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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Once upon a time

in Canada,


There was a club. It wasn't much of a club, just a big empty expensive space. Rumour had it that it had been built for something else that never happened.

So a bunch of strangers wandered over one by one and started using the space. It was more or less free. It wasn't licensed or zoned or any of that stuff. There had never been anything like that before, so people made up their own rules for using it.

Some people put on punk rock concerts. Fans and performers cursed, spat and fought. Within the confines of the club, that was "normal."

Some people staged fights. Within the confines of the ring, people battered each other until they bled. Had they fought outside the ring, outside the club, someone would have called the cops.

There were burlesque shows and insult comics and debates.

The space was the birthplace of many relationships, political movements, businesses large and small, and more. Everybody understood how it worked.

They understood -- because it was patently obvious -- that magic spells were an entertaining fiction. That asking stupid, crazy questions -- "did six million really die?" -- didn't somehow kill six million more people. That questioning global warming didn't make the world hotter, or even colder. Words were not nooses or bullets or fists. They were words.

It was like a movie or a play. Only children or simpletons thought that violence and deaths they watched on a screen or a stage were real. Oh sure: that didn't mean that in the entire history of movies, some poor guy had actually died on the set because a stunt went terribly wrong. But that wasn't the norm. Nobody said: let's shut down all of Hollywood, just in case... People die. That's life. Or used to be.

Then one day the lawyers showed up.

The lawyers couldn't decide whether or not to join the club or shut it down.

Being lawyers, they decided to do both.

First they showed up and shouted, 'hey, there's a FIGHT going on in here!' And everybody laughed at them.

So they gave brash speeches like other folks did, and sometimes these speeches were outrageous, rude and insulting, packed with lies. But if you heckled the lawyers or challenged their behaviour, they sued. Afraid of being sued, lots of long time clubbers simply left.

Other veteran clubbers defied the lawyers. They got sued, too, then got tired of that and left. The club wasn't the same anyway now.

When the lawyers weren't in the club, they worked for Very Special People called politicians, or became politicians themselves.

These politicians were allowed to say whatever they wanted about each other without being sued, in a club of their own, called Parliament. When they were rude or outrageous, other politicians cheered or booed. But that's as bad as it could get, because their special club had that special rule.

The lawyers didn't see the irony of this. They were lawyers, after all...

After the penultimate lawyer in the club sued the last lawyer left, the club was purchased by a bunch of lawyers and politicians and turned into a factory that manufactured children's bike helmets that also filtered out particles of peanut butter.

The best part was, the filters were recyclable!

And that's how lawyers destroyed the internet.



This was just too good not to post in full.

Kathy can sue me later, when she's finished being ruined by the minions of Sauron.

7 comments:

  1. Anonymous1:17 pm

    Would never dream of it! Thanks so much for the nice comment and the link :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous3:03 pm

    This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  3. to put it as succinctly as Kathy herself might have:

    bugger off if you can't play nicely.

    oh, and

    one who slings mud under cloak of anonymity is a coward.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous4:23 pm

    No dissent, other words.

    Heh. You types are a riot.

    The only rational response to anything Shaidle brings up is to point out her egregious dishonesty.

    Anyway, don't worry about further bother. You champions of free expresssion who delete at the drop of a hat are not worth the time of day.

    Yours in Christ...Anonymous.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Even in Parliament, they don't let you just be unpleasant for no reason.

    And this is my blog.

    My blog, my universe.

    My universe,

    my rules.

    Bugger off now, there's a dear.

    ReplyDelete
  6. oh, and we don't put up with whiney crybabies either.

    Be a man. Own up to what you say.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Magick spells are not fiction, though whether or not someone finds them to be entertaining is up to the individual.

    But on the other hand, if my opponents consider my weapons to be fictional, they wouldn't necessarily have any defenses against them would they? Oh, hey...right, then: "Magick spells are enertaining fiction!" Gotcha!

    Carry on, then.

    ReplyDelete

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