My Anthem

Saturday, November 29, 2008

sumthin' spiritual for travelling' salesmen,

writers, and even preachermen...

As Sunday aproaches, Desi's mindscape sometimes -- not for all the dimes! or dames!! -- takes on spiritual colours. And why I never know. It just/jest sort of happens. You aks those who travel lots. Desi travels a bit, as a journo. mGf mave travels lots, so much so making a date with him/her consumes more energy than our Jalan Alor meal's intake as compensation, and preachermen, no preacher woman, and don't ask me why -- it's always the men in white, maybe they appear more CONvincing? -- who will then spend the night at 6-star ming court motel after delivery messages of salvation to poor malaysian blighters who pass wads of notes into the hat passed around to salve their CONscience. Thye must have had an affair wit' the neighbour's wife, of did they do it to the doggie? The negighbourhood's bitches, I mean. Whatever...

While I look for the Lament of the Hooker, ENJOY this epicSODE, you poor sod!:(

Drug-smeared boobs knock out robbed men

From NEWS.com.au and from correspondents in Kampala
Agence France-Presse

November 28, 2008 11:03pm


UGANDA'S police warned male bar-goers to keep their noses clean after a probe found a gang of robbers had been using women with chloroform smeared on their chests to knock their victims unconscious.

"They apply this chemical to their chest. We have found victims in an unconscious state," Criminal Investigations Directorate (CID) spokesman Fred Enanga said.

"You find the person stripped totally naked and everything is taken from him," he said.

"And the victim doesn't remember anything. He just remembers being in the act of romancing."

Mr Enanga, who explained that several types of heavy sedatives had been used, said he first came across the practice last year when an apprehended thief named Juliana Mukasa made a clean breast of the matter.

"She is a very dangerous lady," he said.

While early investigations suggest that the gang may consist of dozens of members, the source of the sedatives remains unknown.

"We don't know exactly how they get these materials," Mr Enanga said. "That is something that our investigations must crack."


He called on men, particularly travelling businessmen who tend to carry a lot of cash, to take caution.

"It's a serious situation and people have to be aware."

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