Tuesday 19 January 2010

Lie down!

So, I’m positive this is a subject everyone on the planet can relate to (except maybe Bruce Forsyth) as it’s one of mans natural urges, the most powerful one besides sex and checking your email every half hour.

While most people would disparage lying (or merely tut if you’re English), I would like to take the lower moral road and say, “go ahead” and “do it” and other such catchy phrases. Because once again, at the Crack’d Pot, we don’t like to take the normal easy road, since the harder road tends to be more fun (unless you have a full bladder, in which case it’s hilarious).

Lying, to me is as essential as a good meal, or bathing, but unlike food and showering lying has this negative stigma attached to it, because many people have given it a bad reputation, much like the great white shark, or the humble honey badger. In this edition I aim to talk about these people, these people who have lead us to believe and to be told, that lying is evil and worth a lock up in the great oven downstairs (that’s hell I’m talking about).

You see these people everyday, for personal gain normally, not that that isn’t worth lying about. Take for example the expenses scandal, for those who aren’t sure what happened, join the club because neither am I, but what I can gather is that politicians claimed money from the government that shouldn’t be claimed from the government for things that the government didn’t want to pay for and were in fact for the selfish fools own gain. (Yeah, why do you think I didn’t do a blog on the “Credit Crunch”) for instance “Oh this? Yes I’ll have a receipt for this cream egg, why yes, the government need my car working and I heard that eggs can be used to fix a leaky radiator... what do you mean these eggs don’t work?” (The worse thing is my best friend, and a viewer of this blog is highly political and will tear me a new one for that). What I’m trying to get at is this sort of lie doesn’t help anyone; in fact this hinders people, because maybe it was because people were claiming on moats that we are in recession. (Once again, I don’t know, I’m just guessing).

But maybe the real reason lying isn’t seen as an amazing trait (where has the truth ever got anyone after all?) is not due to the fact that lying can help you gain something, people do that all the time. (Even me, I know) but more due to the idea that lying is in fact really deceptive. “No dur” I hear you yell, again with the loudness, “Lying isn’t being truthful? Mehuuuh” well it’s something more than that. We, and by “we” I mean humans, have an irksome tendency towards the gaining of knowledge, in fact some people and by “some people” I mean people who pay attention to the bible, say that this pursuit of knowledge was in fact the original sin after all the tree that Adam and Eve stole the apple from was called the tree of knowledge, and they were stealing that apple. Granted sins have “grown up” a bit now, in hindsight Adam and Eve’s rebellion in a garden, where they were basically scrumping, seems a bit tame now that we have guns and bank heists and expenses scams. So back to my point about original sin, most people think of the “Original” as the best, for instance, in film: terminator is much more badass than the T200, in songs: the original “Valerie” by the Zutons is much better than the Amy Winehouse version (I mean really, could you have a more suiting name?) and finally cereal: Cocopops are by far superior to Morrison’s chocolate coated puffs of rice, though the name isn’t as catchy. Therefore we must conclude that the original is the best and most memoriable.

So humans have an unhealthy pursuit of knowledge blah blah... go off on tangent about cereal... ah yes.

so by deceiving someone you are taking away their knowledge of the subject, for instance, by replying to the question “Did you kill my dog?” with “No, he just kicked himself off the cliff” you are taking away that person’s reason to break up with you, by replying to the question “did you steal that cookie from the cookie jar?” with “Who me?” and then to the next question of “Yes you” with “couldn’t have been” you are officially a demigod in my eyes and we should definitely get a drink together.
But also you stole a cookie, which is bad, because cookies are very good.
So in a roundabout way I’ve started on the subject of lying, the bad parts over now, the negative stigma will be detached and thrown carelessly into a bin like a used rubber sheath next week.

Joe Strange

The first “two part-er” blog, I feel so serial drama-y.

1 comment:

James Sweeting said...

You weren't far off with your description of the expenses "scandel". Although I for one defend an MP's right to claim expenses for repairing one's moat!