Britannia 15 & 16
Chapter 15
The train ride to Pembrokeshire was uneventful and surprisingly pleasant. After the train companies were re-nationalised by the Union the quality and especially promptness suffered greatly. The lines which managed to retain some control over the finances and contracts were the best off. Virgin was one of the few companies to gain from the re-nationalisation. It was true that they lost all the lines they bought during the nineties but Virgin retained or added several service contracts for British rail lines. As with most things Virgin was involved with, the group proved yet again that old Richard still knew how to cut a cosy deal. The Paddington to Pembroke line was one of those that Virgin “serviced.”
When David, Michaela, Kiara and Rob alighted at Pembroke Dock station, they were all in good spirits. Owing to therecent spate of bad weather, there were not many people on the train. It was an especially cold, dark and rainy August in West Wales. There was a common belief in that part of the world that “global warming” was not only balderdash but if it were true it might be a good thing.
Get em young?
Hitler Jungen? No just a radio show on German public radio. Guess who they try to get the mini-Krauts to hate? Americans naturally; well it could be worse. It could be anti-Jew.
Comments are off for this postRacist murders are important
Well unless the victim is young and is white that is…
Alas the conclusion of this piece is spot on And the BNP gains another recruiting sergeant.
Comments are off for this postWatchers Need You!
Friday Film Fest
There is no doubt about it—the Japanese are a cruel people. Here they are tormenting poor dumb animals.
And here they are tormenting poor dumb me. Warning: decidedly NSFW.
Comments are off for this postGlitter joke…
Nice to that the Vietnamese are celebrating Christmas 2005 in the festive spirit…they’re hanging Glitter this year…
Comments are off for this postgnotalex Refuses U.N. Request!
The BBC:
The United Nations has launched an appeal for a record $4.7bn (2.7bn) to help more than 30 million victims of war, famine and natural disaster.The amount is equal to global military spending in 48 hours, UN emergency relief co-ordinator Jan Egeland says.
“We can afford to clothe, to feed, to care for all of the children of this world,” he told the BBC’s World Today.
Would that be before or after your cut?
...”We are asking exactly the amount of 48 hours of military spending in this world, or we’re asking for the equivalent of two cups of coffee per rich person.”
Here ya go. Hold still, I’ll pour another.
“U.N. Man” rides to the rescue! (Via The London Fog, who appropriately calls the video “ghastly.” Warning: music and extremely bad voice acting.)
Comments are off for this postBoycott the Red Cross
Until they stop being judenhass scumbags.
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