27th February 2010
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Eight
27th February 2010
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Seven
‘A large group of terrorists had a planned three-pronged attack on the Police
camp’, said Chief Inspector Harvey. ‘As one group of Terrs came in, one of our sergeants disturbed their plans.’
The Sergeant - now recovered - was shot three times before the Terrs fired
several mortars at the camp and then fled.
In the follow-up operation one terrorist was killed.
camp when the attack on Gokwe was launched, were also shot, but not killed.
So before the camp became populated (even Nigel has no idea which government department actually ‘owned’ the place), the ‘whites only’ shower at the camp didn’t work, as there was no water in its tank. Hence we showered as in the picture.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Six
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Five
Monday, February 08, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Four
Saturday, February 06, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice: Part Three
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Toilets of Rhodesia and other Number Twos of Notice. Part Two
Before I continue down the sewerage lane, I would like to bring to your attention this nifty little device. The idea is that you put into this machine all dodgy office documents and they get converted into toilet paper. This amazing machine costs a mere £63k and can be installed in any government department that produce dossiers full of crap.
Now, the machine you see in the video is the Mark 2. The original model was installed in 2001 in 10 Downing Street, for the then Prime Minister Tony Blair, after former President Bush had ‘Buy one, Get one Free!’ put in the White House. However, they worked in reverse. Tony simply put crap filled toilet paper into one end and Hey Presto! - out came manuscripts claiming
Amazingly (this is true), in
As I have often pointed out in previous postings, the Rhodesians invented the craft of recycling. Our school exercise books were of such loose fibres that we could only write with ballpoint pens. If you used an Indian ink fountain pen, the paper sucked out every drop in seconds, turning the page into a soggy blue sheet. But, the toilet paper had a hi-gloss shiny side of exceptionally good writing quality and the reverse was matt and could handle a pencil very well. Unfortunately, it couldn’t wipe your recycling orifice clean; hence if we hadn’t brought any decent TP from home, we simply used our Afrikaans homework books.
I often wondered what happened to the warehouses full of these toilet rolls. The stuff was almost indestructible and even pulling any off the roll could give you a serious paper cut. I think they were eventually used to print
To be continued…
Monday, February 01, 2010
Precious? It’s Priceless!
Is this the best film critique ever?
He would make me flagellate myself with guilt, before slashing my wrists!
You might have to look up some of the words he uses – I did, and it makes it all the worth while.
Dr Sukhdev Sandhu was educated at
Thank goodness he happens to be a British-Asian, for had this verbal dissesection been done by a British-Caucasian-Heterosexual-Lesbian-Gay-Transvestite-Evangelical-Atheist- 90hour a week self-employed; he/she would have been accused of stereotyping anarchistic xenophobic racialism.
I for one can’t wait to (er... meet a man in the pub, who has a dodgy copy of the film and left it accidently in my jacket pocket), watch it