Monday, August 21, 2017

In which the pond enjoys a late afternoon Oreo, because it's never too late to bite into an Oreo ...


The pond only harks back to Mike Carlton here because - some distance down that tweet - a kindly soul EJB - blessed with the wondrous tag silly cat running -  the pond has always thought of itself as a silly cat running - put up a link to the pond, and so the pond achieved perhaps one or two degrees of separation from the acerbic Carlton ...

And then thanks to Michael Pascoe's tweet, embedded in the chain, the pond went off to down memory lane to about me ...


And why does that matter?

Well you see, after all the mockery and ridicule, it will be noted that the line about the Oreo's Australian university status no longer appears at about.me, but instead has been discreetly edited out, airbrushed like a Playboy photo ...

But the pond hastens to reassure punters that it's still the same smart cookie beloved and celebrated by the pond ...


And lo, just as the pond has returned, so has the Oreo.

Yes, all this was by way of reassuring stray punters that the pond hadn't forgotten that Monday is Oreo day ... but don't the pleasures longest delayed taste the best when finally consumed, or perhaps belatedly consummated?



Strange, the definition seems simple enough ... and the Oreo seems to be exhibiting strong signs of it ... not for her a wide ranging variety of flavours, just your standard mass produced fast food Oreo ...


...though how to pronounce xenophobia could take hours of discussion ...



And here for the argument and a sample pronunciation ... even if it's not the way the pond would say it, because amongst many pedantic matters, the pond refuses to acknowledge that "zee" exists ... and not even Oscar the Grouch could persuade it otherwise ...


Ah Oscar and the Oreo, as one with the messaging ...

Never mind, it's back to the Oreo for a final burst of xenophobia ...


Now the pond has done its duty and paid attention to the Oreo, but if it might be so bold, could it offer a few editorial suggestions, along the same lines as made that talk of being amongst the ten top university minds mysteriously disappear ...

Most migrants and refugees make fine citizens, and even some members of the reptile commentariat, though sadly only some. Let's face it, it was Australia's gain and America's loss when Rupert decided to abandon his Australian citizenship for a brazen pot of Fox News gold ...
The story of modern Australia is a migrant story, no matter how many Greens councils try to deny it by banning Australia Day, or members of the reptile commentariat insist it’s been a total disaster that puts all our lives at risk, or refuse to acknowledge that the day was once celebrated all over the shop, and is a moveable feast and that if there was to be a proper federal Australia Day, it should be on the 1st January, when the Commonwealth came into being, but we all know how we feel about doubling up on a holyday, as opposed to spreading them out, though we've spread the day out before to all kinds of odd days, as this meme suggests... 


But the balance between mass migration and social harmony is a delicate one. It is put at risk by ratbag ideologues of the Oreo kind who demonise Islamics, persecute minorities and pursue a fanatical closed-border policy without assessing the consequences. 
The unelected scribblers staffing the Murdoch rags risk have continued to serve their chairman in a bid to ensure his going endless acquisition of wealth, while determined to limit the wealth of others. If the emergence of a bigoted population prone to Foxian hysteria has come as shock, with the Donald the ultimate tragic consequence - though can climate science and Brexit be far behind? - it is because the scribblers are so far removed from the people they claim to serve, which might help explain their circulation and revenue problems. 
The bulging register of mindless references to Godwin’s Law-breaking thought crimes that every fuckwitted dimwit leads with can only be balanced by the silly stupids who routinely open their columns with references to Orwell and Brave New World, when that brave old socialist would have been appalled to see the likes of an Oreo quoting him ...
Somehow these loons think that wearing wondrous un-PC badges shields them from the intolerable hysteria they have cultivated in a dissenting minority of crazed white supremacists, isolationist nationalists and neo-Nazis. 
But shouting xenophobia at bigots won’t stop their terrorism. Fox News continues, though it’s been outflanked by other even more extreme forms of ratbaggery, and the reptiles of Oz now look on at their capacity for creative destruction, and wonder how it’s all come to this. 
Well their ongoing cultivation of the extreme right won’t protect the free world from those determined to make us unfree, like Daesh and the Chairman and the Oreo, who shout that closed borders is freedom, and who, to an uncomfortable degree, spread about exactly the same kind of hatred and bigotry and unwillingness to just live and let live and get on with enjoying life as fundamentalists everywhere do ....

And with that bit of re-writing done, it's time for a Rowe, evoking an Oreo hero ... with more Rowe here ...


On the other hand, the pond could just have put up that meme to be found on the Carlton tweet and not bothered with anything else ...



7 comments:

  1. The sight of that Cheeseburger Oreo had me laughing my head off: Brilliant work there DP. I have no idea what it would taste like, but it must be disgusting.

    As for "make us unfree".....well that has to be right up there in the range of top tens.
    The fact that these RWNJ's were happy to globalize everything that moved, while waging a bag of pre-emptive wars to suit their own brand of fundamentalist delusion, and then have the nerve to blame everything on the average punter or for that matter, anyone left of Genghis Khan, takes some beating.

    And the Oreo writes with such utilitarian inconsequentialism.....I made that up....non the less , the Oreo is just a hater. Cheers.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utilitarianism

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6Sxv-sUYtM

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  2. Hi Dorothy,

    The Oreo has evidently been re-reading Brave New World presumably looking for tips.

    I must admit that I also have been reacquainting myself with some favourite literature and recently came across this rather timely piece from the Umberto Eco's classic 'The Name of the Rose';

    ""Why the Jews?" I asked Salvatore. He answered, "And why not?" He explained to me that all his life preachers had told him the Jews were the enemies of Christianity and accumulated possessions that had been denied the Christian poor. I asked him, however whether it was not also true that lords and bishops accumulated possessions through tithes, so that the Shepherds were not fighting their true enemies.

    He replied that when your true enemies are too strong, you have to choose weaker enemies."

    DiddyWrote

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    Replies
    1. :)³ And speaking of the Jews, interesting times in Israel with the gutless Netanyahu fellow traveling with the Donald fellow travelling with the neo-Nazi anti-semites. It's caused an uproar, but what strange days are these ...

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    2. "you have to choose weaker enemies" - Why did this make me think of drug-testing for welfare recipients?

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  3. Now be fair, DP, the Oreo has got the right idea about borders after all: if the Aboriginals had maintained closed borders, the English terrorists would never have been able to sail in and take over the country. Now you can hardly find an Aboriginal anywhere ... well there's barely any in the world's "Most Livable City" anyway.

    And ditto for the Maoris and the Amer-indians and the last of the Mohicans and so forth.

    But I confess that I'm getting just a little curious about that "academic work" that is so prominent in "the syllabi of Harvard University, the University of London, the University of Toronto, Amherst College, the University of Wisconsin and Columbia University."

    Aren't you just a teensy bit curious too ? Has anybody any good ideas as to how to chase it down ? Google Scholar maybe ?

    On the other hand, maybe it would have appeared in the daily newspapers sometime. Just like "Strangled by ghosts, saving lives: a psychic's work day is never boring" appeared in the Business/Workplace section of the Sydney Morning Herald on Aug 17th.
    http://www.smh.com.au/business/workplace-relations/paranormal-by-design-20170814-gxw97f.html

    Now that shows the kind of naive gullibilty you'd have to exhibit to want to include the Oreo in your syllabus.

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    Replies
    1. Golly GB the pond fells like awarding a year's supply of cheeseburger Oreos for anyone who discovers the truth, but she's such a mendacious fraud (and her published CVs are so skimpy about her life and what she's done) that it might be better to go tilting at windmills ...

      As for that bizarre bit of click bait, the pond can match you. We were out on the road and heard a bit of God Forbid interviewing witches and warlocks, before turning to the sanity of world destruction on ABC news radio ...

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