[kj] Tony Blair Is Dead
Change
crackedmachine at yahoo.co.uk
Mon Jul 2 10:22:25 EDT 2007
>
> S T I L L W A R M
>
>
> (A special edition from the makers of The Friday
Thing)
>
>
> Tony Blair, Prime Minister
>
> 1997-2007
>
>----------------------------------------------------------
>
>TONY BLAIR
>=
>
>Prime Minister Anthony Charles Lynton Blair
reformer,
>friend of Cliff Richard, champion of gays, warmonger,
liar,
>master of spin, guitarist, Christian, father of David
>Cameron - has died.
>
>He was 10.
>
>----------------------------------------------------------
>
>TONY BLAIR, PM: A TEXTIMONIAL
>=
>
>gudbI tOnE blr
>gn
>bt nt 4gvn
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>POLITICS: THE PLACE OF LOW SKULLDUGGERY
>=
>
>'Some may belittle politics. But we know who are
engaged in
>it, that it is where people stand tall. Although I
know it
>has its many harsh contentions, it is still the arena
that
>sets the heart beating a little faster and if it is
on
>occasions the place of low skullduggery, it is more
often
>the place for the pursuit of noble causes, and I wish
>everyone, friend or foe, well and that is that. The
end.'
>
>- Tony Blair, Wednesday June 27, 2007
>
>....
>
>If a week is a long time in politics, which
apparently it
>is, then ten years must be absolutely ages. Going on
a
>decade in fact. But all things - even very long
things -
>must pass, and now that Tony Blairs ten years as a
lead
>player on the world stage have crawled into the past
like a
>limping, disgraced clown, its time for the
biographers to
>brush off their biographite, and assess the years
that they
>are already calling The Blair Years.
>
>Sadly, all of the biographers are agreed that it
doesn't
>matter how hard you try and spin it, Blair's legacy
will
>forever hinge upon one thing and one thing only:
Iraq.
>Indeed, Iraq is to Tony Blair very much what those 13
>murdered women are to Peter Sutcliffe. For if it
hadn't been
>for his victims, Peter Sutcliffe would to this day
most
>probably be considered a thoroughly decent chap who
went
>about his business, kept himself to himself,
occasionally
>had a regrettable temper tantrum at Christmas but on
the
>whole was a pretty OK guy.
>
>But, sadly, facts is facts just as sure as eggs is
eggs, and
>once an egg is broken, there is no putting the facts
of a
>shattered shell back together, not even if the
resulting
>omelette tastes truly wicked and the whole world
wishes it
>had never been brought into existence. So just as
Sutcliffe
>will never be able to shake off his vicious,
psychopathic
>murderer tag no matter how many old ladies he
helped
>across the street when he wasn't cracking innocent
skulls
>with his hammer so Blair will never be washed clean
of his
>share of the blood of around 655,000 dead Iraqis no
matter
>how tremendous were his other achievements. Also,
blaming
>God did little to alleviate the guilt of either men.
>
>But forget God. Let's take a moment just how
tremendous
>*were* his other achievements?
>
>Well, there's the pacification of Northern Ireland of
>course. Then there's the Civil Partnership Act. Then,
well,
>there's some other stuff, we're sure of it. He was
very
>loyal to his friends of course, which is nice. That's
where
>him and Peter Sutcliffe definitely part company
Tony
>*always* looked after those who managed to get close
to him.
>Peter Mandelson, for example. David Blunkett. John
Prescott.
>He wasn't too good at taking care of those who didn't
always
>agree with him however. David Kelly, for example.
Robin
>Cook. Mo Mowlam... Not that we're suggesting anything
>underhanded here. Oh, except the blood from all those
dead
>Iraqis of course. The cash for honours thing. And the
myriad
>lies he told from beginning to end to maintain for
himself
>and his family the lifestyle to which he very quickly
became
>accustomed.
>
>The shit.
>
>One thing we will say for him however: at least he
never
>used a hammer.
>
>
>-
>
>akillerpm at thefridaything.co.uk
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>THE BLAIR YEARS IN ELEVEN WORDS
>=
>
>'Get up the arse of the White House and stay there.'
>
>- Blair's chief of staff, Jonathan Powell in 1997, to
>Ambassador to Washington Sir Christopher Meyer.
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>BYE THEN, TONY
>=
>
>And so, Tony's reign of terror is at an end. Cherie,
gobbing
>off at the press as she went, was her graceless self
to the
>last. It's all been pretty anti-climactic - no matter
how
>breathless and deferential the television coverage -
which
>was probably the plan. Were you dancing a jig or
feeling
>strangely flat? Where were all the street parties?
Did
>things just get better or worse? Was the tap gushing
Iraqi
>blood miraculously turned off at lunchtime on
Wednesday?
>
>Be honest now. Examine the depths of the fathomless
pit that
>you call a soul, conscience or whatever. You know,
that part
>of yourself where you buried what you did with that
magazine
>you found in the woods or what you let that boy do to
you at
>that party when you were 14.
>
>Now, it might be that you're a Amnesty
>International-subscribing liberal, wet of knickers
and
>bleeding of heart. But wouldn't part of you love to
see Tony
>Blair's head on a spike outside the Tower of London?
His
>face contorted in a final agony that had even his
>executioners weeping and vomiting? There, don't you
feel
>better admitting it, if only to yourself? We know we
do.
>
>'But think of all the good he did,' say his vestigial
>supporters. The first 'good' to fall from their lips
is
>Blair's three general election victories. 'He was a
winner,'
>they protest. The thing is, the Labour Party isn't
like the
>Brazilian World Cup team - an election victory isn't
a
>trophy to put in the glass case until the next
tournament.
>To hear most of Blair's hagiographers speak, winning
has
>been the end in itself.
>
>Once you get past the three golden 'historic'
election
>victories, the rest of the trophies accrued over the
last
>ten years look small and brassy. What about economic
growth
>during every quarter of his premiership, cry the
faithful.
>Or the minimum wage? And tax credits? Especially when
>they're administered in such cack-handed, inhumane
ways
>tales abound of people's lives being made harder not
easier.
>
>The thing is, who really cares about such things?
Who, now,
>says of Anthony Eden, 'Forget the Suez Crisis, what
about
>the interest rates in 1956? *That's* a legacy'? Or of
John
>Major, 'Say what you like about him knobbing Edwina,
he
>bowed to no one in his grasp of macro-economics'?
>
>Anyway. Blair won't be missed *nor* forgotten and a
tenner
>on him slopping out at the Hague before the end of
the
>decade seems a comforting, if not exactly lucrative,
wager
>to make. It's probably true to say that he
radicalised
>millions of people, just not in the way he would have
liked.
>It's because him we're up to our necks in blogs, for
>starters. The bastard.
>
>The only question left is, will there be so much spit
on his
>grave when he dies that it'll be an ice-rink in
winter? Or
>will the salt in all the urine deposited there
prevent the
>saliva from freezing?
>
>
>-
>
>missingyoualready at thefridaything.co.uk
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>TONY BLAIR: THE VERY BEST AT BEING BAD
>=
>
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9_yv1m9jN8
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>THE FUTURE: A MORE OPEN AND HONEST DIALOGUE
>=
>
>http://tinyurl.com/2aop3a
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>THE BIG RESHUFFLE: WHO'S OUT, HOON'S IN
>=
>
>
>IN!
>
>Jack Straw - First MP to become Lord Chancellor, with
the
>position normally being held by a member of the House
of
>Lords who was a flatmate of the Prime Minister; and
who
>started shagging the Prime Minister's ex-girlfriend
at
>university immediately after they split up. Contrary
to some
>predictions, Straw will not become Deputy Prime
Minister as
>the position has now been abolished. Thanks to John
Prescott
>ruining it for everyone.
>
>Jacqui Smith - Can't be arsed to update her website.
As the
>first female Home Secretary, Smith is already
planning
>sweeping changes to the Justice System. Bless her.
>
>Geoff 'Buff' Hoon - New Labour Chief Whip. Has
already
>pledged British troops to remove John Pilger from
power.
>
>Alistair Darling - Chancellor. Oddly enough, we were
tipped
>off on Monday that this appointment had been
confirmed by a
>high-placed Whitehall mole. Same mole also told us
that
>there's a rumour bouncing around the cabinet office
that
>Brown had a brief but passionate sexual affair with
his
>predecessor. Strange but true.
>
>David Miliband - Twelve years old. Youngest Foreign
>Secretary in 30 years. And first to be paid in Habbo
Hotel
>coins.
>
>Ed Miliband - Secretary for the Cabinet Office.
Younger
>brother of David, making him officially a foetus.
According
>to TheyWorkForYou.com, has used three-word
alliterative
>phrases (e.g. "she sells seashells") 54 times in
debates.
>This is a meaningless statistic.
>
>Steve Miliband - Their latest album, Fly Like An
Eagle: 30th
>Anniversary Edition, was released in 2006.
>
>
>....
>
>OUT!
>
>John Prescott - True fact: when one TFT writer was 17
he was
>doing work experience at a trade union when a
>pre-Governmental Prescott came to visit. He arrived
wearing
>a velvet smoking jacket and slippers, a pork pie in
each
>hand.
>
>Patricia Hewitt - The former health minister - once
voted
>'MP most likely to be thrown out like a sack off shit
the
>moment Brown comes to power' has quit to 'spend
more time
>with [her] family'. According to Phrases.org.uk, this
phrase
>is widely regarded as 'a euphemistic way of
describing being
>made redundant'. Who knew?
>
>
>-
>
>missingyoualready at thefridaything.co.uk
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>THE BLAIR YEARS IN NINETEEN WORDS
>=
>
>'If this was anything to do with trying to appeal to
the
>electorate, he wouldn't be so excruciatingly honest.'
>
>
>- Labour MP Stephen Pound defends Blair's 'God told
me to do
>it' Iraq defence, March 4 2006.
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>THE KIDS ARE ALL WRONG
>=
>
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEfYI94LzDs
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>TONY BLAIR: CLAIRVOYANT
>=
>
>'I say, with the greatest respect to the right hon.
>Gentleman, that the fact is that in the end there
have been
>many claims made about the Iraq conflict. It was
claimed
>that hundreds of thousands of people were going to
die in
>it; that it would be my Vietnam; that the Middle East
would
>be in flames; and - the latest claim - that weapons
of mass
>destruction were a complete invention by the British
>Government. The truth is that some people resent the
fact
>that it was right to go to conflict. We won the
conflict;
>thanks to the magnificent contribution of the British
>troops, Iraq is now free, and we should be proud of
that.'
>
>- Prime Minister's Questions, June 4, 2003
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>IN FACT IN FACT NOTHING
>=
>
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S96HIGcLcvU&NR=1
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>
>LEST WE FORGET
>=
>
>http://www.thankyoutony.com
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>(c) Copyright Fridaycities.com 2007. You can copy,
but please
>credit.
>------------------------------------------------------------
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