Yorkshire RoseYou know, the good folks of my adoptive county are so full of themselves sometimes…

'Appen today is Yorkshire Day.

February, 2004
Thursday, 5th February, 2004

With the exception of Carolyn, I've never thought of accountants as having much of a sense of humour. I was wrong. It seems that some of them not only have a sense of humour, but also downright class:

John Lanchester, London Review of Books (05-Feb-04):
'In those six years alone [1992-1997] the News Corp accountants had moved A$4.8 billion of income past the tax authorities in Britain, the United States and Australia.' And then Chenoweth [the author of the book under review] has found, looking at the accounts, that the company's profits, declared in Australian dollars, were A$364,364,000 in 1987, A$464,464,000 in 1988, A$496,496,000 in 1989 and A$282,282,000 in 1990. The odds that such figures were a happy coincidence are 1,000,000,000,000 to one. That little grace note in the sums is accountant-speak for 'Fuck you.' Faced with this level of financial wizardry, all the ordinary taxpayer can do is cry 'Bravo l'artiste!'
Saturday, 14th February, 2004
At last, my twin obsessions meet:
Shropshire Star: Ale returns to mark Darwin celebration
A special brew commemorating the achievements of Charles Darwin will soon be available in pubs across Shropshire after a county brewery re-launched its 'Natural Selection' ale.

There is grandeur in this brew of life… (Very bad pun which only Darwin fanatics will appreciate—normal people please ignore.)

Sunday, 15th February, 2004
Observer: Evolution of radar points to HMS Beagle's resting place
One of the world's most enduring naval mysteries - the fate of HMS Beagle, the ship that carried Charles Darwin round the world and led him to develop his theory of natural selection - may finally have been solved. Advanced ground-penetrating radar could have located the ship, which disappeared more than a century ago, near Potton Island in Essex. The discovery has been made by one of the world's leading marine archaeologists, Robert Prescott of St Andrews University. 'I am quietly confident we have found the Beagle,' he said.
Wednesday, 18th February, 2004
BBC: Women slate rivals to win a mate
Researchers at York University in Toronto, Canada, say women are prone to be at their cattiest when they are at their most fertile.

You mean they could actually tell the difference?

Sunday, 22nd February, 2004

At last someone tells it like it is:

BBC: Bid to save sparrows launched
Bird-lovers are being urged to help save the house sparrow, whose numbers have suffered a mysterious decline. The government minister leading the campaign to boost the sparrow population has blamed their disappearance on "trendy gardens" and an explosion in the number of pet cats.

Cat populations are being sustained at unnaturally high levels by selfish people who think Tiddles can do no harm.

String them up is what I say (the cats or their owners, I really don't mind which).

Wednesday, 25th February, 2004
BBC: Pint and prayer at the local pub
A pint, a sandwich and a cut and blow dry should all be on offer to help the local pub survive, according to a new guide. How To Save Your Local Pub, launched by the Prince of Wales on Wednesday, gives examples of how to keep this focus of village life going.

I'm all for finding new ways to help keep country pubs going, but this guide goes too far: pubs are not churches, they are not pharmacies, they are not dry cleaners nor hairdressers. But above all, pubs are not supposed to be bloody creches—despite the growing trend of selfish parents to treat them as such.

Read my lips… Pubs are places for the consumption of alcohol by grown-ups. Keep your bloody brats out!

Saturday, 28th February, 2004

Conversation with Jen:

J: Are you getting shorter?
R: No. Why?
J: It's just your bald spot was never this noticeable before.

For the record, I don't have a bald spot.

Sunday, 29th February, 2004
BBC: Young Turkmen face beard ban
Turkmenistan President Saparmurat Niyazov has passed a decree forbidding young men in the country to wear long hair or beards. The president said the Education Ministry should be in charge of checking people's hair as the issue was most pressing among the young.

Where Bill Gates, Walt Disney, Ronald McDonald, Adolf Hitler, and Maggie Thatcher lead, Saparmurat Niyazov follows.

Sunday, 29th February, 2004
BBC: US showers praise on Saakashvili
US President George Bush has given a strong boost to the new president of Georgia by praising his drive to expand democracy and fight corruption. "I'm impressed by this leader, I'm impressed by his vision, I'm impressed by his courage," he said after meeting Mikhail Saakashvili in Washington… Mr Saakashvili, a 36-year-old US-educated lawyer, asked for more US help to achieve these aims.

Jumping Jesus! Do you realise what this means? I am older than the President of Georgia!

Have you any idea just how decrepit and inadequate that makes me feel?

(Mind you, Georgia is quite a small country.)


Note: For more on Georgian politics, see the surprisingly interesting After the Revolution in the latest edition of the London Review of Books.