A cow don’t make ham

I’m drunk right now which is probably just as well. I also have a sneaking suspicion that someone has slipped me a massive dose of some kind of hallucinogen. How else to explain this:

Tony Blair is to teach students at Yale University in the US when he leads a seminar on faith and globalisation.

The former prime minister has been appointed as a fellow at Yale and will begin teaching next year.

Faith? Faith? Tony Blair provides concrete proof that God does not exist. The sooner that particle collider in Switzerland opens a door to an alternate reality the better. When it does, me and mine are out of here.

I mean, what next? Peter Sutcliffe to open an outreach programme for prostitutes? Gary Glitter to consult on child protection issues? In what kind of a morally mutilated reality is this shit allowed to happen?


Posted on March 7th, 2008 at 11:04pm under Blair

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6 Comments

6 Comments

  1. kate (14 comments.) on 07.03.2008 at 23:22 Permalink | Reply

    i suspect it’s an entry for the Turner Prize. that’s my way of dealing with it, anyway.

  2. Philip (248 comments.) on 08.03.2008 at 00:11 Permalink | Reply

    Tony Blair provides concrete proof that God does not exist

    Not at all. He merely provides concrete proof that God, if he does exist, is not good.

  3. [...] at least I think he’s given up on the EU job. (ht2 Chicken Yoghurt) Posted in Church Of The Free Market, Culture(!), Idiots, Organised Crime, War [...]

  4. redpesto on 08.03.2008 at 12:28 Permalink | Reply

    Fron the Guarduian: But the appointment will raise many eyebrows. Blair’s decision to teach religion as well as politics highlights how important Christianity is in his life. He became interested at university and then, as a Labour frontbencher, contributed to a book on socialism and Christianity.

    The longer this kind of thing goes on, the more I suspect Labour party members will feel they were conned.

  5. Mike on 08.03.2008 at 14:17 Permalink | Reply

    Remember that Yale spawned both Bushes, so it’s really not too difficult to understand.

    The longer this kind of thing goes on, the more I suspect Labour party members will feel they were conned.

    It is, on the other hand, difficult to undestand how any Labour partty member could not have come to this conclusion long ago.

  6. Clive (41 comments.) on 08.03.2008 at 16:04 Permalink | Reply

    As a Labour Party member, I can honestly say that I started feeling conned by Blair sometime around December 1989. Things took a turn for the worse in May 1994 and never really got any better.

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