Monthly Archives: May 2010

Do all our politicans say one thing and just do the opposite?

LET me get this right. A multimillionaire government minister is caught fiddling his expenses by 40 quid. Now that I come to think about it maybe it was £400.

Or was it £4,000? Not that much surely? That is serious. What did you say? £40,000? Sheesh.

Realising the elastic on his undergarments had snapped, David Laws headed for the exit, but not before just about his entire party, and their partners, called him a shining star.

Incredibly, the prime minister, as we haven’t yet got used to calling him, said Mr Laws was a good and honourable man who could return to government after a wee sabbatical of the type perfected by Blair and Brown for people like Peter Mandelson.

Why did he claim the cash at all if he wanted his nocturnal doings kept under wraps? Apparently, it is because he and his mate were really not that close. The proof of that, according to Mr Laws, is that they didn’t even have the same banking arrangements or social life.

Remember this fellow?

Oh heck. In that case, me and Mrs X are up the Swannee. We have a bank account, yeah, but I also have another for a rainy day. Or in case she runs off with one of these loaded, older men that she always cuddles up to.

These are all coves who are widely-respected consultants in their own fields. Men like Tosh, the insurance consultant, and Mr D. Campbell, the bookmaking consultant, are on my list.

Not forgetting the two transport consultants, my near namesake Iain Don Maciver, a maritime transport specialist, and Johnny Fraser, a Parkend-based private hire consultant, now retired but still very active.

And, oh no, we have separate social lives. Yes, I have to admit that, too. She always has an excuse not to go to the Carlton Bar with me to hear Stornoway’s erudite raconteur, George Gawk, Esq., hand down his pearls of wisdom about life, politics and his own ongoing struggle to earn the affections of certain pretty girls from Harris.

Mrs X just won’t come out. She gets all huffy and says she would rather stay home and have another go at learning how to clean windows.

I told her she was obsessed. She didn’t like that.

“Are you saying I have OCD?” she thundered.

No m’eudail, I would never say anything of the sort.

Old crabbit dame is what she is.

John Prescott was someone who could be really crabbit. Especially when discussing the outmoded political system where the most useless people in the country sit in an ancient village hall called the House of Lords. The Labour Party was dedicated to getting rid, he would roar.

Personally, he hated all that “flunkery” and titles stuff.

So what’s happened? Gordon Brown, rather than doing anything to get rid, has handed Prescott an ermine anorak.

And the shameless fellow has taken it.

As have other toadies like Des Browne, John Reid and Jack McConnell.

What is going on? Are they living in a parallel universe where you can say one thing and do the opposite?

They are getting to be just like Western Isles Licensing Board. Probably two- thirds of the people I meet say someone must shine a light on what they are up to, who they are and why they take barmy decisions.

The other third are obviously in the Free Churches and are not bothered what is actually going on as long as they keep everything shut for as long as possible.

As councillors, board members also have a duty to take decisions which will be good for the economy. This lot we are lumbered with are falling down badly on that one.

With more fed-up families now quitting these joyless islands in the next few weeks, let’s point the finger at the ones dragging their feet on ensuring the islands are open for business for the sake of our children. And their children.

Our Churches should be taking the lead if they want these islands to survive.

Ach, they obviously don’t.

Some of the board members who transmogrify into killjoys when an application comes before them are acting in a puzzling way.

For instance, reports reach me of one of them being seen rapping the door of a certain social club in the wee small hours of the Sabbath. Is this really someone who should be going out of their way to block a well-run family-friendly golf club getting a Sunday licence in a place where several pubs are open, anyway? Just a thought.

Another alleged sabbatarian member is a secret seven-day ferry traveller. Sorry, John Prescott, there are others worse than you here on our doorstep.

If the holy types on our council, and the sycophants with slender majorities who obviously take their lead from them, find themselves unable to give the economy priority, they should just quit. Do a David Laws. Mach a seo. Missing you already.

Maybe my own councillor cousin could find another pastime rather than stand accused of impeding economic progress. Football, maybe?

Chatting to a photographer at a match, the snapper noticed her son warming up. Was he playing, he wondered. Oh yes, replied the proud mama. And what position does junior play in, he asked, expecting to be told he was a striker, outside right or centre forward.

“Position?” she wondered. “Oh, just over there,” she said, nodding towards the pitch.

Rangers can forget Ally McCoist for their next manager. Councillor Annie’s ready for the next challenge.

I think every man should have a very handy wife like mine

OVERHEARING Mrs X declare that what she really needed was a jigsaw, I saw an opportunity to get brownie points. Here was something that I had discovered she really, really wanted, but also it was something that would not break the bank.

After all, how expensive is a wee sheet of cardboard with a photo pasted on to it and then cut up into 1,000 pieces going to be? Not a lot.

She must have read about that pensioner in England who spent seven years on a huge 5,000-piece jigsaw only to find that a piece was missing. She had caught the bug. If Mrs X could be diverted for, say, just one year, she would have no time to berate me about my inadequacies. That would be a good thing. Get my drift?

So off I went and found a 1,000-piece jigsaw of that famous scene The Creation of Adam, by Michelangelo, from the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.

She will absolutely love it, I thought to myself. It’s proper art that has influenced our culture for centuries. It’s historic because it’s 16th century. And it has a naked man in it.

I have nailed it, I surmised.

Er, no. She took one look at it and chucked it on the pile of other unwanted presents from me: the frying pan, the oven glove, the Guide To Making Your Own Black Puddings and so on.

She did want a jigsaw – but it was the kind you plug in and cut things with.

You see, a jigsaw is also a saw that jigs up and down.

Really?

So, to make amends, I had to take her to buy one in Kenny Deadly’s, a DIY shop in Stornoway full of things to cut things with and some of which you have to plug in.

Jigsaws are far from cheap and now this house is like a bombsite. Having started painting the skirting boards weeks ago, the handy lady I live with has now got into her stride properly and decided that everything should be at least chopped, sawn, cut at an angle, scraped, sanded and painted to have a cream-coloured finish.

Hall, stairway, landing, office – even the dog and I haven’t escaped. Both of us now have various bits which now match the skirting boards.

Have you noticed how painting has become very hi-tech now? When I was a lad, there were two shades with which the house was to be decked out in before the communions. Brilliant white gloss for woodwork and magnolia emulsion for anything else.

Go into a paint shop now and ask for brilliant white and they ask: “What kind?” Eh?

And you are storing up a lot of trouble if you ask for magnolia.

Yes, they have it but, just to give you ideas, right beside it you will see very similar shades under names like Sail White, Natural Taupe, Soft Linen and Flawless Fawn – just minute differences between them.

Then there’s, oh yuk, Porcelain Bowl, Pale Gold, Soft Oatmeal and Vanilla Mist.

If that last one gets your gastric juices going you will find more food-related shades, from Toasted Almond, Jersey Cream to, yes, even Rice Pudding. Just 30 years ago, that would all have been magnolia.

Just to be different, some people would say it was off-white, cream or even, to be posh, beige. They may pronounce it as bee-sh or bay-sh, depending on how often they had been to the mainland.

Back then, when I was home on leave, I would help out my cousin on his mobile shop.

One day I took an order from a wonderful old gentleman in Great Bernera who wanted me to get a couple of large tins of Dulux for him when I next went to town for supplies.

Unfortunately, he had the habit of pronouncing the word beige differently from everyone else. The way he said it, beige sounded more like a female dog.

So this fellow, let’s call him Mr Macdonald, because that was his name, stood there, his delightful wife beside him, and told me he wanted a brilliant white for the living room.

Fine. I’d got that. Anything else?

“I almost forgot. Can you get me some beige for the bedroom?”

I didn’t know where to look. I could feel the beginnings of a titter in my nether regions, but I determined to suppress it. Then the look of sudden, open-mouthed astonishment on Mrs Macdonald’s face as she turned to her husband set me off.

Disgracing myself, I collapsed in giggles in front of my bewildered customer and his shocked spouse. Mumbling something about going into the front of the van to find a pencil, it took several minutes to compose myself.

I wasn’t giggling when word reached me that our esteemed licensing board threw out the bid by Stornoway Golf Club to get a seven-day licence. Even after all the advice and guidance I gave them last week in this column, in which I showed that the Bible was clear that the application should be granted, they still managed to get it wrong.

However, there was a glimmer of hope. Councillor Murdo Macleod, a stalwart of the Free Church, saw sense and did not back this horrendous, un-biblical refusal. He abstained.

Obviously, he’d read my wise words about Colossians 2:16.

Mr Macleod is such a nice man. I have always liked him. A colossus of an operator, always committed to fair play, he towers head and shoulders above the rest of the Bible-defying pack of loony legislators who want to stick with their now-discredited roles as sour killjoys.

I can only show them the way. They have to be the ones to tread the new path to enlightenment. If they do not, we shall have to assume that, with one shining exception, the Lewis members of the licensing board are, indeed, as black as they have been painted.

Words don’t come easy to me – or even to Sir Sean Connery

SOME people will believe any words that they hear, particularly on the telly. Take my own wife. The windscreen of her van was badly damaged recently outside the Creagorry Hotel on Benbecula. Bad crack, that.

However, rather than mope and fret and throw plates at me saying it was all my fault, as she usually does, Mrs X became very excited because of three words: Gavin from Autoglass.

She wanted him to come round and start smearing his stuff all over the glass like he does in the TV commercial.

I think the best she can hope for is someone from Bells Road to do a full replacement job. And, sadly for her, I am not even sure that the boys at Hebridean Coachworks do house calls.

In the aisle at Tesco the other day, I heard a forgetful housewife call to her friend saying she hadn’t got the paper towels. She asked her loud pal to get them for her. But which ones, boomed the pal. The ones that are always on the box was the reply.

She was talking about the ones promoted by a Hispanic-looking gentleman called Juan. That name is so apt because it is, of course, pronounced so very like the word One.

And the surname of this dashing Zorro-type figure happens to be Sheet. And one sheet, because you can wring it out, is all that the makers of this towel claim is required for any job.

How lucky for him and his future career that Mr and Mrs Sheet decided to call their lovely new babby Juan?

So when her piercing, and pierced, pal by the washing powders screeched back asking if the amnesiac housewife, indeed, meant the ones advertised by Juan Sheet, she did not elongate the vowels in the surname sufficiently.

She said . . . well, you know. The muzak had been turned down. We all heard it.

Our housewife could only bawl back: “His name’s Sheet. Did you get that? It’s Sheet. S-H- . . . ”

It is important to check words and get them absolutely right, which is what they should do at the Lord’s Day Observance Society (LDOS). They are frantically trying to stop Stornoway Golf Club opening on a Sunday. It’s all made very clear in the Fourth Commandment, they say.

Yet the LDOS, and some other preachers, have been very crafty. They choose not to mention the other passages where the message is very different.

In fact, the Good Book suggests that the last thing we should do is even listen to people who think they know better when it comes to telling us what to do.

Not written for so-called scholars to put their own spin on it, the Bible says we should not let anyone judge us by what we eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a new moon celebration or – wait for it – a Sabbath day.

That’s clear enough for me. So the golf club should have a drinks licence and serve grub better than those sandwiches turned up at the edges. You will find it all there in Colossians 2:16.

If the licensing board disobeys that biblical mandate for seven-day opening, will its members be headed for a very hot place?

If the Free Church is right, they could well be.

So forget the LDOS. Check the truth out yourself. It’s fantastic what you find if you actually read the old manual yourself instead of letting barmy sabbatarians with silly agendas frighten the pants off you.

They just pick the bits that suit their population-manipulating ends.

Wait till I tell you this one. The Almighty is really not that bothered about people getting married. In fact, he goes so far as to say it is good for guys not to even touch a woman. I found that in Corinthians. Who knew?

Maybe that’s just my Bible. It’s obviously not in the Free Church version.

Words are important and we can use them how we want. Sir Sean Connery, for example, carved a glittering career out of not being able to do other accents while also suffering from what is usually regarded as an impediment by not being able to pronounce the letter “S” very well.

Typical SNP supporter

It will be the nationalistic knight’s 80th birthday in August and, wait for it, there is to be a Talk Like Sean Connery Day. That’s when everyone will be expected to talk like him.

Shir Shean has decided that imitation is the best form of flattery. So fans will pout and say stuff like: “It’sh good to shee you,” in a faintly East Lothian kind of way.

I am not making this up.

I think I’ll sit that one out, as the wrinkly thespian might say.

It is easy to get our words wrong at the best of times. We all do it – in speech and in writing. Even me. I once actually wrote that a London fruit and veg merchant had lost a watch made of 24-carrot gold. No one else noticed, either, and that vegetarian nonsense is what appeared in the paper.

There’s a man in Stornoway I will not name, because I value my life, who also sometimes gets some words just a wee bit wrong. One of his best was when he announced to a colleague that we should all vote Labour because conservatories do nothing for the working class.

And you know, in a funny way, he was absolutely right.

The same fellow makes no secret of the fact that he is very wary of women drivers. He was telling a gaggle of his workmates that he found the fairer sex to be very unpredictable on the road.

However, the way he put it was: “I was behind a woman driver at the Macaulay Road roundabout last night and she had no idea what lane she should be in. She kept switching from one to the other.

“But that’s women for you. The way they drive is very erotic.”

What’s occurring in the Atlantic? Rockall

A lot of predictable reaction to the news that Western Isles Council has given the green light to a Yorkshireman to put a plaque on Rockall.

Hullo Iceland. Hullo Denmark. Hullo Ireland. Come on guys, join the queue.

It’s all nonsense, of course. The lazy media that have been so excitedly reporting this development could not be bothered to look at the applicant’s website for the latest information.  If they had, they would have seen his planned expedition was cancelled many weeks ago.

Irish Times

Planting a new plaque on Rockall

Madam, – I was surprised to learn that a British explorer has been given leave by the Western Isles Council to plant a plaque on Rockall island, claiming it for the UK. This although Ireland, as well as several other countries, has laid claim to it as part of our territory, and the exploration and fishing rights that go with it.

Given that the matter is being put before a commission established under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (April 1st, 2009), after the failure of international negotiations, it is premature and offensive that the UK would take such unilateral action and authorise one of its citizens to “discover” and claim the disputed lands for the UK.

Rockall is part of the Irish territories, and has featured in our folklore for centuries; the Irish Government must make its displeasure clear at the installation of any such plaque until the matter has been resolved under international law. – Yours, etc,

STEPHEN FITZPATRICK,

Foxrock, Dublin 18.

Someone actually said try the drams and choose the best one

SOME people take up jogging. Some just go back on the booze. I decided the best way to get back to normal after the rigours of the run-up to that inconclusive and pointless election was to get another month’s supply of those wonderful pills that Mrs X swears keeps me at my peak of virility.

So I put my collar up and sneaked into Superdrug to see if they had got more in since I cleared them out.

It was the festive season. You have to do something to try to cheer up those women disappointed by what the wee fat fellow had put in their stockings.

As I rummaged to see if the pills were in their usual place, hidden craftily behind the extra-strength cod-liver oil, what did I overhear but a woman in the checkout queue being very grateful to a fellow who had his back to me. A gentleman and a scholar, he was, she declared.

A very generous one, too, for helping her out in her hour of need, she boomed in a voice that was audible along at the shelves of Omega 3 capsules, restorative herbal-based potions and lead-in-your-pencil supplements.

Who was this knight in shining uniform, I wondered to myself, as I grabbed another handful of packets to ensure that my irresistibility would not wilt before next Christmas.

It was obvious this was someone who had stepped in and rescued a damsel in distress. When he turned round, I realised it was none other than Ronnie Jappy, the merry mailman. Ah, of course. Who else?

The jolly Samaritan must have been behind the woman who had forgotten her purse. Ronald, like the true gentleman that he is, must have gallantly jumped in and paid for everything she had in her basket.

What a thoroughly nice chap. Salt of the earth, he is. Someone should nominate him for an award from the Queen. Would that make him a Royal Male?

Shaking his hand, I patted him on the back and ruffled his hair – well, what’s left of it. If there were more decent fellows like him, the entire world would be a better place, I said. People like Ronnie, I told him, were what made Britain great.

Knowing he, too, was ex-RAF, that was something guaranteed to give him a wee warm glow. Generous, big-hearted people like our Ronald cannot have enough wee warm glows.

The very least that the rest of us miserable tightwads should do is make sure of that because I know most of us would have stood in that queue with our hands in our pockets fingering our shekels.

So, I asked him eventually, how much of his own hard-earned had he actually given the forgetful shopper in the end? Was it £10, £20 or more? He went quiet. Must have been more. What a star this man truly is, I decided there and then.

However, it turned out that the woman had not actually forgotten her purse. But she had, indeed, been short and was just about to break into another £10 note when he overheard.

So the bold Ronnie gave her the amount she was short – 1p.

Just 1p? Why was she praising him so lavishly for handing over a measly penny? Because she was a very nice woman, obviously.

Where does that leave Ronnie, I hear you ask. Well, it is the thought that counts. I suppose that is true but, then again, he could not have given her less if he tried.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that Ronnie is not the kindest, most generous and downright decent fellow that has ever put a tax demand through my flap, it is just that he did not, on that particular occasion, get the chance to prove it.

Next time I see him in the Legion or the Carlton, I shall go out of my way to ensure he does.

Because I am like that, you see. If there is a wee dram on offer of an evening, usually I take the considered view that it would be rude to refuse.

So it was that I took the invitation the other week to sample a few drams as part of the process of the Hebridean Celtic Festival selecting its 15th anniversary whisky.

Not a simple task. It had been whittled down to three 15-year-old malts. So they were all just the age of the festival. Memory dims, but I think they were a Macallan, an Aberlour and a Glenkinchie.

Some of the great and the good in the islands were invited along to actually choose the dram, while we soaks, I mean experts, ruminated loudly about the elements leading up to the final decision. Sadly, the chosen dignitaries were all busy washing their hair, so we had to put up with the likes of Alasdair Gaelic Macleod and a few other poor souls who found such an invitation difficult to decline.

And Calum Runrig Macdonald. He was there as the band is headlining the July extravaganza that will be number 15. Sadly, Calum’s whisky-tasting abilities are nowhere near as well-developed as his musical talents.

For some unearthly reason, Calum and the panel of ne’er-do-wells with him decided that the nondescript Aberlour had hitherto and apparently cleverly hidden qualities, which no one else in the civilised world could fathom, which put it ahead of the superbly warming and comforting Macallan.

They were unsettlingly unanimous, which just goes to show how daft committee decisions can be. Comhairle nan Eilean Siar take note.

I don’t know what qualities they were looking for to choose Aberlour and describe it as having “a brave bouquet, a splattering impact on the upper tongue and unforgettable aftertaste”.

Because that is exactly like the paint stripper under my stairs.

Don’t look at me like that. It was late. I was thirsty. Mrs X was away. The tax rebate hadn’t come.

The candidates on Isles FM

Click the arrow to listen to the Great Debate broadcast on Isles FM on Monday 3rd May after 5pm.

Prospect of Brown visit packs a punch to the wallet

The trouble that Gordon Brown has caused me in the last few days. The man has cost me hundreds of pounds. And he hasn’t even got here yet.

I had a call from someone on a paper in London asking if I’d heard Gordon Gruamach may be heading up here. No, I hadn’t.

So I called Labour HQ. A chap, who sounded a bit like Peter Mandelson, told me the big man could indeed make the trip to the Scottish Hebrides before Thursday. Ever so casually, I asked whether, if he did come, I could get a wee interview. Just a teensy one? Please.

Well, I thought I could repeat my success last year with a top government minister when I interviewed work and pensions secretary James Purnell. Great operator, I wrote and tipped him for party leader and greater things beyond.

Within weeks, he had been caught up in the expenses scandal, had quit the party and been publicly rude about Gruamach. Oops.

Better luck this time. I’ll get an exclusive. I’ll ask him about Sue, that woman who gets the blame for everything that goes wrong.

That’ll show these great reporters who jet in here and promise to show us local hacks how to have a good time.

Now where would this interview be, the Mandy clone inquired.

Well here, I told him; my house. Up the road from Kiwi’s Garage. Brown door. Can’t miss it. He then scanned the area on Google View, presumably to check that our general colour scheme was not too Tory blue or SNP yellow for Gruamach.

No, there was no obvious political bias to be seen. Although if he had looked very carefully he could have seen Kenny from the SNP office having a sneaky wee fag down at the bottom of the street. I can only assume that MI5 has decided that Kenny is no longer a threat to national security.

“Tell me now,” the Mandy eventually asks, “which house is it? Is it the smart one with the lovely pot plant or the one with the panes that obviously haven’t seen Windolene for six months?”

Listen, I explained, my wife has many other talents. She is good at negotiating discounts in shops and stuff. But, yeah, that’ll be our pad.

Eventually he said yes. But I had to keep it under my hat for a few days. I don’t have a hat but my name was on the list.

Happening to mention to Mrs X that the prime minister may pop in for tea and a chat, she got more upset than if the man himself had called her a bigot. She flapped around yelling: “Ooh, the state of this place. We were going to get furniture for the living room anyway. We should do it now in case Gordon Brown comes.

“Don’t want that Sarah woman looking down her nose at my alcove. Be practical, cove. Get your jacket. Oh, and your wallet.”

And the windows, I said. They could do with a wee rub, don’t you think? Whoosh. Right over her head. Didn’t hear a word I said.

So I was dragged round looking for curtains and a table for the prime ministerial banana, apparently the Gruamach afternoon snack of choice.

Duncan in Furniture World showed us round his many tables and sideboards, none of which matched our wood. He was just elated having customers who knew what they wanted. His usual patrons don’t even bother with stuff like measurements. When they ask for curtains, they say: “Och well, standard size. You know.”

When he tells them there are many sizes, their usual response is something like: “The same size as the rest of houses in Morrison Avenue. You know.”

Er no. He doesn’t know. He lives in Back and knows zilch about window measurements of each row of houses in Manor Park.

Duncan’s delivery drivers fare little better. One recently had a difficult conversation when he went to deliver furniture but had to phone a customer as he could not find the house.

“Hullo Mrs Macdonald. This is Calum from Furniture World.”

“Yes dear. what can I do for you.”

“I have your new bed.”

“Oh good. That was quick.”

“Where are you?”

“I’m in the kitchen making porridge. Cheerie.”

So my ear was dragged, and me with it, down to Oisean’s, or Macaskill Home Stores, as posh people call it. A couple of not cheap tables were duly bought and when we picked them up Mrs X quickly spotted wee marks on them. Those MacKinnnons of Plasterfield are like that. They will always find some way to save a few pence.

She had the girls there whirling around like dervishes – polishing, buffing, huffing and puffing as she demanded a hefty discount. Poor Amanda, poor Jane; run ragged they were.

Most of the time, of course, women are a ray of sunshine. But about, oh, maybe 12 times a year, they become tetchy and difficult.

That is when they are useful for negotiating prices downwards. Why is that, do you think? No, nor me.

I thought of telling the Oisean girls it was all Gordon Brown’s fault. No, I wouldn’t have believed me either.

When we got home with all the lamps, ornaments, rugs and tables, Gillian Duffy was on the telly looking surprised at something Gruamach had said about her in a car while wearing a radio microphone. And it was all Sue’s fault.

What was the PM thinking? Gillian Duffy bigoted? That’s just ridiculous.

I don’t think that poor woman’s even in the Free Church (Continuing).