Jimbo ([info]oranjedoom) wrote,
@ 2006-03-01 19:23:00
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BOO!
The Lizard Queen was down the bay today, opening the £67 million National Assembly building. How many schools and hospitals can you buy for £67 million?

I was delighted by this:
"In Cardiff Bay, the royal group were greeted by a mixture of music from the Royal Welsh Regiment Band, cheers from hundreds of children and well-wishers, and boos and jeers from a variety of protesters."
You could hear the boos on telly as well! I was booing along merrily with them, and made up some alternative words to the "national anthem" (pffffft).

They're not really worth repeating, just slurs and swears in the general direction of the German lizard family.

Serious. Neither that dirge of an anthem, nor that stupid gaudy flag, nor the Moronarchy mean anything to Welsh people (and by that, I'm generalising, and mean "me").

There's nothing wrong with that. The English don't get all gushy over the Ddraig Goch or Mae Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau, and nor should they.

But the Welsh don't go over there and sing it to them expecting Londoners to bow and scrape and tug their forelocks to, erm, some... Welsh... Royals...

Which we haven't had since Llywelyn ap Gruffydd ap Llywelyn died in about 1282.

Anyway. If you can find it, First Minister Rhodri Morgan's speech is worth a listen in its entirety.

The Lizard Queen came on giving it all, "The skill and imagination of those who've designed and constructed this remarkable... zzzzzzz", and then Rhodri gets up and starts making jokes about the Star Trek Enterprise and Caesar getting stabbed.

It was piss funny, not because Morgan is a particularly funny man, but just the incongruity and lack of respeck' for da Queen. Tidy! HRH was amused.

Another highlight was the look on The Rinse of Wales' [sic] face while our national poet Gwyneth Lewis (who was at my graduation ceremony, woo!) read out a poem.

I remember something about walking on a sea made of slate, and not being able to hear. And something about an island of the mind. It was a bit rubbish.

Old Kaiser Philhelm had not a clue what she was on about.

His missus is a bit of a growler though. Jesus.



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(Anonymous)
2006-03-04 01:28 pm UTC (link)
i like the royal family, good bit of tradition that makes being british great, you're proud to be british aren't you james?

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[info]oranjedoom
2006-03-04 02:49 pm UTC (link)
"British" means nothing. "Welsh", now that's something to be proud of.

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(Anonymous)
2006-03-06 01:21 pm UTC (link)
then next time i ask you where someone is from and they're from england i'll be waiting for you to say english instead of british you welsh and scottish are just the same and only use the term 'british' when it suits you.

i on the other hand am going to try and get hereford made into a country as i'm sick of the welsh and english giving us shit, gonna go home tonight and doctor my passport i think.

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[info]oranjedoom
2006-03-06 02:56 pm UTC (link)
I thought Herefordians were all about the "English". They're always giving the Welsh shit.

Found out that Welsh hero Owain Glyndwr *may* have spent his last days in Hereford, at the Scudamore house. Wasn't there someone called Tom Scudamore at Bishop's?

Wikipedia, he say:

"Nothing is known of Owain after 1412. Despite enormous rewards offered he was never captured. Tradition has that he either died and was buried at his estate in Sycharth or on the estates of his daughters' husbands — Kentchurch in Herefordshire or Monnington. Owain’s daughter, Alys, had married Sir Henry Scudamore, the Sheriff of Herefordshire. Somehow he had weathered the war and remained in office. It was rumoured that Owain finally retreated to their home at Kentchurch. In his book 'The Mystery of Jack of Kent and the Fate of Owain Glyndŵr', Alex Gibon argues that the folk hero Jack of Kent – the family chaplain of the Scudamore family – was Owain Glyndŵr. Gibbon points out a number of similarities between Kent and Glyndŵr (including physical appearance) and claims that Owain spent his last years living with Alys passing himself off as an aging Franciscan friar."

And apparently during the rebellion, Shropshire, Herefordshire and Montgomeryshire sided with the Welsh (or at the very least signed treaties with them.

So you're possibly closer to the Welsh than you think...

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(Anonymous)
2006-03-07 01:43 pm UTC (link)
well yes, hereford used to be part of wales, and my grandad was born in wales but moved to hereford at an early age, the rest of my family hail from the north of england, southern scotland and somewhere in ireland so i could be considered a proper brit as i have a mix of blood.
i only give the welsh shit over football, but there's loads of welshies here and the surrounding villages, but we get grief of the english for being welsh, a good point of this is when acrington fans brought a banner down with them last season saying 'we see welsh people', and we always get the chants 'sheep sheep sheep shaggers' and 'you're welsh and you know you are' and if there is any kind of event on where england are playing they sing 'eng-er-land eng-er-land eng-er-land', they think we care.

hereford for the herefordians!

oh by the way did you catch the news story aboot the shopkeeper in bromyard who had his shop raided and got arrested for having 3 gollywogs on display in his shop window?

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