The clients will drop into Donal for chats (receiving generous financial compensation for the time taken to do so) and it is hoped that a culprit or culprits will be identified during the course of these chats so that something might be done maybe going forward you never know like.
A valid concern expressed by one of our nation's leaders is that 'it was probably a hape of lads that did for lovely old Ireland' and that to identify these 'lads' by name would be 'commercially insensitive' as it would dissuade this self same 'hape of lads' from investing in 'lovely old Ireland' again.
Do not worry though, a solution to this dilemma has been devised and it is a solution that is typically Irish in its lateral cunning. The hope is, you see, if you follow me now, ...the hope is that the suspects, I mean clients, will put their interrogation, I mean chat, wages, I mean compensation, back into lovely old Ireland and reinflate the property bubble, I mean market, going forward.
That's the idea anyway. Unless, as Judge O'Dreary pointed out himself, the culprits turn out to be Travellers. 'If it turns out to be a bunch of dirty knackers that wrecked the place', said O'Dreary from the doorstep of his Killiney home, 'I'll come down on them like a ton of bricks. A TON OF BRICKS!'
2 comments:
How is this blog redundant?
Do you have a secret similar blog?
Ah, I'm just saying shit that everyone already knows. It makes a soul sick. It wears you down. Keeping a blog can destroy a man. It's like being a miner in the 18th century but for less pay and with even tougher conditions (especially when the formatting on the text goes a bit wonky and it all takes far longer than you planned).
Other than that, it goes on so you folks be sure and come back. I'll be here because, as the legendary Richard Gere told the immortal Louis Gossett Jnr., 'I got nowhere else to go'.
Jesus, people actually read the tags?
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