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A man who crept up behind the hardest bloke in his local pub and hit him with a barstool but failed to knock him out has said he feels “Now is the time for diplomacy”. 


Colin Sawdust of Oswestry was apparently stung by his girlfriend’s mockery when the local hardnut, Dave Concrete, accidentally jogged his arm as he walked past, causing him to spill his drink.


'It’s not like he meant to do it,' Sawdust protested, which in no way made his girlfriend think him less of a pussy.


Realising he would have to do something to prove his bravery, he decided he would hit Concrete from behind with a barstool, run out of the pub before he came round and never drink there again.


However, genetics had gifted Concrete with an abnormally thick skull and muscular neck, and he seemed barely to notice as the barstool shattered against him. Nor was he persuaded by Sawdust’s subsequent appeal that, whatever had happened up to now, they should put the past behind them, sit down and talk like adults in order to avoid further violence.


“In the face of such provocation, it would be unreasonable to expect me not to retaliate,” is probably what Concrete meant by pushing Sawdust face-first through the pub’s jukebox.


Photo by Victor Clime on Unsplash


Do you remember the current President of the USA Donald Trump suddenly packing his bags and leaving the G7 meeting in Calgary, Canada? We found out later that he was off to sort out plans to try out America’s biggest bombs on nuclear sites in Iran.


At the time, Trump said that he had something more important to do, but didn’t say what. Obviously, it had nothing to do with protecting the world, co-operating with the other most powerful nations, or anything else that wouldn't benefit him personally, so our valiant reporters (and a couple that aren't) have worked hard - over a cup of cappuccino and a chaser of crème de menthe – to come up with a handy list of reasons for leaving important meetings that his press team could use in future.


Here it is:


- He suddenly remembered he had a game of golf scheduled with Jeff Bezos

- It had been a couple of weeks since he'd started a war, and he was getting itchy

- He hadn't clashed handbags with former BFF Elon for nearly 2 days

- He'd forgotten why he was there


- He was getting confused with all the bigly words

- He didn't know why there were women present, unless they were there to get the Diet Coke

- He realised he couldn't tell anyone 'You're Fired'

- He gets nervous at meetings where he's not standing on good ole American soil


- He only stayed while his Tesla was charging

- No one at the meeting wanted to sign a trade deal

- He only cares about 'Making America - and Iran - Great Again’

- He missed his date night with Putin and had to make up for it


- He was worried that President Macron was trying to seduce Melania and, even worse, fake Melania

- Putin said he has a new golden shower he can try

- They served tacos for lunch

- Everyone said that his birthday parade was pathetic


- He couldn't remember where he was

- The gift bags were really disappointing (Canada: just maple syrup and moose mousse)

- He was expecting a call from Putin, and wanted privacy.

- He'd run out of orange tan lotion



Story credit to Sinnick

With contributions from deskpilot, benvoleo, jamesdoc, modelmaker, Midfield Diamond, mcdabble 


Image credit: Nightcafe studio


With talk of Armageddon rife across the globe, a new poll published this morning reveals the majority of Britons would prefer to endure the rigours of a third world war, rather than see the return of Boris Johnson to frontline politics.


Analysts admit the findings are puzzling, particularly when the results show 99% in favour of a global conflagration, while just 1% was unsure.


One Tory Party member who wished to remain anonymous said: 'After his monumental blundering incompetence over Covid, in all honesty I'm not entirely surprised by this. I mean it's true, we'd have to sacrifice bananas, put up with rationing and get used to powdered egg again. But these are small inconveniences compared to, albeit highly unlikely, Boris returning to take the helm during another international crisis.'

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