Clear, cold and curmudgeonly at the Castle this morn, yestermorn
something wondrous happened; the 48 day old mist lifted and the big bright
yellow thing appeared in the endless blue thing, so Angus of the Dei and his
Maj tentatively stepped into the garden and thirty seconds later five thousand
midges descended for a feast-shortest bit of sunbathing ever....
The study is a vacuum for any sort of disassembled machines;
the butler is frantically stuffing fat teenagers into the furnace and my
ballcock needs replacing-again.
The deputy Prime Monster reckons that the £1 billion plan to
tackle high youth unemployment will apparently be paid for by taxes on
"people with the broadest shoulders".
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Clegg would
not specify where the money would come from to pay for the plan, which will
cost £1 billion over three years.
But he said: "We will do everything we can to make sure
the poorest are protected. We will not balance the books of this country on the
backs of the poorest".
Liar, liar wallets on fire....
And:
Apparently
GCHQ is to explore commercial applications for their top secret expertise
in a move designed to help the country fight off cyber attacks.
The move is part of the government’s new “cyber security strategy” which is
seeking to make better use of the expertise at the Cheltenham listening centre.
The strategy says that GCHQ is “home to world-class
expertise in cyber security” and it wants that to be used to support the
private sector “without compromising the agency's core security and
intelligence mission.”
The agency has agreed for the first time to “work with
private sector partners to explore the potential commercial applications for
GCHQ's unique expertise.”
It will also explore “strategic vehicles” for bringing
together industry, academia and government to exploit the latest innovations in
cyber security.
A major new development could see GCHQ developing a venture
capital “model” to help fund innovation in cyber security in small and
medium-sized enterprises, based on a model developed by the CIA.
Oh well if America does it then we have no problems-look at how well the toxic mortgage thing went...
According to the job posting of a Chinese employer long-haired
freaky people need not apply for jobs, and Scorpios or Virgos aren't wanted either.
The unusual job ad
was posted at a university in Wuhan for an unidentified English-language
training firm.
"We don't want
Scorpios or Virgos, and Capricorns," the job posting says, according to
the newspaper.
A woman at the
company said she's found Scorpios and Virgos to be feisty and critical.
Virgo’s feisty and critical-never-I’m a Virgo....
A former police
officer accused of theft in the US stunned a court when he blamed a ghost in
his basement.
Joseph Hughes, from
Mount Gilead, Ohio, faced 21 charges against him, including stealing 12 air
conditioning units, a 6,000 watt generator and a welder.
All are believed to
have been taken from the Morrow County sheriff's office - one air conditioner
was even labelled 'auditor' in thick black marker.
But after the
stolen articles were found in Hughes's basement, he gave a paranormal defence
for why he didn't know they were there.
"It's going to
sound kind of ridiculous, but we believed that there was some kind of
paranormal presence in the basement," Hughes said in court.
Ghosts that install air conditioners and weld things-no
wonder the job market is so bad....
Designed by Hamburg-based designer duo Heike Mutter and
Ulrich Genth, the walkable roller-coaster titled Tiger & Turtle - Magic
Mountain is 45 meters high and consists of 249 steps. Visitors can climb on the
curved sculpture and walk around, and take in the surrounding views from the
spiral walkways in their own pace.
The structure is located on top of a mining waste tip at the
Heinrich-Hildebrand-Height in the Angerpark, overlooking the Rhine in Duisburg,
Germany.
About 120 tons of galvanised steel were used to make the
sculpture which is supported by 17 posts. At night LED lights illuminate the
handrails.
Sort of defeats the object, and how do you get round the
loop....
And finally:
Brighton woman Fiona Turton is renting out her stable for
£12 a night during December - complete with straw bed, manger and resident
donkey - in an effort to get Brits to rediscover the magic of Christmas.
With the proceeds of the venture going to Leukaemia and Lymphoma Research, the modern version of the birthplace of Jesus Christ features mood lighting, electricity, heating and an ornamental fireplace and bookcase.
In addition to a straw bed for two, a
manger and resident donkey, the little Bethlehem - located 2,300 miles away
from the real deal on an organic farm in the South Downs - comes complete with
tea-making facilities and an armchair.
Shepherd costumes, bath towels and WiFi
are available at an additional cost, but traditional yuletide lessons are free
of charge.
Think I’ll stay in the Castle this Crimbo.
That’s it: I’m orf to suss
out somewhere to retire to.
And today’s thought:
3 comments:
That is a rather unusual roller coaster. Hopefully the view at the top is worth it!
I don't do heights CherryPie:)
Nor me ;-)
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