Friday, March 31, 2006

Unveiled: monument to sperm

A monument to the Sperm Cell was inaugurated yesterday in a public ceremony in Foetus Square.

The sculpture was commissioned by the pro-fanaticism movement, Gift of Lib, as part of its drive to re-ignite the prehistoric cult of fertility on the island of Malta.

Speaking at the ceremony, the President of the Republic said: "I'm a Roman Catholic. And have been since before I was born. And the one thing they say about Catholics is: They'll take you as soon as you're warm. You don't have to be a six-footer. You don't have to have a great brain. You don't have to have any clothes on. You're A Catholic the moment Dad came. Because every sperm is sacred. Every sperm is great. If a sperm is wasted, God gets quite irate."

Addressing the crowd, the chair-spermatozoa of Gift of Lib added: "Let the heathen spill theirs on the dusty ground! God shall make them pay for each sperm that can't be found! Hindu, Taoist, Mormon, spill theirs just anywhere. But God loves those who treat their semen with more care."

Blessing the monument, the parish priest concluded: "Every sperm is sacred. Every sperm is good. Every sperm is needed, in your neighbourhood."

(To make your own donation to Gift of Lib, send your sperm sample, preferably in a labelled jar, to: Gift of Lib, Semen House, Penetration Road, Fecundania)

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

My Big Fat Upper Barrakka Wedding

Ah, it's my favourite time of the week again: parliamentary question time!

In the old days, MPs used to ask such boring questions. Like: how much did you spend on this? How many applications were received for the tender to that? And what are the chances of being infected with H5N1 through exposure to illegal immigrants who broke out of the Hal Safi detention to have a meal at KFC?

Fortunately, today's generation of MPs have much more varied interests. Like Dr Jason Azzopardi (left), who deemed it a matter of extreme urgency to ask Environment Minister George Pullicino the following, earth-shattering question:

How many weddings were held at the Upper Barrakka last year?

Naturally I awaited the answer with bated breath. And George Pullicino did not disappoint: Only one wedding was held at the Upper Barrakka, my dear Jason, he said. There were two applications, but one was withdrawn at the eleventh hour.

Gee. My life is so much richer now that I am privy to this sensational piece of information. So my only complaint is that there were no follow-on questions from our intrepid investigative Member of Parliament. Like: whose wedding was it? What was the bride wearing? Who provided the catering? Did anyone get food poisoning? And, most important of all... WHY WASN'T I INVITED?

Maybe next week...

(Oh, and while I'm on the subject of asking questions... How much do our MPs get paid again?)

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Ghaxar xhur tqala?!

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Skip survey results #2

According to the shocking results of our latest scientific poll, a relative majority of Maltese people want a 24-hour curfew to be imposed without delay in order to solve the nation's congenital public transport disorders.

Exactly half the respondents (50 per cent ) voted for the immediate introduction of a 24-hour curfew, which would relieve the public transport system of the bother of actually transporting members of the public.

Forty-two per cent favour legislation which would force members of parliament to work as part-time bus-drivers, while eight per cent believe the problem could be solved by reinstating Sea Malta.

Meanwhile, the Skip is reliably informed that as a result of this scientific survey, a delegation headed by the Interior Ministry's "G.I. Joe" Azzopardi has already left for Baghdad, Iraq, where it will be attending seminars on how to seriously curtail the free movement of people in order to minimise inconvenience to the government (which might otherwise actually have to do some work).

And now for something else. Our latest scientific poll concerns the identity of the mysterious supercolumnist, Roamer, who writes in The Sunday Times (Is it a priest? Is it a Republican? Or is it just another Nationalist liberal-basher with nothing better to do?)

Please note that, unlike previous polls, users can vote differently every day of the year. This way, you are free to change your mind depending on what Roamer writes each week.

Happy voting....

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Skip Survey results #1

According to the results of Skip on Toast's first ultra-scientific survey, the vast majority of the Maltese people (60 per cent) would like a Constitutional amendment to introduce: a) the death penalty for adultery; b) mandatory burkas for Gzira women; c) obligatory portraits of Lawrence Gonzi in all homes and offices; d) hard labour for homosexuals; e) compulsory Sunday mass attendance, and f) internment and exile for all environmentalists and left-wing intellectuals.

Of the remaining 40 per cent, half want only the mandatory burka, while the other half want only the obligatory pictures of Lawrence Gonzi in all homes and offices.

These findings have since been communicated to the Ministry for Justice, Idiocy and the Interior, which will shortly be issuing letters to invite all members of Civil Society (that's politico-speak for "all tombola clubs, bocci associations and flower arranging societies") to write in on pain of deportation to signal their whole-hearted approval of this entrenchment proposal... which will naturally be hurried through parliament before the summer recess, to make sure no-one gets a chance to actually discuss it.

Meanwhile, thank you all for your kind participation (No flowers by request, but donations can be made to: Skip On Toast Scientific Surveys United, Public Opinion Street, Maghtab.)