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View Full Version : UK: The United States of Total Paranoia, by Jezza


Archangel
07-07-2009, 03:59 AM
DISCLAIMER: None of the following is representative of the thread starter's views on anything, I just thought it was funny, and wanted to see your reactions. This is from one of Clarkson's Sunday Times columns, and was re-printed in his third collection thereof, For Crying Out Loud. It's there that I saw it, so forgive me for posting an article from, well, three years ago.

Linkery. (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/driving/jeremy_clarkson/article681768.ece)


I know Britain is full of incompetent water board officials and stabbed Glaswegians but even so I fell on my knees this morning and kissed the ground, because I’ve just spent three weeks trying to work in America.

It’s known as the land of the free and I’m sure it is if you get up in the morning, go to work in a petrol station, eat nothing but double-egg burgers — with cheese — and take your children to little league. But if you step outside the loop, if you try to do something a bit zany, you will find that you’re in a police state.

We begin at Los Angeles airport in front of an immigration official who, like all his colleagues, was selected for having no grace, no manners, no humour, no humanity and the sort of IQ normally found in farmyard animals. He scanned my form and noted there was no street number for the hotel at which I was staying.

“I’m going to need a number,” he said. “Ooh, I’m sorry,” I said, “I’m afraid I don’t have one.”

This didn’t seem to have any effect. “I’m going to need a number,” he said again, and then again, and then again. Each time I shrugged and stammered, terrified that I might be sent to the back of the queue or worse, into the little room with the men in Marigolds. But I simply didn’t have an answer.

“I’m going to need a number,” he said again, giving the distinct impression that he was an autobank, and that this was a conversation he was prepared to endure until one of us died. So with a great deal of bravery I decided to give him one. And the number I chose was 2,649,347.

This, it turned out, was fine. He’d been told by his superiors to get a number. I’d given him a number. His job was done and so, just an hour or so later, I was on the streets of Los Angeles doing a piece to camera.

Except, of course, I wasn’t. Technically you need a permit to film on every street in pretty well every corner of the world. But the only countries where this rule is enforced are Vietnam, Cuba, North Korea and the United States of America.

So, seconds after breaking out the tripod, a policeman pulled up and demanded that we show him our permit. We had one that covered the city of Los Angeles . . . except the bit where we were. So we were moved on.

The next day I was moved on in Las Vegas too because the permit I had didn’t cover the part of the pavement I was standing on. Eight inches away was fine.

You need a permit to do everything in America. You even need a passport to buy a drink. But interestingly you don’t need one if you wish to rent some guns and some bullets. I needed a 50 cal (very big) machinegun. “No problem,” said the man at the shop. “But could you just sign this assuring us that the movie you’re making is not anti-Bush or anti-war.”

Also, you do not need a permit if you want — as I did — to transport a dead cow on the roof of your car through the Florida panhandle. That’s because this is banned by a state law.

Think about that. Someone has gone to all the bother and expense of drawing up a law that means that at some point lots of people were moving dead cows about on their cars. It must have been popular. Fashionable even.

Anyway, back to the guns. I needed them because I wished to shoot a car in the Mojave desert. But you can’t do that without the say-so of the local fire chief who turned up, with his haircut, to say that for reasons he couldn’t explain, he had a red flag in his head.

You find this a lot in America. People way down the food chain are given the power to say yes or no to elaborately prepared plans, just so their bosses can’t be sued. One expression that simply doesn’t translate from English in these days of power without responsibility is “Ooh, I’m sure it’ll be fine”.

And, unfortunately, these people at the bottom of the food chain have no intellect at all. Reasoning with them is like reasoning with a tree. I think this is because people in the sticks have stopped marrying their cousins and are now mating with vegetables.

They certainly aren’t eating them. You see them growing in fields, but all you ever find on a menu is cheese, cheese, cheese, or cheese with cheese. Except for a steak and cheese sandwich I bought in Mississippi. This was made, according to the label, from “imitation cheese”.

Nope, I don’t know what that is either but I do know that out of the main population centres, the potato people are getting fatter and dimmer by the minute.

Today the average petrol pump attendant is capable, just, of turning on a pump when you prepay. But if you pay for two pumps to be turned on to fill two cars, you can, if you stare carefully, see wisps of smoke coming from her fat, useless, war losing, acne-scarred, gormless turnip face.

And the awful thing is that you don’t want the petrol anyway, because it’ll simply get you to somewhere else, which will be worse. A point I shall prove next week when we have a look at what happened in Alabama. And why the poor of New Orleans will sue if the donation you make isn’t as big as they’d hoped for.

Archangel
07-07-2009, 04:03 AM
Part 2: Arrested just for Looking Weird

Link. (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/jeremy_clarkson/article684953.ece)

Last week I wrote about my recent trip to America, and to be honest it didn’t go down well. I don’t think I’ve ever been on the receiving end of such a blizzard of bile. One man called me an “imbosile”. Hundreds more suggested that it’d be better for everyone if I just stayed at home in future.

And do you know the awful thing? I haven’t finished yet. Last week’s column was just an introduction, an amuse-bouche, a scene-setter. It’s this week that things really start to get going . . .

So far we’ve looked at the problem in America of power without responsibility. Step out of the loop, do something unusual and you’ll encounter a wall of low-paid, low-intellect workers whose sole job is to prevent their bosses from being sued. As a result, you never hear anyone say: “Oh I’m sure it’ll be all right.”

You know the Stig. The all-white racing driver we use on Top Gear. Well, we were filming him walking through the Mojave desert when lo and behold a lorry full of soldiers rocked up and arrested him. He was unusual. He wasn’t fat. He must therefore be a Muslim.

It gets worse. I needed money to play a little blackjack in Vegas but because I was unable to provide the cashier with an American zip code he was unable to help. It’s the same story at the petrol pumps. Americans can punch their address into the key pad and replenish their tank. Europeans have to prove they’re not terrorists before being allowed to start pumping.

I seem to recall a television advertisement in which George W Bush himself urged us all to go over there for our holidays. But what’s the point when you can’t buy anything? Or do anything. Or walk across the desert in a white suit without being arrested.

The main problem I suspect is a complete lack of knowledge about the world. I asked people in the streets of Vegas to name two European countries. The very first woman I spoke to said: “Oh yes. What’s that one with kangaroos?”

Then you’ve got New Orleans, which, nearly a year after Katrina, is still utterly smashed and ruined. Now I’m sorry but insects can build shelter on their own. Birds can build nests without a state handout. So why are the people of Louisiana sitting around waiting for someone else to do the repairs?

I tried to help out. I tried to give a car I’d been using to a Christian mission. But I was threatened with legal action because the car in question was a 91 and not the 98 that had allegedly been promised. A very angry woman accused me of “misrepresentation”.

Not everyone in America is deranged, of course. Sammy certainly isn’t. Sammy was helping us out washing cars, and one night, over dinner, he explained how he’d become so badly burnt. And why, as a result, the best he could hope for out of life was washing cars for cash.

His car had exploded after it was rammed from behind by an off-duty cop. He was taken to a hospital that had no air-conditioning, in California, in the summer. Not nice when you have third-degree burns to half your body.

And to make matters worse, there was nobody to help him go to the loo, so he either did his business where he lay — or went through untold agony by rolling over to pee on the floor.

The bill for his botched plastic surgery was half a million dollars, $15,000 of which came from the cop’s insurance. This means Sammy can never get a proper job, or buy a house or find credit.

The government, he says, is waiting for him to pop up on the radar and then they’ll come round to get their greenbacks back.

Of course, many Americans would say our health service is far from perfect and I’d agree. I’d agree there are lots of things wrong with Britain.

I’d also agree, having been to every single state in the US — apart from Rhode Island — that there are good things about America. The hash browns, for instance, served up by Denny’s are delicious, you can turn right on a red light and er . . . well, I’m sure there’s a lot more but I can’t think of anything at the moment.

Among the things I don’t like is the way everyone over 15 stone now moves about in a wheelchair. As a result, it takes half an hour to get through even the widest door. And I really don’t like the way that every small town looks exactly the same as every other small town. Palmdale in California and Biloxi in Mississippi are nigh on identical. They have the same horrible restaurants. The same mall. The same interstate drone. Live in either for more than a week and you’d be stabbing your own eyes with knitting needles.

But it’s the idiocracy that really gets me down. The constant coaxing you have to do to get anything done. “No” is the default setting whether you want to change lanes on a motorway or get a drink on a Sunday. It’s like trying to negotiate with a donkey. Once, I urged a cop in Pensacola, Florida, to use his common sense and let me load a van in the no loading zone, since the airport was shut and it would make no difference. “Sir,” he said, “you don’t need common sense when you’ve got laws.”

That, I think, probably says it all.

Insomniac
07-07-2009, 04:38 AM
Hash browns at Denny's?

This guy is fucking crazy.

Das Kahlua
07-07-2009, 04:43 AM
You want my reaction: I'm waiting for Part 3, hoping that's when it actually gets funny, as you promised.

Archangel
07-07-2009, 04:59 AM
Oh, right, your type only laughs at Abu Ghraib torture pics.

Das Kahlua
07-07-2009, 05:30 AM
Oh, right, your type only laughs at Abu Ghraib torture pics.

Actually I was deeply offended by Abu Ghraib. No, I only laugh at things that are funny, something you must have left behind during the re-launch.

Archangel
07-07-2009, 05:54 AM
Actually I was deeply offended by Abu Ghraib.

Not enough waterboarding, right?

Mustard
07-07-2009, 06:15 AM
I'm pretty sure Voltaire was right about saying that common sense is not too common. But this, of course, applies to more than just a few idiots in the US.

Archangel
07-07-2009, 06:27 AM
There may be indeed idiots everywhere - one stroll through a German industrial suburb proves that beyond the shadow of a doubt - but what exacerbates that problem in the US is that in other countries, if you slip and fall, people laugh at you for being clumsy and stupid. In the US, you get to sue someone for millions of dollars.

That makes for a society in which stupid people are cosseted and protected rather than derided, which is a dangerous state of affairs.

Mustard
07-07-2009, 06:41 AM
Sometimes, those who cannot defend themselves require somebody to defend them against injustices. I can respect that.

Oftem times, however, your example is more prevalent and more noticed as ass-backwardsry, and it gets the due attention it deserves. Having a slue of idiot lawyers who get a C average at Northwestern Nevada State and somehow pass a Bar exam doesn't help our cause any either.

billy1980
07-07-2009, 06:55 AM
The sue happy thing per capita is like plane crashes. It happens and is covered by the news, but its still safer than driving in a car, or doesnt really happen as much as its made out to. At least the I fell as I was robbing you, so now you are getting sued bit.

Mustard
07-07-2009, 07:03 AM
I guess the problem is too much legalese.

Its not entirely an argument that goes from anarchy to totalitarianism, but I guess the sub-elements are ripe for debating.

Morfin
07-07-2009, 08:04 AM
Arch, this is a big yawn. Wow, what a knee-slapper. Making fun of America. Woo-hoo. ROTFLMAO.

And, a nice story filled with made up examples to provide a caricature of the U.S. No different than the caricature of every slip and fall leading to a lawsuit worth millions. I especially like the part about the only places you can't openly film are Vietnam, Cuba, North Korea, and the U.S. Funny, but sites like Boing, Boing are filled with stories of how the police in the UK are constantly harassing people in London just trying to snap pictures. Or the police in the UK and France randomly stopping people (and mainly Middle Eastern-looking people) and asking for ID.

This is not a case of me not being able to laugh at myself and my country, it is being tired of caricatures that have little basis in fact.

fuldstændigamok
07-07-2009, 08:11 AM
Arch, this is a big yawn. Wow, what a knee-slapper. Making fun of America. Woo-hoo. ROTFLMAO.

And, a nice story filled with made up examples to provide a caricature of the U.S. No different than the caricature of every slip and fall leading to a lawsuit worth millions. I especially like the part about the only places you can't openly film are Vietnam, Cuba, North Korea, and the U.S. Funny, but sites like Boing, Boing are filled with stories of how the police in the UK are constantly harassing people in London just trying to snap pictures. Or the police in the UK and France randomly stopping people (and mainly Middle Eastern-looking people) and asking for ID.

This is not a case of me not being able to laugh at myself and my country, it is being tired of caricatures that have little basis in fact.
SO NOW THE WAR ON TERROR IS A BAD THING????

Morfin
07-07-2009, 08:29 AM
The issue in the article was about paranoia. My point is that, if we are paranoid, then the European countries are just as, if not more, paranoid.

<Inset lame 'french are pussies' joke.>

hatepoppy
07-07-2009, 08:48 AM
DISCLAIMER: None of the following is representative of the thread starter's views on anything, I just thought it was funny, and wanted to see your reactions. This is from one of Clarkson's Sunday Times columns, and was re-printed in his third collection thereof, For Crying Out Loud. It's there that I saw it, so forgive me for posting an article from, well, three years ago.

grammatical person consistency fail.

Archangel
07-07-2009, 09:12 AM
The issue in the article was about paranoia. My point is that, if we are paranoid, then the European countries are just as, if not more, paranoid.

It wasn't just paranoia of terrorist attacks, though (and I do contend that your paranoia in that case is unmatched - we don't have a PATRIOT act or a Dept. of Homeland Security, for one); it was also about the legal paranoia which gives a lot of mouth breathers the authority to say "no" to perfectly reasonable requests.

I dunno, I've been to airports on every populated continent except S America, but the idiocy of US airport employees takes the fucking cake - a fact much mocked by Americans themselves, as well.

grammatical person consistency fail.

Nah, after the first time, I realised that speaking of myself in the third person sucks balls.

Morfin
07-07-2009, 09:18 AM
Having traveled in three countries (U.S., Canada, Bahamas), I feel that I am fully qualified to say that low-level bureaucrats and airport workers, border guards, people of that ilk are mouth-breathers who have failed the test to become cops and like to abuse what little power they have all the while being afraid to deviate one iota from their directions because that would require them to think and, oh my God, take a chance.

Idiots are idiots. And if they weren't idiots, they wouldn't be in those loser jobs in the first place. Maybe European idiots are better at their jobs than American idiots. But the bottom line remains: They are all idiots.

Diet Coke time (although, I do like the new Coke Zero much better)

Archangel
07-07-2009, 09:39 AM
As I said: Idiots may be idiots, but you treat your idiots as if they were, well, special.

Willam
07-07-2009, 09:43 AM
From A Fish Called Wanda:

Otto (http://forum.gorillamask.net/name/nm0000177/): Don't call me stupid.
Wendy (http://forum.gorillamask.net/name/nm0014883/): Why on earth not?
Otto (http://forum.gorillamask.net/name/nm0000177/): Oh, you English are *so* superior, aren't you? Well, would you like to know what you'd be without us, the good ol' U.S. of A. to protect you? I'll tell you. The smallest fucking province in the Russian Empire, that's what! So don't call me stupid, lady. Just thank me.
Wendy (http://forum.gorillamask.net/name/nm0014883/): Well, *thank* you for popping in and protecting us.
Otto (http://forum.gorillamask.net/name/nm0000177/): If it wasn't for us, you'd all be speaking *German!* Singing "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles...”

Archangel
07-07-2009, 09:45 AM
I think that the Kaliningrad Oblast is rather smaller than Britain.

redsox39
07-09-2009, 04:06 PM
His car had exploded after it was rammed from behind by an off-duty cop. He was taken to a hospital that had no air-conditioning, in California, in the summer.

Where the fuck was this hospital? Was Sammy 71 years old?