused, and that's where my concentration is. And I don't regret any other aspect of it. And so I -- we filled a lot of space together."

--on British Prime Minister Tony Blair

"You helped our nation celebrate its bicentennial in 17 -- 1976."

--to Queen Elizabeth

"There are some similarities, of course (between Iraq and Vietnam). Death is terrible."

--Tipp City, Ohio, April 19, 2007

"As yesterday's positive report card shows, childrens do learn when standards are high and results are measured."

--on the No Child Left Behind Act

Man City or Al Hilal? Errr…

MANCHESTER, England: Asian Player of the Year Yasser Al Qahtani revealed he has turned down an offer to join English Premier League club Manchester City.

The Saudi Arabia striker had been on trial with Sven-Goran Eriksson's side but has opted to stay in his home country with Al Hilal.

"I had a successful trial with Manchester City and I was given great praise from everyone there including coach Sven-Goran Eriksson," said 25-year-old Al Qahtani. "We had reached an agreement but there were some issues in the contract that were not resolved. "However, the reason I rejected the offer was not due to financial reasons but because I feel Al Hilal need me too much this season."

Motherwell skipper dies

Motherwell captain Phil O'Donnell died on Saturday after collapsing during a match against Dundee United.

O'Donnell, 35, fell to the ground as he was about to be substituted towards the end of Motherwell's 5-3 Scottish Premier League win over Dundee United.

He then received some five minutes of treatment on the field before being carried off on a stretcher and was subsequently taken by ambulance to hospital.

"Unfortunately I can confirm very, very sad news that Phil O'Donnell has lost his life," said Motherwell chairman Bill Dickie.

The cause of death is as yet unknown

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Music review of the week


Album: Greatest Hits

Artist(s): Crosby, Still & Nash

Label: Atlantic/Wea

“And I dreamed I saw the bomber death planes/Riding shotgun in the sky/Turning into butterflies/Above our nation”: Such is the imagery conjured by David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash (collectively known as CSN). Even without the multi-faceted Neil Young (who brought the Y to CSN) the trio towers over their contemporaries.

Ergo a ‘Greatest Hits’ album, for such a talented group of musicians is a tricky compilation: what to put in and what to leave out?

The album is culled mainly from their ‘Four Way Street’ (1971) and ‘So Far’ (1974) albums, and is a delectable testament, to not only a band with immense pedigree (prior to CSN, Crosby founded the Byrds, Stills was in Buffalo Springfield, and Nash was in The Hollies) but with a harmonising ability on par with the Beach Boys and Mamas and Papas.

Those who decry their vocal style are missing the key to CSN — their penchant for lyrics that are, at their core, grounded in reality, yet ethereal in their suggestion.

The ‘Greatest Hits’, has the standard CSN classics like ‘Woodstock’, ‘Wooden Ships’, ‘Southern Cross’ and ‘Suite: Judy Blue Eyes’, but it is behind these that CSN’s unsung heroes lie. Tracks like ‘Our House’, Helplessly Hoping’, and ‘Just A Song Before I Go’ epitomise the rich tapestry — with lyrical and musical strands — woven by the band.

CSN made their mark in tumultuous times; the US was fighting a losing war; the youth were restless and taking to the streets; and all about them was an air of change.

Theirs is a music of, not so much a bygone era, as it is of a circle of history, and that is what makes them eternal, in their music and in their wisdom.

In ‘Teach Your Children Well’, Graham Nash sings: “And you, of tender years/Can't know the fears that your elders grew by/And so please help them with your youth/They seek the truth before they can die.”

CSN is a seeker’s band, and its message is clear: There is no end to the search, only realisation that what we seek is inherent.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

It’s been sold, for $21.3m

NEW YORK: One of only 17 existing copies of the Magna Carta, the iconic 800-year-old English royal manuscript setting out the rights of man, sold at auction at Sotheby's Tuesday for $21.3 million.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Of hairy dogs and bloody marys (festive special)


One can’t quite recall if it was Ernest Hemmingway, Richard Burton or Lee Marvin that described the quintessential drinking experience as: “When you’ve got to hold on to the earth, to prevent yourself falling into the sky.” Either way, it sounds like quite a life-altering incident.

Youth has many benefits — lack of responsibility, admirably weak moral fibre — the most endearing, however, is the ability to imbibe copious amounts of alcohol and arise, a few hours later, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.

As one grows older, the liver tends to close shop earlier than usual; the brain is prone to take up the drums, rather than the harp; and the eyes tend to feel they look best in red. All this leads to only one excruciating conclusion: a hangover.

But is there any way for the geriatric dipsomaniac (anyone over the age of 30, fits into this category) to avoid the soul-withering sensation of the morning after? The English believe that a full meal, about an hour before the revelries begin, helps dull the pain. Unfortunately, however, they are referring to super-absorbent foods, an ability curry and rice haven’t quite mastered yet.

So opt for two heavily-buttered slices on bread 30 minutes before you hit the sauce; it not only lines your stomach, but tends to absorb the first salvos with resilience.

Another tried-and-tested rule is to drink a glass of water between each drink. Now this does work, but can you handle looking like a complete tool in front of your friends (remember, they’ll be too hungover the next morning to pay any attention to your gloating)? Also it tends to make trips to the loo rather frequent.

Of course you could just bite the bullet and shout rather uproariously “I’ll cross the hangover bridge when I come to it.” In that case, make sure that you’ve got water (one bottle of), Crocin (one strip of), non-acidic fruit juice (one carton of), by your bedside, and hope that one, or more, of your organs don’t go into Che Guevara mode and revolt.

There is, however, another method of getting rid of a hangover, but it’s frowned upon, in most cases anyway. It’s called the Hair of the Dog, and it’s the same one that bit you last night. A morning after drink does work, but it soon snowballs into a vicious cycle. If you are going to stumble down this perilous avenue then opt for a proper Bloody Mary (chock full of Tabasco, pepper, Worcestershire sauce et al) or a Buck’s Fizz (champagne and orange juice).

Of course if you’ve completely ignored this article’s good advice and are quite willing to be the archetypal masochist, then find solace in these words by Ol’ Blue Eyes, Frank Sinatra: “I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day.” And If anyone should know, it’s Frank.

Here come the Turks

ARBIL, Iraq: Turkish troops entered northern Iraq early on Tuesday to flush out separatist Kurdish rebels, Jabbar Yawar, spokesman for the Kurdish peshmerga security force, told AFP

Thursday, December 13, 2007

There is a bit of all of us in Modi

It was meant to be a personal opinion as most columns are, but the response has been pretty public and vocal. A columnist for a daily newspaper in the city wrote that there is a Narendra Modi in every one of us (he was referring to the Gujarat CM, allegedly the mastermind behind the massacre of Muslims during the 2002 Gujarat riots). Is he wrong? Or do we all have a latent genocidal maniac lurking in the abyss of our mind? I think we do.

So what is it then that prevents us from making like Pol Pot having a temper tantrum and obliterating everyone in our vicinity? The answer lies in our fear of repercussion.

Humans, unfortunately or not, live in an environment of fear. And it is made with the blood and sweat of our own beings.

Fear — whose greatest patrons are organised society and religion — keeps us hemmed in; prevents us for realising our potential and above all exercising our need to express our free will.

Anarchy would be Politik 101 if it wasn’t for our fear of being labeled social pariahs. The execution of those we despised would be far more agreeable if it wasn’t for our fear of being incarcerated — or worse, executed ourselves.

Society claims that these are the very reasons why dogma and rigid diktat must be enforced: not so much to protect us from antisocial elements, as to keep us from harming ourselves. Society is nothing but religion’s general, and we mere foot-soldiers in a battle for (pardon the cliché) global hearts and minds.

There is a Modi in every one of us, says the columnist. I would go one step further: there is a bit of us in Modi...and Manson...and Papa Doc...and Hitler.

We live by a moral code that is not ours, and has been thrust upon us by consecutive generations of feeble-minds. Veer from the road well-traveled and feel the brunt of religion’s apocalyptic horsemen: Justice, Family, Society and the Word.

Modi gave his henchmen carte blanche. He took away their fear of repercussion and promised them freedom to express their will. He turned them into humans, he took away their social consciousness and returned them to their primordial state. In many ways he set them free. The fact that Modi used religion to spur on the killers is moot, what isn’t, however, is that he turned society’s weapons upon itself.

Modi, however, made one grave mistake. He sought refuge within the belly of the very beast, whose commands he had shredded, and whose codes he had destroyed. This is his comeuppance. In his case, his lack of fear, was his undoing.

Society is an unforgiving nemesis: at times, it may lapse, but it never forgets. We fear repercussion, because it is inevitable, not because it is righteous.

Those who rail at the columnist’s views are merely reading from society’s hymn sheet. It is time we begin to rail against the system. Anarchy — violent or non-violent — works. Just ask the likes of Gandhi, Robespierre, and Samuel Adams.

Modi may be wrong, but in the homicidal carnage he inspired, there is a hint of the rebelliousness, inherent in all of us. We must now begin to tap it.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Two Emiratis jailed 15 years for rape of European boy

DUBAI, UAE: A Dubai court on Wednesday sentenced two men from the United Arab Emirates to 15 years in jail for raping a French-Swiss teenager.

The prosecution said it would appeal against the sentence, which the victim's mother considered too lenient. The trial of the two UAE nationals, aged 18 and 36, opened on October 24. The older of the two defendants is HIV positive, according to legal sources.

"Fifteen years is nothing for someone who knew he had AIDS," the mother, Veronique Robert, told AFP after the verdict.

"I respect their justice system and I have no other comment to make before speaking to my lawyer."

Defence lawyers had claimed the 15-year-old European had consented to sex and that he had lied to the authorities. The sex act was "in consent and not forced" on the teenager, they said. On November 18, the Dubai public prosecutor's office demanded the maximum penalty for the two adults, one of whom said he was drunk at the time. Under UAE penal code, the maximum penalty for rape could have meant a death sentence.

Diary of a Lady - 16


The captain of the sinking crystal ship was recently congratulated on expressing his feminine side through the writings of this diary. Now that’s a laugh. The captain of this hole-ridden blog is a misogynist who in his own words would happily fuck a narwhal. I, on the other hand, have standards when it comes to deciding who I want to sleep with. No man or woman has refused me yet, though after 29 years of fucking around, I’m beginning to think that sex is overrated.

I prefer to sleep with men and women I know or even like. Otherwise, as I stare into the face of the stranger pounding me, I think of the lines from TS Eliot’s Wasteland. I summarise: She is bored and tired, he endeavours to engage her in caresses, which though unreproved are undesired. His vanity requires no response.

And at the end of banal interlude, you get up and say, “Well, thank god that’s over.” That’s what it boils down to.

19 killed in apartment fire in central China, hundreds trapped

BEIJING, China: A fire tore through an apartment building in central China early Wednesday, killing 19 people and leaving hundreds of other residents trapped, the official Xinhua News Agency said. (Watch Crystal Ship for story updates)

Nine charged with woman's death during Maori exorcism

WELLINGTON, New Zealand: Nine family members appeared in a New Zealand court Wednesday charged with manslaughter over the death of a 22 year old woman during an apparent Maori exorcism ceremony in October, police said, according to the Associated Press.

The six women and three men entered no pleas when they appeared in Lower Hutt District Court, and were released on police bail by Judge Denis Barry.

One of the women was charged jointly with a fourth man with cruelty to a child, a 14-year-old girl who also nearly died during the ceremony.

The judge granted all 10 defendants interim name suppression until they reappear in February.

The 10, aged between 42 and 57, were released on bail on condition that they not participate in or advise anyone over any ceremony involving Maori exorcism or cleansing procedures.

Police said the deceased drowned in a family bath during the ceremony at her grandparents' home on October 12 while about 40 members of her family looked on.

Her 14-year-old cousin was taken to hospital after nearly dying during a subsequent exorcism — one of six other people subject to exorcism after the woman drowned, police said.

Earlier, police said the teenager nearly lost her sight after her eyes were gouged to drive out an evil spirit during the exorcism.

These girls are too Spicy for Las Vegas

London: The Spice Girls (aka Skinny, Eddie’s beeach, Fatso, Butch and Slapper), who are spreently on their reunion tour, sang to a half empty stadium in Las Vegas.

Of course to some in the audience it was half-full. But optimists seem to be fleeing away from the Painful Pentet, acording to website ananova.com.

Becks was there weeping into his lace handkerchief, alongside pugilist Ricky ‘Mayweather’s my daddy’ Hatton, but paying fans decided not to show up.

According to the Associated Press, things have been getting worse for the group after their comeback single Headlines, which was sung for the NGO Children in Need, flopped so badly that it became the charity's worst selling song of all time.

On a better note Spandau Ballet’s reunion seems to be on track for 2008. The band will go on World Tour with the newly-reformed Culture Club. Oh the humanity!

Friday, December 7, 2007

We demand Angelina!

MANILA, Philippines: According to the Associated Press, thousands of rural people have been displaced by increased military operations, a left wing Filipino farmers group said Friday in an appeal for help to the United Nations High Commissioner on

Refugees.

OK, so far so dreary, but hang on it gets better.

The Farmers' Movement of the Philippines, or KMP, urged the UNHCR to send goodwill ambassador and Hollywood star Angelina Jolie to the Philippines to look into the rising number of internal refugees in the country.

Angelina Jolie?! Methinks these farmers want to see more than an end to their plight. It’s like all the single men in Mumbai demanding Paris Hilton (Sign up now to the Paris For Oscar Club...starting soon, in a basement near you) come to the city to see their...errr...plight

The KMP, according to the AP, asked for Jolie to witness “the real situation of internally displaced people in the country.” As opposed to what? The surreal dreanm world that we all think farmers live in?

For heaven’s sake, if you want to see the bird and her plumage, just do what everyone else does...surf www.freeones.come. Classic!

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Moderator moi? Never!

For heavens' sake lads, the comments just come into my e-mail and I publish them all. Look at it this way, pretend I am a newspaper editor. All the reporters file their stories, and I have a look at them and publish them verbatim. If I have failed to publish any comments, please do let me know. If, however, you're being derogatory to the Duck-billed Platypus or the Lesser Echidna, you're post will not only be deleted, but you will be black-balled by the Strange Mammal Foundation, of which I am the Head Vertebrate. Keep posting. PS: I am looking for someone to write news snippets (gossipy or newsy) from the city in which they live. If anyone out there wants to do so, please let me know.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Groups for Euro 2008 (check out Group C)

Group A

Switzerland

Czech Republic

Portugal

Turkey

Group B

Austria

Croatia

Germany

Poland

Group C

Netherlands

Italy

Romania

France

Group D

Greece

Sweden

Spain

Dr Selflove, or how I learned to stop worrying and love my bombs

Never, even in my most legally wildest dreams, did I ever think I’d be saying this, but here goes: Tom Cruise once said (albeit as Jerry Maguire), “Have you ever gotten the feeling that you aren’t completely embarrassed yet, but you glimpse tomorrow’s embarrassment?” I have glimpsed, looked, and fallen flat on my face in the puddle of embarrassment that formed such an integral part of my youth.

In my younger years, I was given a rather pithy bit of advice: “Be embarrassed, by what you do, never by what someone else does.” Now I can’t remember if the bearer of this lesson was a gorgeous psychologist or ophthalmologist, but either way I dismissed it with regrettable aplomb.

Growing up, I had friends who would partake in my embarrassing shenanigans with a youthful gusto, so missed in our fogey years. A journalist friend, and myself would spend many an hour in his flat regaling (or so we thought) all sorts of people with our erudition and pontification on subjects as diverse as Leibniz, and Captain America.

Our inebriated dialectic method meant we never had the same guest twice (we deemed that a sign of our wealth of acquaintances). Eventually, the truth dawned, and we realised that the guests were fleeing, rather than dashing out because their baby was on fire — I still can’t believe we bought that excuse.

One irate visitor, after hours of being subject to our discourse on Descartes’ method — superbly interspersed with an acoustic rendition of Johnny Lee’s Looking for Love — resorted to literary sabotage. It is alleged, he ripped out the wires of the computer on which my friend was writing his magnum opus, hence depriving the world of a classic in the Joycian mold. I did, and still do, believe my friend, even if he now — years later — ignores my calls and writes about dogs and their toilet habits (Ignatius Reilly IS having the last laugh).

My girlfriend at the time, refused to join in our discussion for a number of reasons (“there’s not enough alcohol in the world” and “because being bored into a coma is not my idea of an evening out” being just two of them). On the rare occasion that she did pander to her masochistic tendencies, she would be overwhelmed by the misogynistic tirade that usually emanated from two dipsomaniacs with a steamer trunk full of insecurities. This often resulted in her hiding the courage juice, or, heaven forbid, the guitar! We have since parted ways, and she is currently basking in the eternal sunshine of her spotless mind.

By the time my friend and I realised that people were laughing at us, we were reduced by our carnal and intellectual vices to quivering masses of anti-social ectoplasm. Our embarrassment has been unsurpassed. He learned his lesson, I, however, did not.

Over the next few years, I was the Sundance Kid going solo, while Butch got married and seems to have opted for those simple canine pleasures. I partied hard, and annoyed harder, and unfortunately still do.

A few weeks ago, I had the misfortune of visiting one of the city’s colleges and saw a young man telling a group of girls why Sartre was the father of Existentialism (he pronounced it ‘eggshilism’). They sniggered, and looked longingly at the four aces smoking in the corner talking about Eat My Decaying Corpse or some other new metal band.

I wanted to walk up the lad, and tell him that it would all be for nought; that they too would run and he would suffer humiliation and embarrassment that would resign him to a shrink’s couch for aeons. But I didn’t. Any idiot who didn’t know that Søren Kierkegaard was the father of ‘eggshilism’ could go to hell.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Diary of a Lady - 15


Interacting with people frightens me. Loud people put me off. The overly ambitious leave me quaking in my dirty old shoes. The smug ones need a good smack. The intelligent mind makes me feel dumb. I loathe having prolonged conversations with a group of people because more often than not, such 'sessions' highlight my inadequacies. My thoughts get confused, the noise is disorienting… and the pointlessness of the situation hits me in gut.

The evening before last, I was forced to attend a sit-down dinner. I shrank in horror even as I looked at the shiny, happy faces around me. Why can't I be shiny and happy? My friend who knows my insanity throws me a sympathetic glance and tries to involve me in the conversation, but I cannot talk.

After an hour of nicotine and alcohol, I wanted to kill the lot — in true PS3 style. I zoomed in on the faces that irked me the most. The judgmental prig needs a good fuck, and should then be burnt on a stake. The grating laugher. Bang, bang… you're dead. The arrogant boor. I'm going to stab you with my dinner knife. I imagined their blood spilling on the dinner table. It was satisfying.

I have nothing to say to anyone anymore. Yes, winter is slowly setting in. Yes, 65-year-olds are having sex with nubile African boys. And then… silence. I drag my tired feet home and curl up in bed. I welcome my nightmares — they're not as bad as my reality.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Of errant ‘E’s and that idiot Fowler

It wasn’t the best of times, but it just might have been one of the worst, because there I was sipping a beer and gawking, with goggle-eyed inebriation, at the bar staff, who had bleached their hair blonde for some sordid event.

Not only were their heads gleaming like little bobbing suns, but they wore black T-shirts — all of which had “I may be blonde but I’m smart...drink (name of brand withheld as the writer cannot afford to be sued) emblazoned on them.”

Now — apart from the fact that the tipple in question was so vile it would have been unceremoniously booted out of any self-respecting moonshine palace — I am a great supporter of the blonde cause. In fact, I am an ardent fan of Paris Hilton (the actress, not the socialite), Jessica Simpson (Daisy Duke, not Newlyweds) and Anna Nicole Smith (the live version preferably).

But I digress, my apologies.

Now the little ditty on the shirt was perfectly innocuous in itself, but when I spotted one of the male members of staff wearing the same shirt (imprint and all) I was aghast, verging on agog.

“Excuse me,” I said, “do you know what’s wrong with that shirt you’re wearing?”

Now it’s never a good idea to probe a hulking South African fly-half, but a man’s got to do, what a man’s got to do.

“Why? What’s wrong with it,” he muttered, twirling an empty Sol, with cringe-worthy agility.

“Oh nothing major, it just assumes you’re a woman.”

“A what...?”

Thankfully for me the music was loud enough, and the lights low enough to mask my sharp intake of breath, quivering bladder, and eyes that were now the size of pimped-up flying saucers.

“Blonde!” I shouted quickly, already wondering whether a broken nose or a broken jaw, would be a better story to tell the little ones (my sister’s, not mine).

“What’s wrong with blonde?”

“Blonde,” I muttered, “spelt the way it is on your shirt, implies a woman. A man would have been ‘b-l-o-n-d’.”

“Don’t be a smart arse,” he said.

“Don’t blame me, blame that pedant Henry Watson Fowler,” as soon as the words came out of mouth, I knew I had just stepped over a boundary: that which lies between erudite nag and pompous twit (I was twittering like a Tit).

As I beat a hasty retreat to the nearest exit I heard him call out over the din of the Jam: “Who did you say it was?”

I stopped. My left brain recreated the battle of the Somme with my right. I turned and walked back to the burly barkeep and stared into his nasal passages, for purely height reasons of course.

The words were forming, and my tongue was contorting trying to keep them in. It’s tough-muscle status now in serious jeopardy. And then I uttered: “It’s whom, not who...you moron.”

Next week: How to prevent organ failure by curling up into a foetal position, while being stomped on by a 150 kg supertanker of a man

Execution for making a call

North Korea has resumed frequent public executions, among them a factory chief accused of
making international phone calls who was shot at a stadium before thousands of spectators, a South Korean aid group said Monday.

Diary of a Lady - 14

Penises are redundant. I’ve arrived at this glorious conclusion after spending a weekend alone – no men, no lovers, no horny exes… just me and good old Thomas Hardy. (And I would never have slept with Hardy – give me William Butler Yeats any day). OOoohhh. It’s not Yeats’ penis that interests me as much as his mind. But I digress.

Last weekend, I switched off my cellphone, curled up in bed and pleasured myself. It was me and my rabbit, with the strains of Amadeus Mozart’s Symphony No. 29 wafting from my cheap laptop speakers.

And I came and came and came – even Leda would have been envious.

But at night, after two bottles of wine, I needed a hug, and there was no one to give me one. Somehow, I can satiate myself, but I can’t comfort myself.

Ye olde white bird and her dark fantasies

Jeremy Clarke, reporting for Reuters from Mombasa in Kenya had this rather interesting feature on the wires. Send in your comments on this trend.

Bethan, 56, lives in southern England on the same street as best friend Allie, 64. They are on their first holiday to Kenya, a country they say is “just full of big young boys who like us older girls”.

Hard figures are difficult to come by, but local people on the coast estimate that as many as one in five single women visiting from rich countries are in search of sex. Allie and Bethan — who both declined to give their full names — said they planned to spend a whole month touring Kenya’s palm-fringed beaches. They would do well to avoid the country’s tourism officials.

“It's not evil,” said Jake Grieves-Cook, chairman of the Kenya Tourist Board, when asked about the practise of older rich women travelling for sex with young Kenyan men. “But it's certainly something we frown upon.”

Also, the health risks are stark in a country with an Aids prevalence of 6.9 percent. Although condom use can only be guessed at, Julia Davidson, an academic at Nottingham University who writes on sex tourism, said that in the course of her research she had met women who shunned condoms — finding them too “businesslike” for their exotic fantasies.

The white beaches of the Indian Ocean coast stretched before the friends as they both walked arm-in-arm with young African men, Allie resting her white haired-head on the shoulder of her companion, a six-foot-four 23-year-old from the Maasai tribe. He wore new sunglasses he said were a gift from her. “We both get something we want —where's the negative?” Allie asked in a bar later, nursing a strong, golden cocktail. She was still wearing her bikini top, having just pulled on a pair of jeans and a necklace of traditional African beads. Bethan sipped the same local drink: a powerful mix of honey, fresh limes and vodka known locally as ‘Dawa’, or ‘medicine’. She kept one eye on her date — a 20-year-old playing pool, a red bandana tying back dreadlocks and new-looking sports shoes on his feet. He looked up and came to join her at the table, kissing her, then collecting more coins for the pool game.

Grieves-Cook and many hotel managers say they are doing all they can to discourage the practice of older women picking up local boys, arguing it is far from the type of tourism they want to encourage in the east African nation.

These same beaches have long been notorious for attracting another type of sex tourists — those who abuse children. As many as 15,000 girls in four coastal districts — about a third of all 12-18 year-olds girls there — are involved in casual sex for cash, a joint study by Kenya's government and UN children's charity Unicef reported late last year. Up to 3,000 more girls and boys are in full-time sex work, it said, some paid for the “most horrific and abnormal acts”.

Emerging alongside this black market trade — and obvious in the bars and on the sand once the sun goes down — are thousands of elderly white women hoping for romantic, and legal, encounters with much younger Kenyan men. They go dining at fine restaurants, then dancing, and back to expensive hotel rooms overlooking the coast. “One type of sex tourist attracted the other,” said one manager at a shorefront bar on Mombasa'’s Bamburi beach.

“Old white guys have always come for the younger girls and boys, preying on their poverty.... But these old women followed, they never push the legal age limits, they seem happy just doing what is sneered at in their countries.”

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Sins of our underestimation


We can build ocean-spanning ships; aircraft that skim the border of space; and trains that travel faster than World War II warplanes, but nature, and her fury continue to evade our devious hands.

As pictures trickled in of the MV Explorer, slowly sinking into the icy waters around the Antarctic, the message was clear, nature is not going to give up her controlling-stake in our planet. Not without taking a few of us with her anyway.

In that sense, the passengers of the Explorer were lucky: all 90 of them survived. But the writing is on the wall, as cyclones buffet Bangladesh, hurricanes lash the man-made coasts of North America and earthquakes and volcanoes batter the cursed islands of Indonesia.

If we, however, delude ourselves into thinking that by building bigger, faster and stronger vessels for our ignorance, we will be able to tame — nay control — nature’s indignation at her rape...we are in for a surprise.

We will not only suffer the fate of Icarus, but the next ‘Explorer’ that impales itself on nature's icy limbs may be carrying far more than 90 people. And this time they may not be so lucky.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

More guns please, we’re American


SAN MARCOS, Texas: Now, I honestly believe that Americans are a much-maligned people, and have had the pleasure of meeting more than my fair share of cerebral ‘Yanks’. So why oh why, do they — every now and then — have to give the Associated Press these little nuggets, that just portray them as idiotic morons.

Get this: “Mike Guzman and thousands of other students say the best way to prevent campus bloodshed is more guns.”

Is this guy for real? For heaven’s sake he’s an economics major. Give him a gun and you might as well give your wife your credit card...because, baby, your life’s over.

According to the AP, Guzman, who studies as Texas State University in San Marcos, is among 8,000 students nationwide who have joined the nonpartisan Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, arguing that students and faculty already licensed to carry concealed weapons should be allowed to pack heat along with their textbooks.

Picture this.

Professor: So Mr Guzman. Can you explain to the rest of the class the tenets of Disaster Capitalism?

Guzman: Errr...no.

P: Mr Guzman, I demand an answer.

G: I demand not to be asked.

P: That’s it, you’re suspended.

G: Suspend this, motherfucker! (Guzman whips out gun, misses the Professor and kills classmate instead. Classmate’s boyfriend, peeved, pulls out his piece and shoots at Guzman, only to kill the janitor mopping the corridor. Soon everyone’s whipping everything out and the Gunfight at the OK Corral, suddenly, looks like a Disney flick).

Tapped at 14, Spears ain’t no virgin

London: That lying bitch! (OK I’m not as upset as that sounds), but surely Britney Spears could have come clean about her virginity.

According to the wires, Britney, who had famously vowed that she would wait till marriage to have sex, lost her virginity when she was 14, her former laywer said.

In an interview with a magazine, Eric Ervin claimed that Spears first had sex with her boyfriend of three years. He also said that Spears' virgin image was a "PR blitz" and that she and Justin Timberlake were intimate from the beginning, thesun.co.uk reports.

Some famous virgins. Seriously
  • Hans Christian Anderson
  • James Barrie
  • Lewis Carroll
  • Emily Dickenson
  • Ed Gein
  • Edgar Hoover
  • Immanuel Kant
  • Soren Kierkegard
  • Sir isaac Newton
  • Nikolai Tesla

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Paris’s elephantine problem


GAUHATI, India: In what is arguably one of the most bizarre stories to hit today’s wires, Associated Press has reported that conservationists on Tuesday have hailed socialite Paris Hilton for apparently trying to highlight the cause of binge drinking elephants in northeastern India.

According to the report, activists said a celebrity endorsement was sure to raise awareness of the plight of the pachyderms that get drunk on farmers' homemade rice beer then go on a rampage.

“There would have been more casualties if the villagers hadn't chased them away. And four elephants died in a similar way three years ago. It is just so sad,” Hilton was quoted as saying in Tokyo last week.

Hilton of course has no idea where Meghalaya is. She has, however, expressed a desire to try some of the moonshine.

“The elephants get drunk all the time. It is becoming really dangerous. We need to stop making alcohol available to them,” she said in a report posted on the World Entertainment News Network Web site.

Maybe Paris should try a similar tack among her addled friends on the Hollywood has-been circuit.

According to the report, while welcoming Hilton's interest, another conservationist said elephant alcohol abuse was just a symptom of the real problem.

Looks like Elephants Anonymous is just round the corner. We really must get these elephants to deal with their emotions in a reasonable manner, rather than trying to find solutions at the bottom of a bottle. Of course we might find it a smidgen difficult to get an elephant to stand up and say: “My name is Dumbo, and I am an alcoholic.”

Hilton recently announced plans to do charity work in Rwanda for the Playing for Good Foundation, but the trip was postponed until next year.

We reckon that was due to the fact that...well...she just couldn’t find a good nightclub in Kigali.

There. He finally said it

KRASNOYARSK, Russia: President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that a convincing victory for the party he is leading in December 2 parliamentary elections would give him the "moral right" to maintain strong influence in Russia after he steps down next year. Putin's remarks were the clearest affirmation yet that he plans to keep a powerful hand on Russia's reins when his eight years as president are over, but he stopped short of saying whether he would seek a formal role.

Diary of a Lady - 13


Parents who let their children walk around in squeaky shoes should be fed to a pack of hungry lions (I'll be cheering from the stands).

There's nothing like a spot of afternoon sex on a lazy Sunday to get you all relaxed and happy. What my partner and I hadn't counted on was a toddler pacing outside our window wearing shoes that squeaked. Through it all: foreplay and mainplay, the brat never stopped walking. So we decided to time our responses.

The refrain was rather simple: squeak, oh yeah, squeak, jesus that's good, squeak, I'm coming, squeak, squeak, squeak, yes, yes, yes!

Forty-five minutes later, I was enjoying my orgasm (which I very rarely have), and I could hear the ominous 'squeak, squeak, squeak'.

Stuart Gair dies, aged 44

Hapless Scottish victim of a notorious miscarriage of justice

By Bob Woffinden, The Guardian
Stuart Gair (right), who has died of a heart attack at the age of 44, was the victim of one of Scotland's most flagrant miscarriages of justice. He was born in Reading, Berkshire, never knew his father and was brought up in Plean, a small mining community near Stirling, when his mother returned to her home area. After a troubled childhood, he lived mainly on the streets in Glasgow and survived through small-time criminality.

On April 11 1989, Peter Smith, a supermarket manager, was found dead from a single stab wound to the chest in a well-known gay cruising area of the city. At the time, Gair was with his girlfriend and two acquaintances in a hostel. However, he was picked up the following morning for an unrelated minor offence. When Strathclyde police found out that he was from Plean (where Smith had also been brought up), they began to build a case against him for the murder.

A number of young, frightened gay men were pressured into giving evidence. Forensics ostensibly linked Gair with what was purported to be the murder weapon. For reasons that remain obscure, his alibi witnesses were never called to give evidence. According to witnesses, Smith had been attacked by two men. William McLeod, another vulnerable young man, was coerced into signing a confession that he and Gair had killed Smith together. Charges against McLeod were then dropped and he became the main prosecution witness. At trial, however, he said he had signed the confession only under duress. That evening, he was threatened with perjury charges, and the following day went back to court to restate the untruthful account.

Gair was convicted by an 8-7 majority verdict on August 30 1989 and sentenced to life imprisonment. In Glen Ochil prison, he was befriended by Dr Jim MacGregor, who was a GP in Alloa and part-time medical officer at the prison. MacGregor studied the papers, concluded that it was "a shocking case of corruption" and helped to mobilise a growing campaign. The case became a cause celebre; among those lending assistance was Peter Mullan, the Scottish actor and director of The Magdalene Sisters.

From 1995, Gair was represented by Glasgow solicitor John Macaulay, who uncovered "one impropriety after another" and built up an impressive dossier of evidence for his client. Key witnesses retracted their evidence. Dr Bill Hunt, a leading pathologist, described the forensic science evidence as ranging from "quite seriously flawed" to "total nonsense".

In 1999, Gair's became the first contemporary case to be referred to appeal by the new Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission. Pending the appeal's outcome, he was released on bail in 2000. While the case was becalmed in the torpid Scottish judicial process, he was living a kind of purgatory. "I didn't comprehend how mentally damaged he was as a result of the years he'd spent in prison as an innocent man," said MacGregor.

Gair, a heroin user, had no family, no support, no means of getting by, and he alienated many of those who had tried to help him. He was taken to court three times on other charges, twice for possession of heroin and once for breach of the peace after inviting two schoolboys back to his flat.

Finally, his conviction for Smith's murder was overturned at appeal in 2006. There was general disquiet - although not surprise - that, rather than opening the can of worms that the case represented, the judges allowed the appeal on the limited ground of non-disclosure of evidence.

After that, friends felt that Gair had turned the corner. However, on October 26, Donal MacIntyre, the television reporter, was filming with ambulance crews in Edinburgh when they were called to the flat of someone who had just suffered a major heart attack; it was Gair. MacIntyre stayed with him at the Royal Infirmary and contacted Paddy Hill, one of the Birmingham Six, and John McManus, who together run Mojo (Miscarriages of Justice Organisation) Scotland.

"He was gifted and highly intelligent," MacGregor said, "but his whole life seemed blighted. The biggest tragedy was that he died just as he was beginning to look forward and to plan his life."

· Stuart Gair, miscarriage of justice victim, born August 27 1963; died October 29 2007

Captain's Log: If any Scots out there have any memories of Gair, or the case, please don't hesitate to let the Crystal Ship know

Monday, November 12, 2007

Surf's up...check it out

Thanks to the Guardian for bringing to our attention this cracking website. It's a treat for anyone with a penchant for irony and sarcasm..oh and for those who have immense amounts of time on their hands, as well.
Here's the site: www.passiveaggressivenotes.com/

Saudi Prince goes for size, buys A380

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the Saudi billionaire who is Citigroup Inc's biggest individual investor, agreed to buy a $319 million Airbus SAS A380 superjumbo (seen in picture), becoming the first private customer for the world's biggest aircraft.

The purchase was announced by Toulouse, France-based Airbus at the Dubai Air Show today. Alwaleed, ranked the world's 13th-richest person by Forbes magazine, flew in from Saudi Arabia on his Boeing 747.

Who is this dude?

  • He is the owner of the Kingdom Holding Company (not to be confused with Big Brother and his)

  • After the 9/11 attacks, Al-Walid suggested that the attacks were an indication that the United States 'should re-examine its policies in the Middle East and adopt a more balanced stand toward the Palestinian cause', Giuliani asserted, Giuliani subsequently rejected the prince's $10 million donation to disaster relief in the aftermath of the attack.

Britney in a tizzy over mum’s book

London: Troubled pop star Britney Spears, who is working on a comeback, is upset with mother Lynne for writing a book about her and now wants pen her side of the story.

Lynne has signed a $1 million deal to pen the book on parenting. Spears wants to write her own memoir at the same time, contactmusic.com reports.

"She is trying to make a quick buck. She says she's not sure if she'll go through with it — but I can't really trust her," Spears reportedly told a friend.

Spears is trying to regain control over her life so that she can get custody of her children who now are with her ex-husband Kevin Federline.

She also has a new album out, Blackout, as an attempt at a comeback.

The Crystal Ship has also discovered that Britney has already written a book — about how to get fat and dance like an orgasmic dervish — but she just can’t remember where she put the manuscript. Maybe it’s in the car with her kids

20 years' salary for families of workers killed in Dubai

DUBAI: The families of the seven Indian workers who were killed in last week's accident at a bridge construction site in Dubai will get 20 years' salary — double the compensation announced earlier.
The Wade Adams Contracting Company Monday announced that the next of kin of each of the deceased would get 20 years' salary as compensation instead of 10 years as announced earlier.
"Our company has decided to give 20 years' salary — their lifetime salary — to their (the workers') families. We don't want them to suffer," N M Naushad, human resources director of Wade Adams, told IANS.
He said that, as an interim measure, the company has decided to give 20,000 dirhams ($5,400) to the next of kin of each of those killed.

The bitch is back!


MADURAI: A 33-year-old man in Sivaganga district of Tamil Nadu has married a dog in a bid to ward off the "curse" of a canine couple he had killed 15 years ago.

Selva Kumar tied a 'mangal sutra' on the animal, petnamed Selvi, at a Ganesh temple in Manamadurai, about 50 km from here, yesterday.

The 10-year-old saree-clad "bride" was brought to the temple in a grand bridal procession. After the function, the bride was feasted with bread.

Kumar, who vowed to protect Selvi all through its life, said he married the animal as per the advice of an astrologer. "I will take care of it till its death."

According to Kumar, when he was 18-years-old, he had clubbed to death a dog-couple when they were mating and hung them on a tree.

After the incident, he suffered a stroke and could not move his left arm and legs and also turned deaf. He now walks with the help of a stick.

Kumar claimed that an astrologer had suggested him that he had the "curse of dogs".

The astrologer advised him that all his problems will be solved once he did the penance by marrying a bitch, Kumar said.

Captain’s Log: The astrologer is obviously a complete nutter. Not because he believes in the ‘curse of dogs’ but because he claims that “all his problems will be solved once he did the penance by marrying a bitch”. Trust me, marrying the bitch only aggravates the situation, just ask Paul McCartney.

Selva Kumar, rather, should be hung up by his testicles and bull-whipped, for murdering those two dogs. I hope the “bitch” bites his head off. Now that would be justice.

Monkey business injures 25 in New Delhi

NEW DELHI: A wild monkey went on a rampage in a low income neighborhood in the Indian capital, injuring several people, most of them children, police said Monday.

Police sub-inspector Gaje Singh told The Associated Press that the attacks started late Saturday in the Shastri Park area of New Delhi, adding that it was not immediately possible to give an exact tally of the injured. Local news reports said as many as 25 people were injured.

Singh said officers were patrolling the neighborhood in search of the rogue animal.

“But the monkey hasn't been spotted yet,” Singh said.

People in Shastri Park often sleep outside their homes or on open roofs to escape the heat.

Neighborhood resident Naseema, who goes by one name, carried her one-year-old daughter into her house in attempts to escape the animal. “The monkey followed me in and buried its teeth in my baby's leg,” she told the Times of India newspaper.

As New Delhi's forest cover shrinks, rhesus macaque monkeys have overrun its government buildings, temples and residential areas, occasionally biting passers by or snatching food from them. A government official died last month when he fell from his balcony during an attack by wild monkeys.

Part of the problem is that devout Hindus believe monkeys are manifestations of the god Hanuman and feed them bananas and peanuts, encouraging them to frequent public places.