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PostPosted: Fri Dec 18, 2009 8:26 pm
by Big Benn
Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.


Is all that true? :shock:

Re: UK paper to Copenhagen -- You're buffoons

PostPosted: Fri Dec 18, 2009 8:47 pm
by hoser23
truchas wrote:Hoser23 approves.

When your attempt at recreating the Congress of Vienna with a third-rate cast of extras turns into a shambles, when the data with which you have tried to terrify the world is daily exposed as ever more phoney, when the blatant greed and self-interest of the participants has become obvious to all beholders, when those pesky polar bears just keep increasing and multiplying – what do you do?

Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.

If there were not $45trillion of Western citizens’ money at stake, this would be the funniest moment in world history. What a bunch of buffoons. Not since Neville Chamberlain tugged a Claridge’s luncheon bill from his pocket and flourished it on the steps of the aircraft that brought him back from Munich has a worthless scrap of paper been so audaciously hyped. There was one good moment at Copenhagen, though: some seriously professional truncheon work by Danish Plod on the smellies. Otherwise, this event is strictly for Hans Christian Andersen


Source

:lol:

Dude you make me laugh without even reading it!

Re: UK paper to Copenhagen -- You're buffoons

PostPosted: Fri Dec 18, 2009 9:53 pm
by Ejnar Fjerdingstad
truchas wrote:Hoser23 approves.

When your attempt at recreating the Congress of Vienna with a third-rate cast of extras turns into a shambles, when the data with which you have tried to terrify the world is daily exposed as ever more phoney, when the blatant greed and self-interest of the participants has become obvious to all beholders, when those pesky polar bears just keep increasing and multiplying – what do you do?

Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.

If there were not $45trillion of Western citizens’ money at stake, this would be the funniest moment in world history. What a bunch of buffoons. Not since Neville Chamberlain tugged a Claridge’s luncheon bill from his pocket and flourished it on the steps of the aircraft that brought him back from Munich has a worthless scrap of paper been so audaciously hyped. There was one good moment at Copenhagen, though: some seriously professional truncheon work by Danish Plod on the smellies. Otherwise, this event is strictly for Hans Christian Andersen


Source


That is the best summing up of the whole ridiculous affair that I've seen. Let us hope this will be the last of these idiotic meetings, fighting a non-existent problem with histrionic gestures.

Re: UK paper to Copenhagen -- You're buffoons

PostPosted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 10:52 am
by Big Benn
Ejnar Fjerdingstad wrote:
truchas wrote:Hoser23 approves.

When your attempt at recreating the Congress of Vienna with a third-rate cast of extras turns into a shambles, when the data with which you have tried to terrify the world is daily exposed as ever more phoney, when the blatant greed and self-interest of the participants has become obvious to all beholders, when those pesky polar bears just keep increasing and multiplying – what do you do?

Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.

If there were not $45trillion of Western citizens’ money at stake, this would be the funniest moment in world history. What a bunch of buffoons. Not since Neville Chamberlain tugged a Claridge’s luncheon bill from his pocket and flourished it on the steps of the aircraft that brought him back from Munich has a worthless scrap of paper been so audaciously hyped. There was one good moment at Copenhagen, though: some seriously professional truncheon work by Danish Plod on the smellies. Otherwise, this event is strictly for Hans Christian Andersen


Source


That is the best summing up of the whole ridiculous affair that I've seen. Let us hope this will be the last of these idiotic meetings, fighting a non-existent problem with histrionic gestures.


You tell em Ejnar! :D

Re: UK paper to Copenhagen -- You're buffoons

PostPosted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 2:05 pm
by The Chief
Bryan Benn wrote:
Ejnar Fjerdingstad wrote:
truchas wrote:Hoser23 approves.

When your attempt at recreating the Congress of Vienna with a third-rate cast of extras turns into a shambles, when the data with which you have tried to terrify the world is daily exposed as ever more phoney, when the blatant greed and self-interest of the participants has become obvious to all beholders, when those pesky polar bears just keep increasing and multiplying – what do you do?

Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.

If there were not $45trillion of Western citizens’ money at stake, this would be the funniest moment in world history. What a bunch of buffoons. Not since Neville Chamberlain tugged a Claridge’s luncheon bill from his pocket and flourished it on the steps of the aircraft that brought him back from Munich has a worthless scrap of paper been so audaciously hyped. There was one good moment at Copenhagen, though: some seriously professional truncheon work by Danish Plod on the smellies. Otherwise, this event is strictly for Hans Christian Andersen


Source


That is the best summing up of the whole ridiculous affair that I've seen. Let us hope this will be the last of these idiotic meetings, fighting a non-existent problem with histrionic gestures.


You tell em Ejnar! :D


He can't...

HE'S BEEN BANNED!

PostPosted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 3:26 pm
by Big Benn
NOOooooooooooo...........

Please don't tell me, in large bold capitals, that our very own Ejnar has been banned! :(

What for? Did he interfere with a photo posted here of a Bavarian woman wearing a dirndl? In my book that is about the only thing anyone should ever be banned from PnP Hard for. (Or maybe for interfering with the woman herself. :shock:)

PostPosted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 4:16 pm
by Big Benn
peladoboton wrote:i think the chief was drunk or extremely wishful when he wrote that, highly doubt Ej has been banned from the sight.


:wink:

PostPosted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 10:25 pm
by dadndave
Bryan Benn wrote:
Al Gore, occupant of the only private house that can be seen from space, so huge is its energy consumption, wanted to charge punters $1,200 to be photographed with him at Copenhagen. There is a man who is really worried about the planet’s future.


Is all that true? :shock:


Here in Queensland, the popular saying is "Is that true, or did you read it in the Courier Mail?"
(The Courier Mail being the major newpaper in Brisbane)

In the case of P&P it's more like "Is that true or did truchas post it?" :lol: