Teddy Teacher Gillian Gibbons Finally Freed!

(God, I love alliteration!)

Gillian Gibbons

Controversial expat British teacher Gillian Gibbons, who was jailed in Khartoum for allowing her pupils to name a teddy bear “Muhammad,” is to be freed, having been granted a presidential pardon.

The Guardian has the hairy details:

The breakthrough came after a meeting between two British Muslim peers, Lord Nazir Ahmed and Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, with Sudan’s president Omar al-Bashir.

Lord Ahmed said al-Bashir had agreed to pardon the teacher.

Allah BearAsked whether Gibbons had been pardoned, a presidential adviser told Reuters: “Definitely, yes.”…

Reacting to the news, Khalid al-Mubarak, of the Sudanese embassy in London, said: “Congratulations. I am overjoyed.

“She is a teacher who went to teach our children English and she has helped a great deal and I am very grateful. What has happened was a cultural misunderstanding, a minor one, and I hope she, her family and the British people won’t be affected by what has happened.

There is, at this time, no word on whether the Americans now intend to place her in custody for referring to the problematic plush in question as a Teddy Bear.

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Please mind the gap … in your employment

Emma ClarkeIn the latest example of inadvertently star-making sense of humour failure on the part of an organization, Emma Clarke, smooth-voiced announcer for the London Underground system, has been “de-accessioned” for recording spoof announcements and posting them on her personal website.

London Underground is sorry to have to announce that further contracts for Miss Clarke are experiencing severe delays,” a TfL spokesman told the Evening Standard Monday.

Actually, giving the text a read-over, it appears that these so-called fakes are actually more useful and informative than the officially sanctioned announcements. See for yourself:

  • We would like to remind our American tourist friends that you are almost certainly talking too loudly.
  • Would the passenger in the red shirt pretending to read the paper but who is actually staring at that woman’s chest please stop. You are not fooling anyone, you filthy pervert.
  • Would passengers filling in answers on their Sudokus please accept that they are just crosswords for the unimaginative and are not in any way more impressive just because they contain numbers.

etc, etc. Click over to her website in a day or so to listen to the recordings, once the publicity from the worldwide stories on Reuters, BBC, etc, etc, has calmed down and the site comes back up.

Michael Slade’s Cowboys and Indians

Michael SladeSo there I was in the hallway, sitting stoically at my Shebeen Club trade show table at the Surrey International Writer’s Conference.

And there, in the room right in front of me, was Jay Clarke, retired Vancouver criminal lawyer, better known as Michael Slade, notorious writer of gory best-selling thrillers. He was talking with some consternation about his ancestors. Crofters, every one. Now, you’d think, particularly if you were naturally of a bloodthirsty turn of mind as indeed thriller writers must be, that one’s ancestors would naturally include a black sheep every few generations at least (mine seems to include them about every eight chromosomes, but then that’s the raincoaster gene pool for ya) but not in this particular case. While other people’s ancestors were out raping and pillaging, his were sitting by the fire knitting, and, when placed under duress, saying “och” alot.

And this did not take him to his happy place.

Finally, he found an ancestor who was a genuine black sheep. A scandalous ne’er-do-well who essentially fled the family home lest he expire at a young age of sheer boredom. Instead of doing whatever it is that crofters do (croftation? croffination?) he set out for the New World, with, I believe, an arrest warrant following him all the way to the Three Mile Limit.

Upon reaching the New World he did many things, but foremost among them was that he joined the Great Land Rush across the Prairies, hoping to stake out a decent living on the frontier of the Great Plains, then embroiled in the Indian Wars south of the border. The turmoil below the 49th had sent many bands to Canada to avoid the troubles, but moreover it sent some of the more bloodthirsty parties up, to avoid capture. Canada was, at the time, somewhat like Pakistan is today: a superficially lawful place where known enemies of the United States could take refuge, re-group, and re-arm before crossing the border and re-engaging with the enemy.

This made the Great Migration across the Prairies somewhat more dangerous than your common-or-garden trek a thousand miles across an unknown and largely unmapped land with a team of fragile animals all too ready to succumb to the workload, or the local pestilence along the way, leaving one stranded and dying of thirst or worse would otherwise be.

Not to mention the bootleggers. Then as now, they shot interlopers on sight.

So there he was, I think his name was Edward, trekking across the great grass plains with a mule and an ox as his Mutt-n-Jeff team, Conestoga wagon lumbering behind like a double decker sailboat of the wheaten sea, and no doubt a mongrel dog trailing mournfully along behind.

When suddenly…

over the horizon…

came a group of Indian warriors. Armed. Bloods. The dangerous kind. The kind that taught Custer a lesson he didn’t live long enough to forget.

“OhshitI’mdead,” thought Edward the Ancestor.

They surrounded the clumsy wagon and mismatched team, their war ponies standing shoulder-to-shoulder, glittering eyes silently mocking the draft animals for their plodding slowness.

The leader approached.

“Ohshit,” thought Edward. “He wants my scalp and then they’ll take everything I have and ride away and nobody will even know I’m dead.”

And this did not take him to his happy place.

“Hail,” said the young Indian. “Do you have tea? Do you have tobacco?”

“Uh, no,” replied the ever-so-slightly petrified Edward.

“I see,” replied the brave, who immediately remounted his horse, signalled to his warriors, and led them away at a gallop.

What was that? thought Edward the Vastly Relieved, as he sat there on the wagon bench, reins as slack as his jaw. The ox and mule began to graze, unconcerned.

After a time, Edward recovered enough to pick up the reins and urge the team forward through the heavy grass, towards the settlement of Fort Edmonton, the Mountie outpost established to bring Law’nOrder to the godless Prairies; the largest settlement in the territory was actually Fort Whoop-Up, which was not an authorized agent of the Hudson’s Bay Company, but rather a post established by the Yankee bootleggers, who traded whiskey to the Natives through a hole in the palisade: Canada’s first drive-through window. Then as now, the Americans were foremost in systems management and streamlining the rapid delivery of supply-chain essentials.

Meanwhile, back at the Conestoga wagon…Edward was approaching Fort Edmonton. He could see the walls wherein he hoped to find safe refuge. His relief was complete and his hopes were rising, when he heard a noise from behind him.

Turning, he saw, much to his consternation, mortification, and horrification, that the band of Indians who had left him alive were returning after him at a gallop.

Edward was many things. Stupid was not one of them. He picked up his whip and he flailed that pathetic team as if his life depended on it, which he was quite certain it did. They responded as only a tired mule and ox team can respond: they went what the hell? and then broke into a bone-jarringly mismatched gallop, headed straight for the fort and presumable refuge.

If only they reached it in time.

They did not.

Surrounded once again, Edward thought momentarily about doing something truly dramatic, but he managed to stifle the thought and simply sat, stoically waiting for his fate.

The leader approached. He dismounted from his pony and stepped towards the wagon, hand outstretched. In the hand were two pouches.

Tea. And tobacco.

LOLitics: Mannifest Destuny

Mannifest Destuny iz mannifestin

source

Now, it’s not the first time the Yanks have made a move on our land. The last time they pulled this my ancestors had to go down and loot and burn the White House to discourage this kind of thing, and as we know from recent example, the gene pool has bred true.

But this time they have gone too far.

Welcome: Portraits of America, a new seven-minute film produced by Disney, will be shown in airports and embassies to woo visitors with a sanitised take on US landmarks. There are no shots of highways clogged with cars bumper to bumper. Instead, the camera pans over the wonders of the Grand Canyon, New York’s Chrysler building and the awe-inspiring power of the Niagara Falls.

But wait a minute. What falls are these? They don’t seem to resemble the Bridal Veil Falls that stand on the US side of the border. They do, however, look distinctly like the Horseshoe Falls, the immense curtain of water shrouded in mist that is the stock image of Niagara and lies almost entirely inside Canada. The annexation of a Canadian natural wonder was spotted by the news agency Associated Press.”This is an insult,” said Paul Gromosiak, an expert on the waterfalls. “This is not the US, this is 100% Canada, shot from the Canadian side.

 

We have previously had our issues with the Guardian‘s coverage of Canada, but in this case we have little to add. Very little. Except: you don’t want to piss us off again.

That’s what Portraits of Americans are like.
This is what Portraits of Canadians are like.

via Bridlepath

Swords, baybee. We have swords. What do you have? A weak military force squandered in Iraq and a couple of dozen reserves out scouring the country side for escaped weasels. Tell them to look in Congress and the Senate.

you can never step into the same River Street twice

Rollin' down the River Street

Behold the magnificence which is Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan’s River Street.

Often has it been said that Canadians are too literal-minded; most particularly often it has been said to my face, although there’s nothing about my face in particular or in whole which is literal-minded, and indeed quite often the parts migrate at will or vanish altogether and I’ll end up all ears, ferinstance.

Quite embarrassing, especially when they see me writing down everything they say.

But that is neither here nor there. And it’s certainly not in Moose Jaw, which is not all that far from everyone’s favorite Canadian place name: Head-Smashed-In-Buffalo-Jump.

So…have you been to Moose Jaw? Have you seen it? It’s not Paris, let me tell you. So, when the city fathers/mothers/foster parents put their heads together and wanted to do something uniquely Moose Jawian, they quite naturally phoned Germany and brought over artist Edgar Muller and his team to turn River Street into a painting of a river, reportedly the world’s largest 3-dimensional painting.

How proud they must be, eh?

So they not only paved Paradise: they gravened themselves an image of it and now walk all over it.