live like the automatic

I’ve been sitting here with the blogger window open for about an hour now. Make that going on two hours. Before I signed off to take a phone call it was open for around an hour aswell.

I opened up but now I’m closed
Today I’m just on answer-phone
Tomorrow’s what I really want to say

Can by Mull Historical Society

My mind is certainly not blank, but nothing is really ordered to even try and put thoughts down on paper. (It’s an expression damn you). Actually I kinda have one thought. One of the most important rules in life is an unwritten rule. It is however a simple rule and you should always follow it.

Your best friends girl is off-limits.

I mean really folks, is that one so hard to understand? It’s a good standard to live by, I think. Not just for your best friend or your friends or work colleagues or whatever, but just in general.

I have tomorrow off work. I have to take 5 days by the end of the month or loose them. So a long weekend this weekend giving me a chance to catch up on some sleep and get a haircut before tomorrow night’s big party. Then next week I head to Dublin on Friday night and I get back to London the following Tuesday. So then I have two more days to take, another couple of long weekends would be great.

I’m downloading Mozilla 1.3b to actually give it a try as my default browser for a while. Pretty much because of this article; Mozilla: Blogging’s Killer App

*****

I’ve been saying something like this for a long time now.

When America “cast off monarchical Britain” in 1776, it involved the help of many religious people who had fled repression in other countries, the 11-term Toledo congressman said. Among the nontraditional American revolutionaries were the Green Mountain Boys, a patriot militia organized in 1770 in Bennington, Vt., to confront British forces, she said.

“One could say that Osama bin Laden and these non-nation-state fighters with religious purpose are very similar to those kind of atypical revolutionaries that helped to cast off the British crown,” Miss Kaptur said.
Threat of war spurs U.S. soul-searching