A Christopher Hitchins quip

“Since it is obviously inconceivable that all religions can be right, the most reasonable conclusion is that they are all wrong.”

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Everyone has problems

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My perfect dinner guest: Les Dawson

Les would have to be partial to a takeaway, since my
culinary skills are somewhat limited. The person I’ve chosen would, I
think, be happy at the prospect of joining me for a portion of cod, chips
and mushy peas, just about the only takeaway option for both of us in
our formative years. When I was born, he would have been about 16
and living a mile and a half down the Rochdale Road. Who was he? Les
Dawson, one of Britain’s best loved comics of the 70s and 80s. He was
funny, but had other talents too. He died in 1993, aged 62.

Why would I like to meet him? For a start, I know he’d make me
laugh. We also had things in common. We were both only children, had
an interest in writing, and lived in adjacent districts which were two of
Manchester’s poorest. Success didn’t come easily to Les. He was about
40 before he became a successful comedian, and had to earn a living in
a variety of jobs before he got his break. I don’t know much about his
early life and would like to know more. I do know his Dad was a
bricklayer, money was tight, and the family had to do more than one
moonlight flit to avoid the rent man. His Mum was of Irish descent, and
her ancestors had, quite possibly, left Ireland in the 1840s to avoid the
potato famine.

One of the areas many of these Irish people settled in was
Angel Meadow (a misnomer if ever there was one), it was described by
Friedrich Engels as “Hell on Earth“. The slum conditions that these
people endured were as bad as any in Britain, and was used by Engels
in, “The condition of the English working class“. Angel Meadow
was within half a mile of where Les lived, and I wonder if he knew
anything about it while he was growing up. I’m ashamed to say I didn’t till
I was in my 20s. In the latter part of the 19th century, 40,000 paupers
from Angel Meadow were buried in a pit with coffins piled on top
of each other. As a final ignominy, a lot of the bodies were dug up to
make way for one of the railways to be built from Manchester to the
north. God knows how long it was before they were reburied.

There were differences between Les and me, as well as similarities. I left school at 18 and went into Higher Education; Les left at14 and went straight to work. He remembers a teacher telling his classmates, “Les Dawson has the talent to become a successful writer“.

Les described this comment as lifechanging. He wrote several
books in his later years, and was employed as a journalist on a local
newspaper for a short time. At school he wanted to be “one of the lads”
(didn’t we all), and so kept his writing and love of words to himself.
To try to make it as a writer, he moved to Paris. The move didn’t work from a writing point of view, and to support himself, he played piano in dodgy clubs and even a brothel.

Though a talented pianist, he started playing the wrong notes now and again. The audiences loved it and roared with laughter. This was the start of his comedy career, and he added jokes to the music. I’d love to ask him how he learned to play
the piano, I very much doubt there was any spare money to pay for lessons when he was a kid.

Les’s humour wasn’t politically correct, or you could say it was of
its time . One of his specialities was “ mother-in-law jokes”. One favourite is:

“ I always knew when the mother-in-law was coming to
stay – our mice started throwing themselves on the traps.”

Sometimes he incorporated sophisticated language into
jokes, only to finish with a very different punch line. For example:

“In awe I watched the waxing moon ride across the
zenith of the heavens, like an ambered chariot, towards the ebony void
of infinite space wherein the tethered belts of Jupiter and Mars hang,
forever festooned in their orbital majesty. And as I looked at all this, I
thought- “I must put a roof on this toilet “

Les had other specialities which he developed over the years. He was very good at gurning (contorting his face into quite ugly expressions). Les’s face was definitely of the “lived in” variety, probably helped by the boxing he did in his youth.

Two of the titles given to Manchester over the years were
“ Cottonopolis” and “The birthplace of the Industrial Revolution”, so the
landscape Thal Les and I grew up in was full of mills, factories and the
tall chimneys that went with them. Working conditions in these places
was appalling. It was dusty, monotonous, noisy and dangerous, with
little or no regard for health and safety. The noise from the looms was so
great that normal conversation was impossible, and deafness was an
occupational hazard. As a consequence, the women who operated the
looms, learned to communicate by lipreading. Les used this in one of
his most famous sketches ,which he did with his sidekick, Roy
Barraclough.

The two of them played Cissie and Ada, two late middle-
aged ladies who liked putting the world to rights, and loved a bit of
gossip and scandal to spice things up a bit. Medical discussions were
a speciality of theirs. Most of their communication was normal, that
is speaking out loud, but if the conversation turned to a neighbour who
was playing away with somebody else’s partner, or to medical problems
(especially women’s problems “down below “). They mouthed the words
instead of speaking them out loud. Add a few facial expressions, the
pursing of lips, heaving of bosoms a few malapropisms and the result
was very funny. Perhaps the most memorable malapropism was the
word “hysterectomy “ being replaced by “hysterical rectory”.

I’d have loved to spend time with Les so could find out about his
early life, how he developed his musical talent and how his life was the
same or different to my own. He was a man from very humble beginnings
who had to struggle for everything he achieved, and, against the odds,
he accomplished an awful lot.

Addendum

If you want more Les Dawson jokes go to TOP 25 QUOTES BY LES DAWSON | A-Z Quotes

Alf Orton

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Drinking coffee in the USA and France

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Cooking for Slackers: Cheerful scrambled eggs

The ‘Mission Statement’ of Cooking for Slackers says food should be cheap, quick and cheerful. It’s the ‘cheerful’ bit that often goes missing. Good food? Yes. Cheerful? Possibly not. So, cheerfulness is now included in this recipe.

The basic Slacker meal is Scrambled eggs. Let’s make it cheerful.

Ingredients:

Three eggs

Two thick slices of bread

8 raw cashew nuts

Paprika

Technique

Melt a knob of butter in a non-stick saucepan

Dice cashew nuts as finely as you can

Pour cashew nuts in the pan stirring until brown

Pour eggs in, with a dash of milk, stir until eggs and nuts are fully mixed

Toast two slices of bread unless it’s super-fresh

Serve eggs/cashew nuts onto bread (No butter – you’ve cooked in butter)

Lightly cover with paprika.

Outcome

Scrambled eggs with cheerfulness; making a bland meal sing. A Slackers delight.

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Dick Gregory deals with a racist audience

He was accidently booked by the Playboy Club, Chicago to play a convention of white businessmen…..It was a matter of moments before a refrigerator salesman had stood up and called him the N… word.

The comedian responded by saying that he was paid $50 compensation every time this happened, and urged the entire audience to get to their feet and call him that.

Source The Observer The New Review 4th May 2025 p10

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No pressure! Isn’t it nice?

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War Studies: Falklands War, 1982 ~ The price of pride

The Falkland Islands in 1982 had a dwindling, ageing population.1 Worse: they were of no economic or strategic importance for the UK. Falklanders were excluded from British citizenship in 1981 by Margaret Thatcher. She wanted to off-load them.

Thatcher’s solution to contested ownership was a ‘have your cake and eat it’ ploy: a ‘leaseback’ scheme.2 Britain would hold the territory for 99 years before it reverted to Argentina. (Argentina proposed 33 years.) Conservative MPs called this a ‘sell-out’. Her MPs hated even specks of land in the south Atlantic being given away.

In 1982 the price of pride had to be paid. Argentina invaded.

Fighting a war on behalf of people who been rejected as British the year before was embarrassing. Thatcher’s government rewrote history in 1983, saying it was a mistake.

With retrospective effect from 1 January 1983, as provided in the British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Act 1983, the Falkland Islanders have been full British citizens.3

Making them citizens was a consequence of the ten weeks of successful warfare.

“Answering a Commons question, Mrs. Thatcher said ‘the cost to the defense budget up to the end of September was an estimated 700 million pounds.”4 

The war cost £350,000 for every man, women and child in the Falkland Islands. In Britain, “The average salary in 1982 was just over £5,000 pa, the average house cost £31,000.”5 The war cost 70 years wages for an average British citizen.

Amazingly Michael Foot, the Labour leader, said,

“The people of the Falkland Islands have the absolute right to look to us at this moment of their desperate plight, just as they have looked to us over the past 150 years.”6

Trivialities like fighting a war 8,000 miles away was lost in imperialist fervour. And Britain’s nuclear weapons, couldn’t be used as the USA wouldn’t stand for it.

Britain won the war. ‘Imperial’ Britain was now on the hook for governance and defence costs. These amounted to £2.6bn over 43 years and are currently £60m p.a.

“This £60m, paid for by British taxpayers more than 8000 miles away, represents more than £30,000 a year for each inhabitant born on the islands. This is twice as much as it takes for a UK citizen not to be considered below the poverty line.”7

The price of Margaret Thatcher’s pride is £5,000,000,000 and counting.

Notes

1 The World Factbook (1982)/Falkland Islands (Malvinas) – Wikisource, the free online library

2 Leaseback – Wikipedia

3 British Nationality Act 1981 – Wikipedia

4 Falklands war cost Britain $1.19 billion – UPI Archives In 2025 that is £2.5bn Inflation calculator | Bank of England

5 Where were you in 1982? | AgeWage: Making your money work as hard as you do £700m would also have bought 2,258 houses. The human cost shouldn’t be forgotten Falklands War – Wikipedia

6 Falkland Islands (Hansard, 3 April 1982)

7 The cost of colonialism: What could the Falklands £60m pay for? | The National The war and on-going costs of the Falkland Islands have cost about £5bn thus far.

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Prince Harry: why he’s disappointed

“The Heir and the Spare—there was no judgment about it, but also no ambiguity. I was the shadow, the support, the Plan B. I was brought into the world in case something happened to Willy. I was summoned to provide backup, distraction, diversion and, if necessary, a spare part. Kidney, perhaps. Blood transfusion. Speck of bone marrow. This was all made explicitly clear to me from the start of life’s journey and regularly reinforced thereafter.”1

Prince Harry has been a victim of intrusive harassment by newspapers, which behaved like criminal organisations. His successful retaliation is very lucrative. Obviously this ‘business’ opportunity is time limited. There are only so many years that the horrors of his childhood and youth can be mined for payouts.

He now fully appreciates a new horror: primogeniture.2 His best-selling memoir was called Spare. The quote above is his insight into the actualité of being the younger son of the heir to the monarch. Inheritance, for British aristocrats, is predicated on  social mobility for younger sons: downward social mobility!

The eldest son of a British aristocrat is the winner who takes all. Younger sons are ‘spares’ who are there to replace the eldest son if they die. (They come off the substitutes bench, as it were.) However, that opportunity only kicks in if the eldest son is childless. Harry’s brother, William, has three children and Harry is now fifth in line to be king.

Prince Harry has plunged from second to fifth in the list of successors to King Charles.3 He isn’t even a Spare now. The government’s refusal to provide police protection for him whilst he’s in Britain is a vivid illustration of his loss of status,

“Friday’s decision means Prince Harry’s security will remain outside the automatic, high level of protection which is provided for senior royals.”4

High profile police protection is a prop for Harry’s self-esteem. Armed police protecting him 24/7 is ego boosting as it confirms his special status. Not having it means that his despised role as a Spare has been further diminished.

If he’d paid attention to primogeniture, Harry wouldn’t be quite so hurt and shocked. He isn’t a good student and he is hurt and shocked. History is full of stories of aristocratic brothers and the implications of primogeniture,

The extent of that privilege, in terms of sheer economics, is indicated by the example of the 4th Earl of Aberdeen, who inherited an estate worth over £16,000 a year5 at the age of only 17 [in 1801]. His five younger brothers and one sister each received a single payment of £2,000, which, prudently invested, would have only garnered an annual income of around £100, far less than even the most abstemious individual could subsist on if they were to retain any pretensions to gentility.

The earl’s siblings were brutally removed from the aristocracy. Even though they had been born aristocrats, they now relied on their brother’s good will for patronage. Whatever sense of entitlement they might have had, they were ejected from the upper reaches of the aristocracy. They had to get a job, or in the case of a woman, a husband. Jane Austen summed it up brilliantly,

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.6

Prince Harry is a slow learning aristocrat who didn’t realise the game was rigged.

He should get over it.

Notes

1 prince harry ‘spare’ quote’ – Search

“….the right of succession belonging to the firstborn child, especially the feudal rule by which the whole real estate of an intestate passed to the eldest son.” primogeniture meaning – Search

In the late 20th century gender equality maintained the concept but included women in the inheritance process.

3 “…the British line of succession is led by King Charles III, followed by his son Prince William, and then his grandchildren, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis.” british line of succession 2025 – Search

4 Prince Harry loses legal challenge over security – BBC News

5 ‘Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune’ by Rory Muir review | History Today See also George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen – Wikipedia £16,000 p.a. is equivalent to £10,320,000 in 2025 money Inflation calculator | Bank of England

6 Jane Austen Quotes: 50 Most Famous Jane Austen Quotes ✔️

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The Ultra Branch Librarian

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