impossible thing #15: taking Steven’s advice

Where's your head at?So I took Steven L's advice and went out to the pub for a bit instead of staying home in my pj's blogging. And what was the result?

I'm back home now, sitting here in sweat-soaked clothes, shaking like a Chihuahua in an eagle cage, with aching biceps and what feels like two black eyes; the pain is aleviated only slightly by the pharmacopea of chemicals in my system, and I am under the impression that the sweat itself is so toxic that it's bleaching the insides of my clothes.

How did this happen? Will I ever leave the apartment again? Can I possibly get Sauvignon Blanc delivered? Well, it's this way:

Mug shots...raincoaster may be next!

As longtime readers of the raincoaster blog know, I have been known to dabble in food consumption from time to time. Yes, I know it's unfashionable, but I like to eat, and not just on the weekends. No indeedy! I eat every damn day, and I don't care who knows it. It's not something I'm ashamed of, it's just something I do, and it's perfectly normal to do it, even several times a day. Indeed, there's hardly a period of time where I'm not eating or haven't just eaten, or am going to eat in a few hours. I even stop blogging to eat. Well, sometimes. Like for soup: soup is hard to keyboard while eating. I hardly ever have soup. Damn soup.

The Irish Heather pub is right next door to the Salty Tongue deli, and the deli, as you Snakebite, duhmight imagine, is full of food. So instead of following Steven's orders to go to the pub and top off the pot of Italian roast with milk and sugar that I had for breakfast with a few pints of Snakebite, I am diverted by the irresistable scent of, you guessed it, food.

I say hi to Erin, who has brought the baby, Orla Roisin, in for the day. I make the same inane remarks that everyone does, seeing a baby they haven't seen in three months: "She's getting so big!" and indeed she is, although why I feel the need to share this information with her mother, who has undoubtably noticed, being one sharp cookie and responsible besides for making sure the young un's got clothes that fit, is beyond the wisdom of the ancients to discover.

It must be the drugs.

This is my brain on drugs. How's yours?

Should I back up and explain the drugs? There's caffeine, of course, but who among us does not begin the day with three large mugs of dark roast with sugar and 1%? Eh? Exactly, it's like background radiation; everybody gets the same base exposure, at least in Vancouver they do. This is why God invented the Venti: so people could say "oh, I only have one cup of coffee a day" and still consume enough to get a racehorse barred from a race. There was one unfortunate horse who failed a drug test because the jockey'd given him a Coffee Crisp before the race, which also helps explain how I got through exams at University; coffee and Coffee Crisp. And the adrenaline rush provided by screaming at the eedjits who'd finished and who were playing Pink Floyd really loudly in celebration.

So there was the caffeine. There was also the speed.

Well, I don't think it's technically speed. It's technically "Dayquil" which is like Nyquil, only Day-ish rather than Ny-ish. I'm taking half the recommended dosage, so only one terrier-sized jelly gob per 12 hours. The Dayquil red is so bright and the Nyquil green so green that they look like Mexican jumping beans that an alien might hatch out of any second. Trust me, if you're on Dayquil this metaphor is up there with Donne, okay?

"Alcohol is essential," said Mae West. "A little for you, a lot for your audience." Why don't we all try that now?

Back? Cool.

Tripping signSo the Dayquil has dried up my nose, thank god, and miraculously eliminated my swollen glands; it had reached the point where I had to walk around with my elbows sticking out like a bodybuilder, because my arms wouldn't go down all the way. Having recovered from the self-tanning disaster of earlier, I am now red-and-white tobiano, thanks to the rash.

The fine print that somehow escaped me earlier, or maybe the elves painted it when I went out, cuz I don't remember seeing it there before, informs me that I am currently floating on a high that owes its existence to dextromethorphan hydrobromide, pseudophedrine hydrochloride (what, don't I deserve REAL phedrine hydrochloride???), and acetaminophen, as well as FD&C red #40, FD&C yellow #6, gelatin (oh goody, protein), glycerine, polyethylene glycol (that's either antifreeze or alcohol; either way it's good; I shall not freeze to death if I pass out in a snowbank), povidone, propylene glycol (that's the other one, so I'm all prepped for this passing out in a snowbank thing, too bad I'm not in Edmonton), purified water (cuz we wouldn't want any toxic chemicals in it, eh?) sorbitol (because if it's not sweetened, the Americans won't go near it), and titanium dioxide, for lo, we do not wish our Dayquil to get sunburnt.

I'm wondering which of these causes the shaking and which of them causes the OCD.

So at the deli (we're at the deli, right? Keep up) I ask what kind of soup they have. I don't know why I ask, but I always do. I always order the damn soup anyway, even if it's parsnip, because the soup they make is just the best damn thing around when you've got a cold, no matter what kind it is. It's usually gingery or coriandery or something that you just know God himself orders up when he gets the sniffles. So today all that registers when the nice girl whose name I can't remember helpfully tells me what kind of soup it is, is that the soup is orange. I, unsurprisingly, order it, to go. I take the little paper bag with my soup and bread and head out to the A&N, for by now I'm in a full-blown food attack, and I walk right past the pub.

Even though there is money in my pocket. Yeah, I have trouble believing it, too.

At the A&N I buy white people food, for it is one of the few places around Main & Hastings where you can get such a thing. I grab numerous cans, for when I am sick I don't like to cook, perferring to reheat. When you've been through cancer you get very practical about such things. I also need laundry soap, so I can do, you guessed it, laundry. You're a clever one. I also buy about fifty rolls of tp because it is on sale and it doubles, as we all know, as a hankie, and I feel this flu is settling in for the long run. Now I am presented with the difficulty of hauling this extremely hefty and bulky double-bagged bounty back the six or so blocks home.

Fortunately, it is Mardi Gras and none of the people on the street are particularly hungry, so I get no trouble from them. Mostly it's just the moocow tourists walking three to five abreast that get in my way, and I only have to clip a couple of them with the laundry detergent to get them to move out of the way. Because I am now streaming with sweat and shaking slightly and, let us put it bluntly, not exactly looking my best, they scuttle away without a word.

I attempt to flag down a taxi but am too tired to lift my arms, and lose out to a junkie hooker, who needs to get to her dealer's anyway. An emergency is an emergency, I guess.

The six blocks takes me about twenty minutes to cover, stopping two or three times a block and blowing steam like a stampeding buffalo, albiet one who stampedes at a pace that could be described as, at best, dignified.

By the time I get to my apartment there is no circulation in the fingers of my right hand, and I have to use both hands to turn the key. The Chinese neighbors look at me confusedly; this Gwai Lao isn't usually that kind of trouble, they think.

So that is why I am sitting here in sweat-drenched clothes, shaking like a Chihuahua in an eagle's cage, watching the colours in the room brighten and dull with each beat of my heart, and possessed of the distinct impression that my head is vibrating like a waterballoon after a hearty smack.

Once, I took a Contac C and an extra strength NeoCitran, drove over to my friends' house and fell into a trance looking at just how incredibly green the carpet was. It was twenty-year-old astroturf. No, they didn't let me drive home.

Maybe for experimental purposes I will take a Dayquil tomorrow and then hit the pub. Stay tuned, this could get…vivid.

My brain on drugs...and snakebite?

The Shat: Seven

So much better with William Shatner playing all the parts. Hey, Mister Tambourine Man!!!!!

Spam: Gmail is the New Black

At last! After months of boring repetition (what the hell kinda practical joker gave Eastern Europe, Africa and China the word "goluptious" anyway?) we finally have a new spam meme. Behold the wonders of the Gimme Gmail spam:

From: george owen georgeowen009@yahoo.com Signed-By: yahoo.com | Mailed-By: yahoo.com

To: ____________@gmail.com
Date: May 23, 2006 4:56 PM
Subject: PLEASE INVITE ME

I AM  GEORGE OWEN FROM ENGLAND . I WISH TO ASK YOU TO KINDLY INVITE ME TO GMAIL.I LOVE TO HAVE GMAIL ACCOUNT .
 
I SHALL BE GLAD IF YOU INVITE ME.
 
THANKS,
BARRISTER GEORGE OWEN
——————————————————————————–
Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates.
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com

Yeah, today just isn't doing a goddam thing to raise my opinion of British Barristers all around.

A Booksigning for the Ages

Cherie Antoinette Hutton report Sun 

Is this something from Cherie Blair's backlist? This story, which first broke here on Guido Fawkes, comes from Stewart Jackson, MP of whom I have never heard, but am told to expect much in the future.

Cherie Blair attended a Labour fundraiser where one of the items auctioned was the report on the suicide Dr. David Kelly, of one of Blair's political enemies; the report was signed, in a flourish of almost perfect unselfawareness and mendacity, by Cherie Blair.

The fin is coming early this siecle.

CONDUCT OF LABOUR HON. MEMBERS AT MAY 2006 FUNDRAISER
22.05.2006

Jackson, Stewart

That this House notes that senior members of the Labour Party including hon. Members and Government Ministers attended a party fundraising event last week at the Arts Club in Mayfair; further notes that a copy of the official report by Lord Hutton into the death of Government scientist Dr David Kelly, signed by Ms Cherie Booth QC, was auctioned for party funds raising £400; believes this conduct to be in appalling bad taste, arrogant and crassly insensitive in seeking to make money, albeit indirectly, through hawking, as a novelty item, an official Government report into the death of a public servant; regrets the distress caused to the family and friends of the late Dr Kelly; calls on the Labour Party to apologise for such tasteless and offensive conduct and to donate the money raised to an appropriate charity; and deprecates such conduct by hon. Members.

Perhaps the general reception of this information can be gleaned by a couple of samples from the comments section:

Personally, I could warm to the idea of getting a hospital report (surely not beyond the powers of a British tabloid) on the suicide attempt of the young daughter of a certain well-known family. It could have the details of her physical condition when she was taken to the hospital, the various tests carried out of her, her treatment and her psychological report, etc and be signed by her chief doctor. If auctioned off, it would fetch a fair penny as a novelty item. Of course, you might be found to have slit your wrists in a country lane close to your home later on …

and the ever-classicDavid Kelly

"You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go."

I, of course, as the good literary snob, make the point that since the only person entitled to sign a book is the author and Ms. Booth/Blair does not claim to have authored the words, perhaps she signed under her authority as author of the actions.

More news outlets are picking it up, including the Guardian and the BBC. The story has legs. And still the comments continue to be illuminating. If I were saying some of these things, I'd be nony too!

Fellow anon, let us not forget the distinguished physicians who pointed out that Dr Kelly was "suicided"
Plus Campbell (in front of witnesses) saying to Blair
"well Tony you got what you wanted"
as the news of Dr Kelly's death was announced, not a direct order but probably a "who will rid me of this turbulent priest" moment

And here's what the BBC has to say today.For those who can't quite place David Kelly:

Dr Kelly was found dead in July 2003 after being named as the possible source of a story on BBC Radio 4's Today programme claiming the government had "sexed up" its dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.

Naturally, the death was ruled a suicide. It could well have been, but it's also quite possible to have been encouraged to take that path. No doubt he and Vince Foster are discussing it at this very moment.

And hey, look! Dictator Trading Cards…how long till Tony and Cherie Antoinette have their own?

Dictator Playing Cards

Blog o’ the Day: ‘Tomlinson v MI6’

This is what a spy looks like, peopleAnd why isn’t a blog by a disgruntled ex-MI6 employee, Russian defector and, evidently, completely vengence-obsessed, egomaniacal asshole bigger news? Because it is unfuckinggoogleable, that is why. Try it: google “Richard Tomlinson,” “blog” and any possible other combination. For a bog-standard Typepad blog, it’s pretty well invisible. I got to it only via googling ‘Richard Tomlinson v MI6’ which is what the Observer says it is called, which it is not btw, which led to a Romanian mirror site archive of Cryptome, which led to the blog. This is, like, way more cloak-and-dagger than most internet searches and, given the way Google works, cannot be accidental. Either Google is experiencing a significant failure or Google is overriding its searches even for people who don’t live in China…and with that, an internet icon falls. The reason people used Google in the first place was you couldn’t buy your way to the front of the line; that you can bully your way there, or bully another person off it, completely negates any advantage Google had. 

According to Cryptome, his first site got shut down when it posted a list of currently active MI6 agents. It’s too bad he doesn’t work for the White House; Rove didn’t even have to use vacation time to testify.

ADVISORY, not for publication:

We have been asked by the secretary of the Defence, Press and Broadcasting Advisory Committee to publish the following:

FOR THE ATTENTION OF ALL EDITORS FROM SECRETARY DEFENCE, PRESS & BROADCASTING ADVISORY COMMITTEE

I understand that a US-based website has today published on the internet a list which identifies a large number of SIS (MI6) officers.

Defence Advisory Notice No 6 asks editors and programme makers to seek advice before publishing such details unless they have been widely disclosed or discussed as such action could put lives at risk.

Departmental officers are examining how the damage of this disclosure can be minimised. While this is in progress, I would ask that editors do not
interpret the information in the website as being widely disclosed and do not, therefore, publish the address or the content of the website without
first contacting the D Notice Secretary, Rear Admiral David Pulvertaft

And here is the inevitable Wired story: File not found. Quel suprise. But, fortunately, archived on Cryptome again:

Secret service eliminates ex-spy’s Web site

A former James Bond wannabe had his Web site shut down by MI6 last week after threatening to expose some of Britain’s top secrets.

Richard Tomlinson’s site aimed to shake up and stir MI6 by identifying its officers and site locations around the world, according to a report in The Mail on Sunday. Tomlinson also warned that he would publish a book synopsis of his own MI6 career –- an act he was jailed for last year.

Top government law officer Anthony Hammond, got the injunction banning the site, which is based in Switzerland, where Tomlinson now lives.

The site, run by Lausanne ISP IPWorldcom, stated: “The objective of MI6 is to steal the secrets of other countries. Most of the secrets are stolen by MI6 officers working abroad under cover as British diplomats.”

The map of MI6 office sites was said to be “coming soon”.

Another page showed Tomlinson wearing a silly hat and grinning in front of the MI6 headquarters at Vauxhall Cross in London.

When the site was opened up it played the theme tune to Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

Last week, Tomlinson said he would appeal against the injunction.

Meanwhile, the cheeky Web wizard had switched the pages to a site run by California-based Geocities.com. Again he was closed down after the Swiss injunction was pointed out to Geocities.

According to Tomlinson, MI6 was breaking the law around the globe by its activities, as well as playing with his liberty.

“They are trying to obstruct my freedom to travel and I have already been banned from entering France, the USA and Australia,” he told the MoS.

“There would be no need to put up this Web site if they stopped messing me about. I have already lost one job by being prevented from entering France.” ®

And here is the story in the Observer that got my attention in the first place. Handing Polly Toynbee her ass is just gonna have to wait for now…

Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service is bracing itself for a fresh series of security leaks about its operations on an internet blog launched by a former top-ranking MI6 officer.

Richard Tomlinson who was jailed in 1998 for breaching the Official Secrets Act, has been quiet since fleeing to Russia in 2001 to publish a book about covert MI6 activities. He is back now and seems intent on taking revenge on the secret service which sacked him in 1995.

Tomlinson, who claims he now lives in the South of France and works as a yacht broker, began the blog last month with a warning: ‘Let the game begin…’

Note, as well, that none of the stories contain links to his actual blog. Which we here at raincoaster global HQ, of course, do.

UPDATE: Blog go bye-bye. Quel Suprise. Still, there’s always Google Cache, isn’t there.

UPDATE UPDATED: Cryptome is reporting that the blog has been shut “by request of HMG which bluffed craven US-based Typepad.com.” No source given for that information; I haven’t had any replies to my emails to Typepad, although on a long weekend I’d be surprised if I see anything at all before Monday. The latest upload of the MI6 spreadsheet that is extant is on Cryptome, from July 31st of this year.