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The government continues to deny an imminent plague pandemic, despite disturbing warnings and signs that keep popping up.


Journalists are demanding to know why September 1-8 was suddenly chosen to be Black Death Awareness Week.


Households in Norwich were sent an inexplicable "bring out your dead" SMS with the added info that "collection is planned for Tuesdays". However, the National Health Service insists this is just a routine drill to keep people prepared for hypothetical health scares.


"We have to think of a worst case scenario" said an NHS spokesman, who also warned people not to be alarmed by the invitation to download the Report-a-Rat app.


Other concerned citizens have noticed public service announcements instructing them to pull over to the kerb when they see a cartload of putrefying corpses in their rear view mirror, reminding them that "plague victims have the right of way under the 1346 Road Traffic Act".


However, the police have called for calm, insisting this is just "part of our ongoing efforts to make Britain's roads safer and ensure smoother traffic flow".


Meanwhile, in London, council employees have been spotted marking crosses on doors, using a laser to keep a safe distance.


Most alarming of all, Boris Johnson has appeared in public wearing a beak-shaped plague mask. But his spokesman assured journalists that it's "more of a fashion statement, really - a metaphor for the toxic political environment that brought about his downfall".


When asked to comment, Mr Johnson was less than helpful. "Is that a giant bubo on your groin or are you just pleased to see me?", he quipped.



Much to the surprise of those who spend their time checking hens for teeth and pigs for wings, the Minister stunned political analysts by suggesting drug addiction is primarily a health, rather than a criminal, issue. Just for one fleeting moment, voters were reminded why democracy matters, why rainbows exist and why Boris Johnson on a zip wire never stops being funny.


Applying common-sense, logic and reasoned argument, the Minister caused so many double-takes, that reporters complained of whiplash. One journalist remarked: ‘I just felt really uncomfortable with him being honest. It’s unsettling. Like seeing Richard Dawkins dressed as Santa’. Many speculated that the MP would need to be under the influence of drugs to actually take a principled stand on drugs.


A rejuvenated Minister stated that he had found is his moral fibre, alongside his testacles and the lost city of Atlantis. A spokesman said: ‘We’ve also got a photo of Big Foot’.





https://pixabay.com/photos/surprised-woman-portrait-shocked-6390054



Paul Dacre has admitted that a recent study which links racism, homophobia, sexism and inaccuracy to cancer has made tomorrow's headline a very difficult pitch.


"Normally, it's fairly straightforward; choose the morally worse path and go down it.", explained Mr Dacre, "But the exception is a ridiculous story that links cancer to a random thing, but not this random."


When informed that the study was led by Ms Prisha Patel who is in a same sex relationship, My Dacre responded; "For god's sake."


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