Entry tags:
Celebrity haiku
Stockwell tube station
Dan Cruickshank’s looking confused
That makes two of us
Note to passing non-Brits: You may not know the name now, but he'll crop up on BBC World soon enough.
The Ayatollah Khomeini has written an authoritative guide to Natural Law according to Allah, with whom he is allegedly on intimate terms. In this tome, Khomeini says that a woman may not get a divorce just because her husband is in the habit of sodomizing camels: Allah does not permit divorce for such trivialities and, in fact, frowns on divorce in almost all cases. However, later on Khomeini allows that a woman may get a divorce if her husband is in the habit of sodomizing her brother.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Pontiff in the Vatican declares that divorce is against “Natural Law” in all cases. It appears quite clear that when the Vatican say “all cases” they mean “all cases”. We had a referendum about that in Ireland, and the Pope’s spokesentities made abundantly clear that a man could come home drunk every night, seduce and sexually abuse their children, give his wife syphilis, and commit any abomination in the pages of de Sade and the Catholic God was still against giving the poor woman a divorce. The Ayatollah begins to seem a relative liberal compared with the Pope.
Robert Anton Wilson, Natural Law, 1987 (edited to within an inch of its life)
Iraqi deputies have demanded an official apology from Washington over the manhandling by US soldiers of a member of parliament at a Baghdad checkpoint.When will these silly people learn that the Geneva Conventions don’t apply when the US say they don’t apply—i.e., ever? It’ll probably take the Bush administration a couple of days to come up with a rationale for why they don’t apply—maybe it’ll turn out that Iraq somehow isn’t a “nation”—but rest assured they’ll think of something.
"One US soldier appeared to be designated to my car in particular, as it carried the picture of Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr," al-Shaikh told his colleagues. "As though he was antagonised by the picture, the soldier began to utter some words in English which I did not understand. When I handed out my MP badge and showed it to him, he threw it at my face, opened the car door and pulled me out."
Al-Shaikh said he was roughed up by the US soldier despite his protestations.
"The soldier twisted my hands to the back in an effort to handcuff me. He began to beat me and squeezed me by putting his arm firmly around my neck. Then they pulled me off to a nearby room 10m away in their headquarters."
Al-Shaikh said the US soldier continued to beat him even after he told them that he was an elected MP.
The US military said it was investigating the incident and refused to comment.
At least three other deputies said they witnessed the mistreatment of al-Shaikh. "I saw the whole thing and adding insult to injury was when Iraqi soldiers drew their rifles at brother Fatah as he was being mistreated by the Americans," Ali Yushaa, an independent Shia MP, said.
Deputies took turns to speak for almost two hours about the many indignities that they and the Iraqi population suffer when coming in contact with US troops.
"According to the Geneva conventions, an occupying force must respect the occupied nation," Abd al-Khaliq Zanganah, a Kurdish MP said. "This offending soldier must be thrown out of our country."
A US police department in Arizona intends to follow through on a proposal to train a capuchin monkey for high-risk police operations. A Special Weapons and Tactics (Swat) veteran from Phoenix, Sean Truelove, has researched the possibility of landing a $100,000 federal grant to fund a pilot programme to train one monkey.
“Everybody laughs about it until they really start thinking about it ... it could change the way we do business,” he said.
Truelove told local newspapers that the idea came to him in a dream about 18 months ago. The test monkey could be trained to unlock doors and search buildings for police on command, he said.
The capuchin monkey is considered one of the smartest primates, known by many for its decades-long association with organ grinders. The monkeys weigh 1.3kg to 3.5kg and live for 15 to 20 years.