Thursday, March 29, 2007

Apologies

Not just for not blogging lately. The usual excuse: too much work, blah, blah.

No, i want to apologise to the world. You may or may not know or care, but there have been "celebratations" to mark 200 years since slavery was abolished. Apparantly, there are a number of people out there on planet stupid who think that i owe them an apology for people i never met enslaving people they never met. Granted, slavery in all its forms is a terrible thing, but i have never enslaved anyone (unless you count that woman i have handcuffed in my cupboard). Am i responsible/ culpable for men in stupid clothes who rode the high seas?

Maybe better to concentrate on the slavery that still exists today, thinly disguised as giving poor people the chance to live. I talk of workers paid $10 a day to build luxurious apartments in Saudi Arabia for mega-rich Sheikhs to sell on to their mega-rich celebrity friends; eastern European girls being shipped to Britain to work in the sex trade.

But, as dear old Delbut has a concience, i have been busy arranging a "let's get around the table and be nice to each other" conference. Theme of the meeting was: "Let's all touch hands and say sorry".

I hand wrote invitations and sent them out to people i thought need to apologise for everything. "Where should i start?" i said. "Stop talking to yourself and get on with it", i replied.

Eventually, i had a list and invited people to a secret place in...well, i can't say, it's secret.

The event turned out to be a bit of a potted history of the world, with participants from around the globe. In order, everyone got up and said their bit.

A nice bloke from Milan started. He apologised for the Roman invasion of Britain. It was agreed that the benefits of what they brought us far outweighed the bad bits and we thanked him for being able to crap in a proper toilet, rather than a hole in the field.

Lars, from somewhere cold apologised for the raping and pillaging of North Yorkshire and trying to halt the tide. We agreed that the raping and pillaging was naughty but the attemt to stem the tide was valid, as now, parts of the north-east coast have eroded and fallen into the sea. It was agreed that they should have tried harder.

Next was a rather smelly bloke from Normandy. He said sorry for invading southern Britain while old Harlod was busy shooing awayLars's folks from Hull. Apology accepted.

On behalf of the Welsh folk, i apologised to the English people of Shropshire and Herefordshire for our - although cunningly well thought out - invasions across the border. Oh, and for giving the world Shirley Bassey.
The English then apologised for: Invading Scotland, Wales, India... list too long but practically everywhere.
Collectively, the English and by default, the Welsh/Scots for the potato famine in Ireland. The Irish then spoke of their sorrow for sending so many people to America and all but killing off the Indians on their travels west.
Which brings me to Brian. I invited Brian from Plymouth. ( for you Americans. That's where you were born) He said sorry for sailing to America and giving the flu to a bunch of Indians. But did like to point out that if it wasn't for them, Thanksgiving day would not have been invented. No excuse, we all said. Repent. He cried a bit but did as he was told.
Then came Troy. he's from California. He wanted to express his grief for the San Andreas fault. We said it's not his fault. He said it was - he missed the irony in our joke (God, even the French bloke got it) - we took pity and he sat down.

I thought about all the other wrong-doings in the world and just gave up. Too much to apologise for. We all agreed to leave the pub and go away and think about our actions in the future. But not before we ate a hearty dinner of beef (sorry cows), served by under-paid wenches (sorry women) with loads of wine (sorry itinerant grape pickers)


To all my readers. Sorry for making you read this.

15 comments:

Suesjoy said...

Bravo!
Firstly, for recognizing that slavery does exist today...in morphed forms. Secondly, for making me laugh.

I consider myself to be a liberal, but I abhor political correctness. It is insincere and contrived.

Troy! It's not your fault!
xxx

lryicsgrl said...

Oh I did enjoy this one....and, for that, I apologize for that, as it may have offended someone, somewhere!

PC stands for "Phoney Crap" in my book. Oh you didn't know I had a book, did you?


Have a nice day, Del!

xo

Ben R said...

Hey Delbut!

Cheers for the phone number - dunno how long we'll get before the gig.
My dad finishes work at 5.30, and it's about 1 hour by car and tube, so we will get just under an hour methinks.

My number is 07X719 536X488 (without the X's to stop those web spider thingys!

Anne-Marie said...

Wonderful post, Del! I especially love your reference to current slavery, which is a real problem in the developed world still.

I got my first earful of this type of thing when a 14 year old girl on a bus overheard me (another 14 year old girl at the time) talking about an upcoming trip to Germany to meet my family. She screamed at me that I had killed members of her family in the Holocaust. I was rather unkind right back, but only because I am a firm believer that you cannot hold descendants of a country or a people to a collective guilt for things that happened before they were even born.

I do, however, believe that we should help descendants of those people to achieve full equality by redressing former mistakes. For example, families and people of Canadian-Japanese descent in Canada should be able to get back the goods they had confiscated by our government a mere 60 years ago. It's never too late to fix what can visibly be fixed.

Cathy with a C said...

Great post, Del! Sounds like that pub was rather crowded.

Cathy

Ben R said...

Hey Delbut!!

Dunno where my post form this morning went?...Hmm.

Sorry I didn't get to meet you last night. Customers at my dad's shop meant we didn't leave until 6 pm, and then we hit the massive traffic jam on the M4. Radio said a car had broken down by junction 2 (Chiswick), but we didn't see anything by the time we passed the turning.
That meant we got there about 7.15-7.30, and I didn't want to ring you in case you were inside the hall already.

Hopefully we'll meet at some other AtticJam/Who do in the near future!

Ben

lryicsgrl said...

Del....In case you don't obsessively check the comments over at HIS BOOK, HE did respond to you....now, have a nice day! I will go get a life!

xo

Suesjoy said...

Del-
Plymouth is where I first heard the Who (or Tommy rather...I probably had already heard I Can See for Miles).
I WAS born very close to Plymouth.
I know, I never fail to facsinate...

:P

Suesjoy said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Hiya Del,
Brilliant post as usual..
I'm on and off as need to fix pc, but don't want some dork here.. been there, done that! (ex)
So, I am on my own and the pc is as tempermental as me. So IT works when IT wants.
much love
xoxoxoxoxo
Im not anonymous but can't remember stuff!! it's obviously me, lucy/lily.. :-)

BlackVelvetLace said...

Del,

I about peed my self reading this one. You are tooooo funny. I guess as one of the Irish I could also offer the world an apology for drunken benders, but where indeed would it be without St Pattys day??

~Lace~

Metalchick said...

Hi Delbut,
Good post! It is sad about slavery in the past and the present. I agree that today's generation shouldn't be to blame for what happened in the past, but I believe that an apology is a good way to let go of the past and move foward.

Although what's worse than not apologizing is denial. In 1915, Turkey committed a genocide on the Armenians, and to this day, they refuse to acknowledge the genocide and continue to deny it.

Suesjoy said...

Having fun at yer expense at Bex's...AGAIN.

There's a poem over there that may be fodder for your NEXT post.


Your public awaits you.

:)

Cathy with a C said...

Too busy moderating to post anymore?

Hope all is well.

Cathy

grace said...

well, hi, there is so much slavery still existing in this world, it is a horrific thing indeed. But no-one should really be insulted by anothers opinion, we all have one and we do not always agree.

xxx