The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Sun Sep 07 2008
Departments
International Issues

British Ambassador
by Richard S. Ehrlich
July 26, 2007

BANGKOK, Thailand -- The British Ambassador to Thailand and Laos, David Fall, ended his career as a diplomat by giving a wildly hilarious, shockingly blunt, comedy performance of taboo jokes about Scotsmen using condoms, trigger-happy Americans, and sexual double entendres involving British, Turkish and French officials.

Nearly 200 people, including diplomats, businessmen, journalists and others enthusiastically cheered and applauded every punch line Mr. Fall delivered during his 40-minute speech at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand.

His appearance on Tuesday (July 24) night was titled, "Released into the community: His Excellency David Fall, on the verge of parole, reflects on 36 years as a British diplomat."

Pacing his lines like a professional stand-up comedian, and frequently stressing accents to emphasize foreign voices, Mr. Fall began by warning:

"Stereotypes can be very misleading. I've known German ambassadors with a sense of humor. Well-organized Italians. Australians with no chips on their shoulders whatsoever. Americans who are sensitive to local feelings: 'Take 'em out! Nuke them!' And French ambassadors who speak English without spitting every second word."

Mr. Fall, who retires in August, said he regretted how British diplomats now had to be politically correct, unlike decades ago when a British ambassador could speak and act with greater freedom.

"One of the many things we are not supposed to do these days is say anything which might be dubbed as racial stereotyping."

Tweaking that protocol, he then told an elaborate joke about a Scotsman who buys a condom while complaining it was "really expensive." During the next several weeks, the Scotsman repeatedly returns to the shop, demanding the condom be fixed, because holes are appearing from overuse.

The shopkeeper tells him to buy a new condom, but the Scotsman refuses because of the price.

The punch line? After one month, the suddenly generous Scotsman tells the stunned shopkeeper, "the regiment has decided to buy" a new condom.

"I tell you that purely as an illustration, because we're not allowed to tell that silly joke anymore," Mr. Fall said amid hysterical laughter. "It's also in extremely bad taste."

The ambassador said London's Foreign Office contains archives of witty dispatches written by British diplomats in the mid-20th century.

"Actually, I do recommend a trawl through the Foreign Office's pre-computerization archives. There are some real gems in there," Mr. Fall said.

"For those of you with a sensitive disposition, you may wish to go to the toilet now," the envoy then advised his audience. "I would like to read to you now, from an official Foreign Office document. It is a letter dated 6 April 1943, from Sir Archibald Clerk Kerr, Her Majesties ambassador in Moscow, to Lord Pembroke, the Foreign Office, London."

Exaggerating a pompous British accent, Mr. Fall read:

"'My Dear Reggie, In these dark days man tends to look for little shafts of light that spill from Heaven. My days are probably darker than yours, and I need, my God I do, all the light I can get. But I am a decent fellow, and I do not want to be mean and selfish about what little brightness is shed upon me from time to time.

"'So I propose to share with you a tiny flash that has illuminated my somber life, and tell you that God has given me a new Turkish colleague, whose card tells me that he is called Mustapha Kunt.

"We all feel like that, Reggie, now and then, especially when spring is upon us, but few of us would dare to put it on our cards. It takes a Turk to do that.'"

Amid whoops, chortling and cheers, Mr. Fall said, "If anybody needs to explain that to somebody, well, good luck."

Asked by a mischievous audience for more anecdotes, Mr. Fall told a story about France's former leader Charles de Gaulle, while stretching the general's French-accented English.

"Charles de Gaulle and his wife were at a banquet in London, sitting at opposite ends of this long table, and the conversation was going on. And somebody asked Madam de Gaulle what she thought was the greatest thing in life.

"Madam de Gaulle replied: 'I think the greatest thing in life is a penis.'

"At that very moment, all the talking had stopped and everybody turned and looked at her. To his credit, General de Gaulle, at the other end of the table, backed up and said, 'No no, ma chere, I think what you mean to say is: happiness.'"

After the chuckles died down, Mr. Fall described his future plans by saying: "I'm not intending to work for anybody that I don't want to work for anymore. Thirty-six years as a bureaucrat is absolutely enough, as far as I'm concerned.

"You just want to be yourself," the gray-haired envoy said, predicting a leisurely life of writing, painting, cartooning, gardening, walking the length of the United Kingdom, raising dogs and chickens, and doing international charity work.

Hailing from an Anglo-Welsh family of tenant farmers and coal miners, Mr. Fall's Diplomat Service career included three tours of Thailand, totaling 12 years, plus stints in South Africa, Australia, Vietnam and London, accompanied by his wife Gwendolyn and their three sons.

---
Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist who has reported news from Asia since 1978 and is co-author of "Hello My Big Big Honey!", a non-fiction book of investigative journalism. He received Columbia University's Foreign Correspondents Award, and his web page is http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

International Issues

"Thai voters defy coup leaders"
  December 24, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Bush Administration trains members of Indonesian terrorist groups"
  December 20, 2007
  John M. Miller

"Thailand divides on election"
  December 20, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Italians block construction of U.S. Base"
  December 19, 2007
  David Swanson

"What is after Annapolis"
  December 17, 2007
  Ahmad Al-Akhras, Ph.D.

"Fear of Chavez is fear of democracy"
  December 4, 2007
  Greg Palast

"Same old, same old – Israel wins again"
  December 2, 2007
  Jim Miles

"Thailand's anxious election"
  November 29, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Nukes' seventh decade"
  November 23, 2007
  David Swanson

"The devalued currency of truth "
  November 22, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The assassination of Hugo Chavez"
  November 15, 2007
  Greg Palast

"China's hedge strategy"
  November 7, 2007
  Qing Wang

"Banned from Canada for war protest"
  October 31, 2007
  Ann Wright, retired US Army Colonel and former US diplomat, AfterDowningStreet.org

"Torture claim is filed against Rumsfeld in France"
  October 29, 2007
  Doreen Carvajal

"U.S. will tip its hand before attacking Iran"
  October 19, 2007
  David Swanson

"Canada refuses entry to CODEPINK cofounder Medea Benjamin and retired Colonel Ann Wright"
  October 7, 2007
  Medea Benjamin

"Tiananmen Square, Burmese style"
  October 5, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Forgetting Gandhi on International Non-violence day"
  October 1, 2007
  Pablo Ouziel

"Airplane hijacker's flight for Burma's freedom"
  September 30, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Burma's bloggers"
  September 28, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"World War III"
  September 5, 2007
  David Swanson

"“Free trade” policy craze is crazy, like healthcare"
  September 1, 2007
  Stephen Crockett

"Profit of doom: of vampires, parasites, and the demise of capitalism"
  August 27, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Former enemies find new way forward"
  August 23, 2007
  Mike Ferner

"Thailand constitution"
  August 13, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"People's peace delegation to Iran reports back"
  August 1, 2007
  David Swanson

"British Ambassador"
  July 26, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Civil society lost in media sound bites"
  July 23, 2007
  Pablo Ouziel

"Homeland conspiracy"
  July 18, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"Gender savagery in Guatemala"
  July 15, 2007
  Michael Parenti and Lucia Muñoz

"Khmer Rouge trial"
  July 12, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"The Palestinian left: a lost opportunity for relevance"
  July 10, 2007
  Ramzy Baroud

"Northern Light: Tony Sutton of ColdType interviewed by Jason Miller"
  June 21, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Sudan’s reported acceptance of peacekeepers for Darfur must be followed by immediate deployment"
  June 15, 2007
  Diana Duarte

"U.S. terror Laos"
  June 8, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Conyers challenges Bush for G8 action on vultures, Palast reports from London on BBC Newsnight"
  June 7, 2007
  Greg Palast

"Executioner"
  June 4, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Recent attacks in Darfur demonstrate why UN protection force must be deployed"
  May 13, 2007
  Diana Duarte

"Bombing mystery"
  April 5, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Jesus Wouldn't Bomb Anyone: Why are we waging war on the poor and oppressed?"
  April 5, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Coup six months"
  March 19, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Bangkok bombs"
  March 17, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Four years ago today"
  March 16, 2007
  Starhawk

"Iran in Congress's sights"
  March 7, 2007
  David Swanson

"How the world can stop Bush"
  February 18, 2007
  Paul Craig Roberts

"A pox upon Mr. Armstrong’s wonderful world: of illusory democracies, rogue states, and accelerating humanity’s demise"
  February 18, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Sorry about that"
  February 18, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The Mecca agreement: what should we expect?"
  February 18, 2007
  Ramzy Baroud

"The great eight"
  February 18, 2007
  Marion Schneider

"Overblown threat and Islamophobia"
  February 11, 2007
  Abukar Arman

"Military explosions shake sections of Vieques"
  February 11, 2007
  Peace No War

"A new manifest destiny"
  February 1, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The making of another Iraq"
  January 30, 2007
  Abukar Arman

"Bush's four anti-terror successes all fictional"
  January 27, 2007
  David Swanson

"Global food supply near the breaking point"
  January 26, 2007
  Stephen Leahy

"Oil and foreign policy after Bush"
  January 21, 2007
  Stephen Crockett

"If Beal Street Could Talk – Part 1"
  January 15, 2007
  David Swanson

"International delegation travels to Guantanamo, Cuba to protest infamous US prison"
  January 3, 2007
  Alejandro Beltran




Read Articles by Year:
2007 2006 2005 2004
2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2008
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer