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View Full Version : A letter to the Observer from Terry Jones (yes, of Monty Python).



AndyT
26-02-2003, 11:03
Sunday January 26, 2003
The Observer

I'm really excited by George Bush's latest reason for bombing Iraq: he's running out of patience. And so am I! For some time now I've been really hacked off with Mr Johnson, who lives a couple of doors down the street.

Well, him and Mr Patel, who runs the health food shop. They both give me queer looks, and I'm sure Mr Johnson is planning something nasty for me, but so far I haven't been able to discover what. I've been round to his place a few times to see what he's up to, but he's got everything well hidden. That's how devious he is. As for Mr Patel, don't ask me how I know, I jus! t know - from very good sources - that he is, in reality, a Mass Murderer. I have leafleted the street telling them that if we don't act first, he'll pick us off one by one.

Some of my neighbours say, if I've got proof, why don't I go to the police? But that's simply ridiculous. The police will say that they need evidence of a crime with which to charge my neighbours. They'll come up with endless red tape and quibbling about the rights and wrongs of a pre-emptive strike and all the while Mr Johnson will be finalising his plans to do terrible things to me, while Mr Patel will be secretly murdering people.

Since I'm the only one in the street with a decent range of automatic firearms, I reckon it's up to me to keep the peace. But until recently that's been a little difficult! . Now, however, George W. Bush has made it clear that all I need to do is run out of patience, and then I can wade in and do whatever I want!

And let's face it, Mr Bush's carefully thought-out policy towards Iraq is the only way to bring about international peace and security. The one certain way to stop Muslim fundamentalist suicide bombers targeting the US or the UK is to bomb a few Muslim countries that have never threatened us. That's why I want to blow up Mr Johnson's garage and kill his wife and children. Strike first! That'll teach him a lesson.

Then he'll leave us in peace and stop peering at me in that totally unacceptable way. Mr Bush makes it clear that all he needs to know before bombing Iraq is that Saddam is a really nasty man and that he has weapons of mass destruction -! even if no one can find them. I'm certain I've just as much justification for killing Mr Johnson's wife and children as Mr Bush has for bombing Iraq. Mr Bush's long-term aim is to make the world a safer place by eliminating 'rogue states' and 'terrorism'.

It's such a clever long-term aim because how can you ever know when you've achieved it?

How will Mr Bush know when he's wiped out all terrorists? When every single terrorist is dead? But then a terrorist is only a terrorist once he's committed an act of terror. What about would-be terrorists? These are the ones you really want to eliminate, since most of the known terrorists, being suicide bombers, have already eliminated themselves.

Perhaps Mr Bush needs to wipe out everyone who could possibly be a future terrorist? Maybe he can't be sure he's achieved his objective until every Muslim fundamentalist is dead? But then some moderate Muslims might convert to fundamentalism. Maybe the only really safe thing to do would be for Mr Bush to eliminate all Muslims?

It's the same in my street. Mr Johnson and Mr Patel are just the tip of the iceberg. There are dozens of other people in the street who I don't like and who - quite frankly - look at me in odd ways. No one will be really safe until I've wiped them all out. My wife says I might be going too far but I tell her I'm simply using the same logic as the President of the United States. That shuts her up.

Like Mr Bush, I've run out of patience, and if that's a good enough reason for the President, it's good enough for me. I'm going to give the whole street two weeks - no, 10 days - to come out in the open and hand over all aliens and interplanetary hijackers, galactic outlaws and interstellar terrorist masterminds, and if they don't hand them over nicely and say 'Thank you', I'm going to bomb the entire street to kingdom come.

It's just as sane as what George W. Bush is proposing - and, in contrast to what he's intending, my policy will destroy only one street.

H
26-02-2003, 12:21
Hmm spot on me thinks

Scottie
26-02-2003, 13:25
Agree, spot on.

But, what if Mr Johnson really has developed some weapons and is about two wipe out a few other houses in the street, but we can't say how we know he has them otherwise we would lose the ability to know when they are gone.

There's no right answer is there :confused:

BanjoMaster
26-02-2003, 13:39
Clearly Mr Johnson must burn!

Mr Jones is right. How could I have been so blind? President Bush is the most intelligent president America has ever had, and not, as I had previously thought, a genuine assclown. I'm happy knowing that I will never have the chance to own a 200SX because Mr Bush will get us all nuked first. Hurrah!

200sxer
26-02-2003, 13:44
LMAO:D

Very clever and scarily perceptive

H
26-02-2003, 14:13
Originally posted by Scottie
Agree, spot on.

But, what if Mr Johnson really has developed some weapons and is about two wipe out a few other houses in the street, but we can't say how we know he has them otherwise we would lose the ability to know when they are gone.

There's no right answer is there :confused:

Yeah that is also very true
shit situation really:(

JB
26-02-2003, 14:32
As has been said, spot on.

If Bush has evidence then we should see it, otherwise I don't believe there should be a war just yet until the weapons inspectors have had longer to do their job. I speak as someone who thought that was with Iraq was probably the right course of action a few months ago.

Must admit that stories like the one below make me VERY sceptical about the United States ability to get anything right at the moment:




from sky news.com

BRITON TELLS OF ORDEAL

A British pensioner, wrongly jailed for two weeks in South Africa after being mistaken for a fugitive, broke down as he told of his ordeal and said he just wanted to get home.


A visibly shaken Derek Bond fought back tears as he spoke to reporters for the first time since being released from a Durban police cell by the FBI.

He said he was delighted to be free but was considering legal action.

"Although I protested my innocence from the beginning it seemed to have little impact on the FBI. I was getting very despondent," he said.

Asked whether he was planning to take legal action, Mr Bond said he would have to consult his lawyers, but said there was "every possibility" and that he appeared to have a genuine case.

He was owed a great deal more than an apology by the FBI, he said.


Concrete floor

Breaking down briefly Mr Bond told how it was 10 days before a personal statement was taken from him.

He had to sleep on a concrete floor with a mat and didn't eat for three days because he was so worried, he said.

The 72-year-old from Bristol, was eventually freed after the US Attorney's Office admitted: "We got the wrong man".

The FBI arrested the real fugitive, suspected of fraud and money laundering, in Las Vegas last night.

Agents had been hunting a suspect known by the names of Derek Bond and Derek Lloyd Sykes, who had the same date of birth and passport number as the retired businessman.

The Interpol website said the wanted man "may be dangerous" and listed his offences as property conspiracy, fraud conspiracy and money laundering.

Mr Bond was arrested while on holiday with his wife of 50 years, Audrey.

She said today that she was "over the moon".

Delighted

"I'm absolutely delighted. I can't tell you. It's absolutely marvellous."

His youngest son Richard said he was "delighted" at the news but expressed concern over the FBI investigation.

Speaking from his home in Knowle, Bristol, the 43-year-old university administrator and father of four, said: "The news is a great relief to us.

But he added: "I don't know what's going on with the FBI. The story that we are hearing is very odd. There are issues that we should all be very concerned about."