Thursday, 24 April 2025

mrs ishmael is going on holiday again

Poor old Starmer – being a lawyer, he has to support and obey the Supreme Court’s ruling. Being a politician, he has to provide a kindly listening ear to the male rage of the scorned transwomen. How to square that circle? Well, he’s not managed the juggling act, much to the mockery of Kemi, first among many. At least he is now clear on the vexed subject, and no longer believes, as once he purported to believe, that 99% of women do not have a penis. And mr mike's revelations, in the last thread, kinda indicate that he carried his former confusion into his private life.

But no! It is all a nasty AI-generated slur. Whilst there is no doubt that Lord Ali bought Starmer expensive clothes (£16,200) and specs (£2,485) and London accommodation during the election campaign (£20,000), Dr. Adrian Wong of Techarp has shown that the video, at least, is fake news. Which is not to say that Starmer and Ali are not chums.

Dr Wong tells us that the video was originally posted on 20 April 2025 (now deleted), by @_head_full-of_dreams on TikTok, which has also posted AI-generated fake CCTV videos of Jesus Christ, Pope Francis, Jay Z and Michelle Obama. The video itself reveals its origins - the timestamp is nonsense - it showed 1219:13 instead of 12.19.13 and remained static,  not advancing as the video progressed.
The man on the left has a pair of interlaced hands on his neck, even though the other man’s forearm isn’t attached. The arms closest to the camera appear merged - another sloppy AI characteristic. The doors are significantly smaller than the two figures and the transom  is distorted. And the bushes aren't really bushes, but AI-generated junk.
So, it's Not Guilty on the tryst, but dodgy on the expensive gifts.


And it turns out that the late Holy Father, whose dead body is currently on display in the Vatican (so European, that) was a reforming radical, although not by his actions – eesa no change. The next Pope will need to busy himself, (one thing's for sure- it won't be a woman) overturning Frankie's reforms and restoring the financially corrupt practices of the inner Vatican circle. How entirely appropriate that God called him home on the fourth day, having concluded all the third day celebrations – I do reckon that it was a dodgy business, making the poor old chap go through all that, with him half-dead after the pneumonia. He was always susceptible to pneumonia, from boyhood. When he was 21, he had part of his lung cut out, after a bout of pneumonia and three cysts. They should have taken better care of him, particularly after the direct intervention of God in his election, according to Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, who said that Bergoglio was elected following two supernatural signs, one in the conclave—and hence confidential—and one from a Latin-American couple, friends of Schönborn at Vatican City, who whispered Bergoglio's name in the elector's ear; Schönborn commented "if these people say Bergoglio, that's an indication of the Holy Spirit". 
Eh, what? A secret miracle and an anonymous couple's tip off from the Holy Spirit? You don’t need to read Dan Brown to know that the Vatican Mafiosi are a bad lot. Murderous, self-flagellating god-botherers. Although it helps – the Dan Brown.

Anyway, I'm off on my hols now and there will be no Sunday Ishmael until the 11th May. Should there be no post then, you'll know that god has finally had enough of me.
Please do continue to talk among yourselves.

Monday, 21 April 2025

Easter Monday: 21/04/2025

Another Incredibly Old Bastard Dies.
 
Of Death, that's what. And, quite possibly, whisper it, being made to sit there whilst some ambitious underling delivered the Urbi et Orbi Easter speech and then having to drive round St Peter's Square in the Popemobile, an almost-corpse being displayed to the mob faithful. The poor old bastard was not long out of hospital where he was treated for double pneumonia - I know how rough I felt, and I just had an unspecified virus (probably Covid. Again. Good thing I had all my vaccinations, eh?), and I wasn't in an Italian hospital, nor am I 88 years old. Unlike il papa. Friends like he had, you wouldn't need enemies. Get out on that balcony, it's your big moment, no, I'll read the speech - you just croak Buena Pasqua and the crowds will just love it. Whadya mean, you don't feel up to it? The show must go on.
If you haven't seen it, do watch Conclave with Ralph Fiennes and Stanley Tucci. It'll bring you up to speed on what happens next, when they've locked all the Cardinals in to fight it out. 
Anyway, it's a great opportunity to look back on the career of Pope Fray Bentos, as told by mr ishmael......

 His Holiness Pope Frankie de los Fray Bentos.
Time Magazine's Nonce Protector General of the year.

Giving his Christmas orders to massed pilgrims in Rome and to believers around the world,   man of the people, Pope Frankie, said, muy caballeros, we are the veecar of Kar-ist, and eet ees the first time for an Argie,  best is not to wreck the boat, eh? And so ees all full ahead with same-as-before reforms, uzzerwise ees  my cock on ze  sacred choppin' block, eh, and then pop in some reliquary casket for fuckwits to pray at for hundred an' hundred of fuckin' year, eh? Is like that  instrument of Satan, mr ishmael, always say,  eesa no business like-a showbusiness. Fucking-a dog bones and-a bits of-a dried-up snot, and millions of silly, daft fuckers have-a been a-praying at this shit for-a fucking millenia. Por favor, Iyam  only ay poor peasant and not even wear ze posh red shoes, not like some fuckin' popes, eh? Am not namin' no popenames but FuckMeJesus, zis 'avin' a Pope fucking Emeritus, is taking the fuckin' piss, no?

both: Heavenly Father, make this bastard die.

No other poping bastard have had to put up with this shit.  
Previous pope should be fucking dead, no, and having serious bit of arse-roasting down there with competitor?
 Not fucking about, getting under feet of busy man like Frankie.

Anyhow, here they is, my list of reforms for new papacy. An' God bless everybody, especially priests, nuns and any other  mad bad fucker working for me. Not get no money y'know, priest and nuns,   not even minimum styarvation wage, like in UK, not on the fucking books, anyhow, otherwise would be paying tax. Render unto Caesar?  Fuck that shit.
Dominus vobiscum.

Frankie Reforms:

Proscribing birth control:  eesa no change.
Forbidding women priests and bishops: eesa no change.
Forbidding married priests: eesa no change.
Church co-operation with torture,  juntas, dictatorships and totalitarianism: eesa no change.
Vatican bank money laundering: eesa no change.
Redistributing Vatican  wealth to the poor: eesa no change.
Prosecution of Pope Nazi for long-term paedophile cover-up: eesa no change
Facilitating and protecting global noncing network: eesa no change, except-a maybe work a bit harder. 
Frankie always say You gotta love the sinner and hate the sin, so best thing is excommunicate moaning little brats and move noncing bastard to another diocese or maybe move to other country, or else bring to Rome and-a make him Cardinal in  fucking nonce's hat. 

 
 Princes of the Church,  O'Brien and Savile
You may kiss my ring, child.
An' mine, too, an' how's about that, then? 

and over now to the Vatican where the late Jimmy Savile has just been made a double saint, not only by Pope Nazi but also by the current Nonce Protector General, Pope Frankie de los Fray Bentos, 
How do we get away with this shit?
Fucked if I know but don't knock it.

 the Morecambe and Wise of Holy Fathers. They are having a laugh, aren't they,  making saints of child molesting former CEOs?  Nil desperandum, as they say in the noncing business. Stay tuned.
The Noncing Monsignors, though, of Popes John Paul, Benny Nazi
JohnPaul2's Man In Boston, Benny, managed to get the Boston Diocese into Voluntary Protective Bankruptcy before those pesky children could claim compensation.

and Frankie Fray Bentos, they've got things back on track, now, while here at home our insipid, Godlessheathenbastard clergy, 

 
happy to splash holy water on the Tornadoes,  claim Christianity is now antique, almost irrelevant, just one aspect of   FaithCorp, worthless fucking bastards.
.....................................................................
 Here's some more pictures of clergy in their working clothes - just for a laugh.









Sunday, 20 April 2025

The Easter Sunday Ishmael: 20/04/2025

It's Spring! It's Easter! And Monty Don is being more than usually aggravating.
In this weekend's edition of Gardener's World, the 69 year old presenter had a nice sit-down on his mound, and confided in the viewers that he was very happy with the yellow at this time of year. He added that he liked "to have the yellow wash over him".
Unlike Alex Van Duyn, of Portland, Oregon, who made a heartfelt plea on KKTV(Colorado) last month. He said that his recycling bin had not been collected one day in September, and, on opening it, he found it contained, in addition to his own recycling, six gallon-sized bottles of urine - the recycler had refused to take the piss, it being a bio-hazard. The anonymous urine donor continued to drop off bottles of piss in his bin each week, until the enraged Mr. Van Duyn gave up on recycling, after which the pisser transferred to his neighbour's bin. But Mr Van Duyn has installed surveillance cameras and is hoping to get identifiable evidence of who the pisser is. He ended the TV interview with the plea: "please stop. Please, just don't do it anymore. It's really pissing me off."
I had a little think about why the pisser is doing this. Apparently he drives up in his car, jumps out and puts the bottles into the bin. If its six bottles each time, then it is likely to be a week's worth. It is not a personal grudge against Mr. Van Duyn, as he's transferred his deposits to the neighbour. The only explanation I came up with - apart from the pisser being quite mad - is that he is living in his car and pissing in bottles. If that is the case, what is he doing with his shit? Maybe he's got a steaming compost heap somewhere. Which brings me neatly back to Monty Don.
Don's latest wheeze is that he is entering a garden in the Chelsea Flower Show next month. It's a special garden, which he has co-designed with his dog, Ned.
Ned's paws not being adapted to holding a pencil, Monty Don watched him running about and captured his routes to transform into paths, which he drew out so that the chap who is actually building the garden, Jamie Butterworth, could incorporate the runs between the trees which he has grown and bagged ready for transfer to Chelsea. This most recent blatant appeal to maintain his special place in the hearts of his adoring legion of middle-aged British women in sensible shoes follows his other initiatives: the carefully curated gardening clothes, his unfortunate, but well-publicised, episodes of depression, appointing Alys of the floaty transparent frocks as his "head gardener" to appeal to the occasional gentleman viewer, a whole series devoted to introducing unemployable young drug offenders to the healing benefits of gardening, endless series - Monty Don's Italian Gardens, Monty Don's French Gardens, Monty Don's Paradise Gardens (for Islamic gardeners), Monty Don's Japanese Gardens, Monty Don's American Gardens, Monty Don's Adriatic Gardens, Monty Don's Spanish Gardens, Monty Don's British Gardens, and a whole slew of books with lots of pictures of Monty posing prettily. Not a bad career for an untrained gardener and former jewellery maker. Anyway, as Monty said about his Chelsea Flower Show Garden: "the British like gardens and they like dogs". What's not to like?
This is, I think, a good opportunity to revisit -


The Collected Monty Don thoughts of mr ishmael. 

"If you're like me, the sort of person who combines farming and helping people and modestly curing drug addicts with saving the planet and somehow managing to do it all on TeeVee or in lavish, glossy books with sometimes literally thousands of pictures of myself, showing me in my carefully battered, old, woollen and corduroy clothes, caring about what I do, then like me, you, too, will have a staff of gardeners, provided by the BBC, who devise all the plans, do all the work, make sure all the crops are perfect, leaving me to do the really important, caring pieces to camera. It is a great life, being winsome, environmentally responsible and standing in the flower beds surrounded by lights, cameramen and sound recordists and producers and script and make-up people.
Suddenly, everyone is doing it, hedges, planting them, growing them, trimming them, grubbing them, as we say, up. And when I say everybody I really do mean everybody, the nice people at the Guardian and the BBC all have their gardeners working flat-out and do you know they find it really therapeutic, watching their staff work so hard because it's really on behalf of you, the license payer, who, let's face it, at the end of the day, pays for it all, and you can't get much better than that."

Monty Don's bland erasure of any other labourers in his vineyard, as though it is he and he alone who so perfectly plans and manages, weeds, digs and mulches his vast garden, as though his really is a horticultural labour of love and not a teevee show with limitless funds, with scores, if not hundreds of production assistants doing the work, off-camera, shredding license-payers' fifty-pound notes into compost. Consumerism's deceitful oddjob man, is Monty.
Posing, of course I'm not posing, I'm being earnest.
There was even some snooty old trollop at the Chelsea Flower Show, angling for business, hungry for recognition, enunciating to Mad Monty Don all the ways in which her Chelsea Garden, her tarted-up bits of grass and flowers movingly evoked the spirit of her great, great something or other who fell at the Somme; you'd think she spent her every weekend volunteering to maintain the Commonwealth war cemeteries of the Western Front.
If I'd been there I'da run a hedge-trimmer down her face. I don't know, maybe - probably - I have some distant connection to a white stone cross atop a bag of bones in Flanders but even if I don't, we have mrs ishmael's grandfather's death medal hanging behind glass in the hall with later medals awarded to her father, for hosing-down and mucking-out Auschwitz. Most people are connected, quietly, one way or another to Slaughter, although few are lavishly paid for rehearsing their own distant genealogy, building a memorial garden for the Chelsea Flower Show, make you puke, really, the New Britons. Anything for a few quid, sell anything, steal anything; Larceny in Virtue's clothes; Thatcher's legacy. And Blair's. And Brown's. And that other prick. The bloke in the underpants.

With Monty, though, he's pure, unadulterated showbusiness; be it gardens about poverty, disability, heroin addiction or, as now, the annihilation of a generation, Monty has an earnest horticultural aperçu with which to lighten our collective, human load: "At the end of the day, viewers, for me, it's what gardening's all about and what better way to commemorate all those dead blokes than for you all to buy my books and watch my shows, whether you're a pacifist - as I obviously am, look, I even have a dog - or whether you're another sort of person - and that really is a matter of personal choice- gardening, through feast or famine, high or low, war and peace, is what it's really all about. Everyman, down his garden with his dog, a camera crew, a producer, a scriptwriter, a make-up girl, a director and a team of sturdy workers to do the actual digging, y'know, the gardening part, rather than, though I say it myself, doing the most important part, the presenting; well, what could be more diligent and painstaking and honest and virtuous and quintessentially British than that?"

Join me next time on Gardeners World for some more well-rehearsed, spontaneous, specious and insincere homilies and you, too, could live a life like Monty - humble, sincere, worthy, essentially carbon-neutral, compostable and completely cuntish.
Viewers grow addicted to the stupidest, most vapid, contrived, worthless and narcissistic filth, to people, for instance, like Monty Don, the Guardian readers' Face of Gardening, year after year peddling his simpering but actually quite shrewdly-reasoned sincerity, his earnest environmental realism, challenging but do-able and his all-round, well-balanced, impeccable but harmonious worthiness, as though he was God's Own Ethical Gardener and not an every-word-scripted, cosmetically enhanced, costumed, floodlit and soundtracked, neurotic, fucked-up, typical telly personality who couldn't, unassisted, find the hole in his own arse. He presents, Monty, as though he has kept, for centuries, Botany's ancient secret, has taken holy horticultural orders, is in some shrubby, composty Noble and Chivalrous Order of the Knights Gardener. He belongs in a loony bin, picking the weeds out from between the slabs, with a blunt knife, so he doesn't harm himself; yet we are taught to worship him, Monty, the luckiest costume jeweller in history.

I'm not Earnest and Worthy Monty Don but we do grow herbs and eat loads of them; this is as we have done for decades, just without the flesh on the plate and when the cows stick their heads over the wall or I meet the sheep in the lane I can pat their heads without guilt.  The Gospel of Monty Don, which saith, never ye an opportunity miss to stress thine own virtuous, ethical and most earnest worthiness, to the planet and its teeming programme schedulers. Yes, more of a ministry's how I see my tenure at Gardeners World, 'sall about responsibility, caring, very deeply I might say, for the garden that is our planet, wearing carefully selected pre-worn clothes and talking like a cunt. 

I don't do clothes in any fashion sense. I hate the fashion industry as much as the arms or the halal meat trades. I used to do clothes, in my twenties, suits and cufflinks, ties'n'hankies, but that's long ago and far away and I don't do them anymore. But I don't not do clothes in a Monty Don way.
Maybe the BBC pays production assistants to locate for him battered old linen shirts, Fred Dibnah jackets, frayed braces, old cardies and worn cord trousers, so's he can continue his poseur's existence, worthy and sincere,
ethically photogenic, green and right-fucking-on, committed to leaving a light carbon footprint.  Wryly, chiding her about GardeningPorn, I bought mrs ishmael one of Monty's huge, millstone doorstop books, must have been six-hundred pages and there were pictures of him on every page, bending, stretching, leaning, more bending, must be over a thousand of them, in the one book, all of them in what we country house owners call shabby-chic, except that you know Monty's get-ups will have been checked and co-ordinated by lighting cameramen, directors, fruit and vegetable stylists, continuity personnel, his publishers, BBC producers and people from the Radio Times.
Adamant agronomy porn-toy
That's not not doing clothes, that's doing clothes Bigtime, image creation and consumer manipulation - Monty's just like you, really, gets his old clothes on and pops down the garden, doing some organic stuff, for the planet and for the children, just forget the squadrons of writers who script his every word, his every conscientious, planet-friendly aside; forget the storyboarders who choreograph his every lithe step, his every wheelbarrow pushed between two epic trees or hedges or sculptural garden features, knocked-up for Oh, just a few pounds, really, and some stuff you can easily get down the local garden centre.
He's an ordinary guy, Monty, just like us, in his shabby old linen. Clothes maketh the man.
There is a pretence that some presenter or other has some specialist knowledge, that Monty Don does do his own garden, for instance; never runs out of compost, although, one man toiling away there in his cardy, he uses tons of it, tons. I make compost in my walled acre and I can never make enough of it, never; have to buy as much from Lidl as I make, at least as much, and I don't have to make teevee shows and write books and columns and save heroin addicts from destruction, like Earnest Monty does. No, it's bollocks, of course; Monty has a team of gardeners doing the work, he's a presenter, leans on his shovel and sighs worthily about how good life can be, if only we do like him, magic gardening with invisible labourers, scriptwriters, producers and the best horticulturalists that your licence fee can buy.
 Let me entertain you.
Mrs Elisabeth Primrose-Banks, new boss of the Royal Horticultural Society,  said the BBC's flagship gardening programme, Gardeners' World, was shite, pure and simple. She probably didn't say:  "Fuckwits, 'swhat they are, that fucking barrowboy, the bald git, Joe Wotsit, and that wheezing old baggage, Carol Klein, they're good for fuck all, wouldn't let them trim my privet, let alone prune my bush or put a seep hose under my Rhododendrons. And now the poor mad bastard's rampaging all around Broadcasting House with ideas for programmes about helping heroin addicts and lunatics who wanna be fucking craftsmen, even though they're not and nor is he, fucking treatment's what he needs, not playing at being a tellyshrink, sanity through digging with Monty, never heard such fucking rubbish. I mean, I love Cruelty TeeVee as much as the next lesbian but Monty fucking Don, telling suburbanite shitbrains that, No, they're not actually cut out to be master stonemasons or Llama farmers so they can just fuck off back to working in Lidl, well, that's too much, even for me."
The convention of these programmes is that by the time the programme is over the punter has a new, sparkling glass home standing with integrity in the landscape, a blend of Rococo and Art Deco and a hint of Swedish minimalism all topped-off with solar panels. 
Or was that a different show? 
How can you tell?
............................................................................

What, mrs ishmael, has all this to do with Easter? The celebration of the most significant event, the founding event, in the Christian religion? Bigger than Christmas? You know how it goes:
"He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died and buried. He descended into hell and on the third day he rose again from the dead...."

Well, apart from just annoying the living daylights out of me, and mr ishmael, as is apparent from the Collected Thoughts, above, I began musing on why I'm drawn back to Gardener's World and to its High Priest, Monty Fucking Don. He is avuncular, he is kindly, but firm, signing off each episode with his "jobs for the weekend". He is very English, in an Archetypal way, and his programme, his since 2003, when he ousted Alan Titmarsh -
A Darkie? In the bushes?
I daresay you're right, your worship, I'll fetch your twelve-bore.
yes, him - is very beautiful and educational. How to adore the compost, grow things to eat and flowers to beautify and bushes to hide in. If Monty - or George, his given first name, is a high priest of anything, it is not of Christ, but of of Ēostre, the Anglo-Saxon goddess mentioned by Bede in his 8th century work The Reckoning of Time. He wrote that pagan Anglo-Saxons had held feasts in her honour during the month named after her: Ēosturmōnaþ (April), and that this became the English name for Easter.
You'll recall the quotation famously attributed to G.K. Chesterton (although the Chesterton Society can't actually find it in the Collected Works):
When Man ceases to worship God he does not worship nothing but worships everything.
Well, it seems that Monty has now stepped up into the vacant god-shaped hole in our hearts. His signing-off words in the Easter edition of Gardener's World were:
"Take time to relish the Blossom. And to get stuck into the garden".
Back to mr ishmael for some Easter thoughts from long ago. Well, not that long ago - and the politicians mentioned, while not in office, mostly, are still breathing God's good air and enjoying their money.

THE ART OF EASTER
It is the end of Holy Week, the fantastical Resurrection remembered, by Blair and Bush and Brown and Obama as they go about their works of Devilment, pious and punitive and profiteering. He is the abomination of our times, Blair. And Imelda, let us not forget Satan's very own working mother, cajoling the MPs' wives to vote for Inferno in Baghdad, the horrible poxed-up crone. Funny how the viler people are the graver, the more public is their piety. And it is darkly meet, fitting that at the height of their crimes, the Blairs joined Pope Nazi Benedict in his monstrous, bloody, infant-buggering hypocrisy. A religion made for these two, full of theatre and threat, superficially benevolent; heaving, beneath, with menace. Il Papa, the Nonce Protector General, is now, in Holy Week, baring his diseased fangs, snarling at his critics, the horrible old bastard. And Blair, too, is demonstrating his vacuity, his hammy worthlessness, with his gobby, meaningless tosh from behind a wall of expensive security, preposterously in his old constituency, surely the stupidest Britons outside Hartlepool, as he half-heartedly extols the Godly to Vote for Snot.(Gordon Brown, famously caught on camera picking his nose and eating it in the House of Commons - ed.
There is early Christian art, in the Middle East and Africa, or so it is claimed by the telly scholars as they jet around the world being scholarly and there are the cathedrals, many commenced a thousand years ago but there's nothing which impinges hugely on our pop-art consciousness much before the Renaissance. Most would recognise Dali's Christ of Saint John of The Cross or this fragment of Bach's St Matthew's Passion - O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden - if only from Paul Simon's reworking of it as his whining, white man's blues, American Tune. There are scraps of doleful, pre-harmony music and bits of bloody paintings but the popular Christian art, the everyday imagery, sound and sculpture was largely made a millenium and a half or more AD and made in the service of the State. 

Happy Easter, Ishmaelites, and take time to relish the Blossom.

Sunday, 13 April 2025

The Sunday Ishmael: 13/04/2022

 


Coalbrookdale by Night 
 by Philip James de Loutherbourg, from 1801. 

Coalbrookdale by Night provides a view of the Bedlam Furnaces in Madeley Dale, downstream along the River Severn from the town of Ironbridge. It has come to symbolize the birth of the Industrial Revolution in the Ironbridge Gorge, Shropshire, in England. It is held in the Science Museum. Art historian Brian Lukacher dubbed the picture as "the best known example" of the industrial sublime, a genre that specialized in representing industrial settings. He said the picture is "a celebration of the energy unleashed by a coke-fired blast furnace and an early reckoning with its environmental consequences".
Margaret Thatcher, born 13th October 1925, died of dementia 8th April 2013Conservative Prime Minister 1979 to 1990, notorious for breaking the trade union movement and the British coal extraction industry. Her government closed 25 unprofitable coal mines in 1985, and by 1992 a total of 97 mines had been closed; those that remained were privatised in 1994.The resulting closure of 150 coal mines, some of which were not losing money, resulted in the loss of tens of thousands of jobs and had the effect of devastating entire communities. Pouring concrete down the pits to ensure they could not again be worked was just the icing on the spite-cake.
Boris Johnson, Conservative Prime Minister 2019 to 2022, sold the British Steel Industry to the Chinese. Who bought it in order to close it down. According to Nigel Farage, that is. Now had Baroness Fucking Thatcher not crippled the coal industry, Britain would not now need to send Royal Navy vessels to protect the  importation of vital coal shipments needed to keep Scunthorpe's blast furnaces operating, the government having finally woken up to the fact that Britain needs the steel industry and the steel industry needs coal, despite LoonyTunes Milliband and his determination to beggar the country with his Net Zero Nonsense.
This has been an astonishing week, culminating in the recall of Parliament from their Easter holidays for a Saturday sitting - the first since 1982, when MPs returned after the start of the Falklands War. Parliamentarians within a single day passed an emergency law through both Houses that allowed the Government to take control of the Chinese company, Jingye, which bought British Steel in 2020, reportedly for £50 million after it collapsed and was placed under the control of the United Kingdom Insolvency Service. We are told that the only viable option was to accept that China would buy British Steel, as the other tenders were not acceptable. The thought of nationalisation at that point clearly did not enter anyone's pointed little Conservative head. Nor that the Chinese Government might have another agenda for the future of the British Steel industry.

Anyway, turns out Jingye has allegedly lost £700,000 a day, stopped buying coke for the furnaces and started selling off its existing coal stocks. It took the workforce taking over the plant and locking out the Chinese management, fearing they would commit sabotage and industrial espionage, for Government to sit up and pay attention. The emergency legislation allows the Government to order raw materials for Scunthorpe's blast furnaces as it is feared that supplies are about to run out. Ministers are able to direct the company's board and workers and ensure that anyone at the plant "who takes steps to keep it running, against the orders of the Chinese ownership" can be reinstated if they are sacked.
It is almost unbelievable. 
But ask the steel workers in Port Talbot, whose steel plant was closed down by its Indian owners, Tata Steel, with a loss of over 2000 jobs, last year, without the government lifting a finger to prevent it. 
Sometimes one feels that the political classes hate the British working classes. One wonders why. The aristocratic classes seem ok with the working classes, although it wouldn't do to marry in. Royalty kindly enquires: and what do you do? and have you come far? 
........................................................................
Daffodils do very well in Orkney. This is a corner of the daffodil meadow that I planted in the walled garden - over a thousand daffodil bulbs, planted in cold, dark November by the light of a head-torch, so that come April they could reflect the sunshine and perfume the air. Until the gales put paid to all that. Probably why there's not much of a gardening tradition here. 
I am not native here, not to the manor born, and a quarter century ago, when I was first here, a Stranger in a Strange Land, a pleasantry ventured to a Local Person would be received with a grunt, or subvocal, Fuck off, English cunt. 
The first time mr ishmael and I attempted to have lunch in a café in Stromness, we claimed a table and sat down, bravely ignoring the stares of the other patrons, and read the menu. Time passed, whilst we puzzled whether clapshot or stovies would prove edible and what the fuck was a clootie dumpling. We decided. We waited. And waited. mr ishmael, you may recall, suffered from extreme food-ordering stress disorder. After 15 minutes, during which time no-one came near us, but the four or five obese women behind the counter looked at us, giggling and whispering, he said, we've got this wrong. It must be counter service. So up I went to the counter, where the women continued with their conversation, whilst staring at me. It was a bit like being in Wales. Eventually I said, excuse me? Sorry to trouble you, but could I order some food? One woman, looking me up and down, and clearly not liking what she saw, snapped: sit down. Its table service. someone will be over and take your order. So I sat down, and we waited. And waited some more. mr ishmael got very restive. Eventually he said, lets go. At which point, one of the large ladies thundered across and asked what we wanted. We interpreted this to be a request to take our order - but it might not have been. We asked for sandwiches and tea. She wrote it down and left. We waited and after another 20 minutes, mr ishmael started getting his coat on. This did the trick and the sandwiches arrived. Two hours from start to finish. For a cup of tea and a sandwich.

For a birthday celebration, we went to the finest hotel on the Kirkwall harbour front. By this time, we were accustomed to service that moves at the speed of a glacier in winter, and were pleasantly surprised when our dinner plates were placed before us, bearing a slab of roast beast with a good hunk of Yorkshire pudding and lots of brown gravy. This looks good, said mr ishmael. Let's hope the vegetables are hot. We waited for vegetables, perking up when the waiter threaded his way between the tables. Not for us. We waited, then started picking at our meat, just tidying it up, a little slice off the edges. Then we kind of got stuck in. You know how hard it is to catch a waiter's eye? They are trained to avoid eye contact, so you have to stick your foot out and trip them up as they go past. mr ishmael asked the waiter he'd managed to detain - there are vegetables, aren't there? Not sure, you see, because it could have been a Scottish custom not to serve vegetables, and there aren't any fruit and veg shops, after all. The waiter said, I'll ask chef. He came back eventually - maybe chef was in a snit, and said, chef says there are vegetables. mr ishmael said: Good. Where are they? The waiter said, I'll ask chef. By the time he came back, we had made considerable inroads into our roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. Chef says that the vegetable have gone out. He looked about the restaurant. I think they've gone to that table over there - they have two dishes. 
Well, can we have them? 
No, the other customers have eaten them. 
So, can we have vegetables from the kitchen? 
I'll ask chef. 
On his return, the miserable waiter told us: chef says you've had your vegetables. You can't have any more.

So, by and large, we stopped going out and tried to have nice food at home - there was the time I went down the street in my lunch hour to buy some cream from Cummings and Spence.  
I looked in the dairy fridge, but, not finding cream, I spoke to a woman behind the counter. Excuse me, could you tell me where the cream is?
It's Wednesday, she informed me. 
Yes, I agreed, but could you direct me to the cream?
There's no cream in the week. No call for it. Come back on Saturday.

Things are much improved now, of course. Two of the establishments mentioned have ceased to exist. 

There are four splendid anthologies of the writings of mr ishmael and stanislav, the young Polish Plumber. The anthologies have been compiled and produced by editor mr verge, the house filthster, from the writings of our founder, in answer to the appalled and bereft reaction of ishmaelites to the passing of mr ishmael in January 2020.  
You can buy the Quartet from Amazon or Lulu. Here's how:
Honest Not Invent, Vent Stack, Ishmael’s Blues, and the latest, Flush Test (with a nice picture of the late, much lamented, Mr Harris of Lanarkshire taking a piss on a totem pole) are available from Lulu and Amazon. If you buy from Amazon, it would be nice if you could give a review on their website.
IIshmaelites wishing to buy a copy from lulu should follow these steps 
please register an account first, at lulu.com. This is advisable because otherwise paypal seems to think it's ok to charge in dollars, and they then apply their own conversion rate, which might put the price up slightly for a UK buyer. Once the new account is set up, follow one of the links below (to either paperback or hardback) or type "Ishmael’s Blues" into the Lulu Bookstore search box. Click on the “show explicit content” tab, give the age verification box a date of birth such as 1 January 1960, and proceed.
Link for Hardcover : https://tinyurl.com/je7nddfr
Link for Paperback : https://tinyurl.com/3jurrzux
https://www.lulu.com/shop/ishmael-smith/flush-test/paperback/product-9yjvn7.html?q=Flush+Test&page=1&pageSize=4

At checkout, try WELCOME15 in the coupon box, which (for the moment) takes 15% off the price before postage. If this code has expired by the time you reach this point, try a google search for "Lulu.com voucher code" and see what comes up.

With the 15% voucher, PB (including delivery to a UK address) should be £16.84; HB £27.04. 




Sunday, 6 April 2025

The Sunday Ishmael: 06/04/2025

 

It certainly is a very beautiful bridge.
From a distance, its pure white cables seem to hover like seabirds' wings; as you drive across it, high above the Firth of Forth, it is simultaneously magnificent in its strength and scary in its fragility. Once your wheels are on it, there's no turning back (a bit like going into labour), you have to keep up with the capricious traffic all around you and keep your eyes firmly on the road, whatever your acrophobia or your satnav is telling you. It has an "Intelligent Transportation System"- active traffic management, enabling variable speed restrictions and lane closures to be displayed on overhead gantries - so if you are not paying close attention, the surrounding traffic, bowling along at pace, seems capricious indeed. Opened by the late Queen in 2017, the Queensferry Crossing is a three-tower cable-stayed bridge with an overall length of 1.7 miles. It carries motorcycles, cars and heavy goods vehicles, while public transport, cyclists and pedestrians use the old Forth Road Bridge. Wind shielding has been built into the design, supposedly to enable use of the bridge in high winds, but I certainly wouldn't want to cross it in a high wind- it's bad enough in flat calm. The bridge was closed for the first time on 11 February 2020, 30 months after opening, due to ice on the towers. Some of the ice fell onto the carriageway, damaging eight vehicles. Which may explain the panicked reaction of my satnav, first time I took it across the bridge. "Off Road, Off Road", it shouted at me. "Make a U- turn". None of the usual "when it is safe to do so, make a U-turn". Nope, it demanded I make a U-ey in the middle of the Queensferry Crossing, 207 metres above high tide, which is 683 feet high.
And it kept up its skriking for the full 1.7 miles. Who says machines don't have feelings? It believed that we were in the river and about to die. This is because it had been born 3 years before the bridge had been opened. I tried to have it updated, but it is too old, Mercedes Benz sympathetically told me. So now I use the satnav on my phone.

I've told you about this before, but my memory was prompted by my chums, who recently set off from home in good time to attend a hospital appointment about 40 miles away. (This was in England - I don't believe there's anywhere in Orkney 40 miles away). They kind of knew the way, but, to be on the safe side, they engaged their satnav, which, in the upmarket car that my chums drive, has a name and has to be addressed, responding, as it does, to verbal commands. Whimsy had led to their satnav being named Keir. "Keir, take me to Blah Blah Hospital". There was a short pause, whilst Keir checked things out, before replying: "Certainly, sir. Your route is displayed. Your arrival time may be tomorrow." Before the car's occupants would reply What? Keir added: "There is a ferry."
We can only be grateful that Keir was unable to lock in the inmates and take them to Brussels, which, they learned, on panning out the display screen, was his intended destination. For the following hour, Keir kept insisting that they did U-eys, book ferry tickets and leave the roundabout at the sixth exit. He would not be dissuaded. But did they try turning it off and turning it on again? Of course they did. He didn't get upset, calmly informing them that their route was being re-calculated and they would reach their destination tomorrow. Perhaps if they succumb and do go to Brussels, Keir will smugly inform them: You have reached your destination.
I used to have an Australian-dialect satnav, which would exclaim joyously: You're here! Windows up, sunnies on, mate!
Should you choose to interpret any of the above as an extended metaphor, you are, of course, at liberty to do so. It is a matter entirely for yourselves.
It was left to Jeremy Vine, of all people, on this morning's Laura Kuenssberg show, to bring a modicum of sense to wild talk of coalitions of the willing and standing with Europe against Trumpal tariffing. Maybe this is a bit of an opportunity? he tentatively suggested, in words to that effect, you know, chum up with Trump, who's levying only 10% on our exports, and will probably drop that if we give him his own apartment in Buckingham Palace. After all, he's half British, through his mum. None of that would do for Lady Nugee, who has brought frothing at the mouth to a fine art. You don't know Lady Nugee, Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire? There's a British Empire? Still? Have I strayed into Bridgerton?
Lady Nugee, married to the Lord Justice of Appeal, prefers to be known as Emily Thornberry. She failed her 11+ (I didn't!), had to resit her O levels (I didn't!), but did pretty well after that (I didn't!). They like her in Islington South and Finsbury, which has continuously elected her as their Labour MP since 2005, when she benefitted from an all-woman short list. Jeremy Corbyn liked her well enough to give her Shadow Cabinet posts, but Sir Keir removed her to the back benches.
Thornberry never really recovered from widespread accusations of snobbery which forced her resignation from the shadow cabinet in 2014. She published on her Twitter (now X) account a photograph of a house in the constituency of Rochester and Stroud adorned with three flags of St. George (the patron saint of England) and the owner's white van parked in the drive, captioning it "Image from Rochester"
Ed Net Zero Milliband, then leader of the Labour Party said her action conveyed a sense of disrespect, Captain Underpants Chris Bryant 
(who is now a sir and a pillar of the establishment despite posting a selfie of himself wearing only his tightie whities on the gay dating site, Gaydar "it was a wound but it's a rather charming scar now") said that it broke the first rule of politics* (he can talk, much), and Simon Danczuk (then Labour MP for Rochdale, up North, until December 2015, when his Labour Party membership was suspended following reports that he had exchanged sexually explicit messages with a 17 year old girl, for which he apologised, saying his behaviour was inappropriate and stupid. He then had a go at being a Reform Party MP, but that didn't worksaid that the Labour Party had been "hijacked by the north London liberal elite" - not wrong there.
*first rule of politics: don't get caught.
So, yes, Emily Thornberry
Not only cross about Trump, not only wanting to get back into bed with the Europeans, despite that 20% tariff, but really, really cross about Israel refusing to allow two potential Labour criminals to set foot in their country.
In an utterly hilarious decision, Israel decided it did not want Abtisam Mohammed, MP and Yuan Yang, MP, to leave the airport on arrival and sent them straight back to Britain. Would that Sir Keir exercise the same decisive ruthlessness in his dealings with illegal and legal migrants - he welcomes migrants, who, it seems, are our strength, because British women won't have babies and British youth are too sick to work. Abtisam and Yuan said they were utterly astonished that Israel wouldn't let them in. Now, girls, girls, we all know that actions have consequences and if you insist on bad-mouthing Israel, what the fuck do you expect? So, why did they want to go to Israel in the first place? Because they were planning to "document Israeli security forces and spread hateful rhetoric against Israel", as the Israeli population authority said. Seems fair enough to me - but not to Frothing Thornberry, nor indeed to David Lammy - luckiest man alive. Fortunately we have Tiny Kemi Bad Enoch - speaking on Sky News' Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips ( ah, that's where he ended up), Kemi said: " I think every country should be able to control its borders, and that's what Israel is doing, as far as I understand. They gave reasons why they didn't believe that those people should come in based on their laws and it's really important that we respect other countries enforcing their borders." Asked whether the decision seemed a bit odd, Kemi responded "I'm not surprised." Lucky Lammy thought that this response was "disgraceful - you are cheerleading another country for detaining and deporting two British MPs".  Lucky Lammy is Foreign Secretary, you know. Obviously, diplomacy, politesse and intellect are no longer attributes required of a Foreign Secretary. 
The Man is a Plank.

Whilst we are discussing MPs who have an interest in matters foreign, you would be entitled to think what the blue blithering fuck, what the dry-wank jaw drop, what the hell are British MPs - British Parliamentarians - doing lobbying the Government of a foreign; like, a really foreign country, with an exotic religion, antediluvian views of women, outrageous punishments for pretty normal behaviour; to build an airport, contrary to their stated views on climate change and their opposition to the expansion of British airports? The letter was drafted by Bedford and Kempston MP Mohammed Yasin and was signed by 20 parliamentarians, including Labour’s Ms Qureshi. It said the signatories were concerned that “long standing” pledges to build an international airport at Mirpur have yet to be realised, with the nearest airport 80 miles away in Islamabad. The letter said: “The Kashmiri diaspora in the UK, including significant numbers of our constituents, have concerns regarding the journey times by road. 
Eight of these MPs campaigning for an airport to be built in Mirpur, Pakistan, voted against Heathrow expansion in 2018 - 
Mohamad Yasin, Debbie Abrahams, Rosena Allin-Khan, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, James Frith, Imran Hussain, Afzal Khan, and Yasmin Qureshi – all Labour MPs – signed a letter this week calling for an airport to be built in Mirpur, Pakistan. They were joined by a number of Labour and independent colleagues, as well as two Lib Dem peers.
I mean, what the actual fuck? 
I blame Empire, myself.

First rule of politics: don't get caught.

Darren Jones, Chief Secretary to the Treasury was all over the Sunday morning politics programmes this morning, uttering statements along the lines of:  “Clearly we’re all shocked and personally saddened by the serious allegations that have been made. It’s right that the Labour Party suspended the whip immediately when police informed the party of Dan Norris’s arrest. But, as the police have said, this is a sensitive investigation and we shouldn’t be commenting further at this stage.”
Yeah, sure. In the public domain - and on Norris' Wiki page, is the following information:
Dan Norris, born 28 January 1960, is a British politician who has served as Mayor of the West of England since 2021. He has served as Member of Parliament for North East Somerset and Hanham since 2024, having represented Wansdyke, one of its predecessor constituencies, from 1997 to 2010. Formerly a member of the Labour Party, he was suspended in April 2025 after being arrested by Avon and Somerset Police on suspicion of rape, child sex offences, child abduction and misconduct in a public office...Norris had an interest in child safety and regularly campaigned against paedophilia.

What the hell is the matter with these people?

Anyway, I've been ill. Apologies for not posting a Sunday Ishmael - but I really couldn't. I've been so ill that I turned to Netflix for distraction - where I found Bridgerton. I've watched 3 series and the mini-series, Queen Charlotte. There is a great deal that I want to say about Bridgerton - but I'm all wore out from catching up on politics, as we laughingly call it, so I'll postpone it. I'm particularly angry about its laziness - to demonstrate the stupid vapidity of several debutantes, the show has them engaging in a conversation about embroidery - and not as a textile art, and not in a good way, merely perpetuating the stereotype that women's art is fit only for ridiculing.
Oh, by the way, can I ask you to exercise your customary restraint and politesse in any comments you care to make, as the Online Safety Act will send me to prison and/or levy a huge fine upon me should you overstep or make a comment on matters not related to the post. What sort of country, friends, is this? J.D. Vance has the right idea.
This is Illyria, lady.
And what should I do in Illyria?


There are four splendid anthologies of the writings of mr ishmael and stanislav, the young Polish Plumber. The anthologies have been compiled and produced by editor mr verge, the house filthster, from the writings of our founder, in answer to the appalled and bereft reaction of ishmaelites to the passing of mr ishmael in January 2020.  
You can buy the Quartet from Amazon or Lulu. Here's how:
Honest Not Invent, Vent Stack, Ishmael’s Blues, and the latest, Flush Test (with a nice picture of the late, much lamented, Mr Harris of Lanarkshire taking a piss on a totem pole) are available from Lulu and Amazon. If you buy from Amazon, it would be nice if you could give a review on their website.
IIshmaelites wishing to buy a copy from lulu should follow these steps 
please register an account first, at lulu.com. This is advisable because otherwise paypal seems to think it's ok to charge in dollars, and they then apply their own conversion rate, which might put the price up slightly for a UK buyer. Once the new account is set up, follow one of the links below (to either paperback or hardback) or type "Ishmael’s Blues" into the Lulu Bookstore search box. Click on the “show explicit content” tab, give the age verification box a date of birth such as 1 January 1960, and proceed.
Link for Hardcover : https://tinyurl.com/je7nddfr
Link for Paperback : https://tinyurl.com/3jurrzux
https://www.lulu.com/shop/ishmael-smith/flush-test/paperback/product-9yjvn7.html?q=Flush+Test&page=1&pageSize=4

At checkout, try WELCOME15 in the coupon box, which (for the moment) takes 15% off the price before postage. If this code has expired by the time you reach this point, try a google search for "Lulu.com voucher code" and see what comes up.
With the 15% voucher, PB (including delivery to a UK address) should be £16.84; HB £27.04.

it's wild garlic time again. Does anyone have a great recipe?