We were expecting the broken egg to reveal a desiccated Pollywaffle. Not a good yoke.
John Hayward
Posted by john Hayward on 02/04/10 at 01:41 PM
A rotten egg.
Posted by Brady Marshall on 02/04/10 at 04:50 PM
They’ll all be like that after the next Tamar Ridge.
Posted by Russell Langfield on 02/04/10 at 07:19 PM
You’re a pathetic childish lot. Why would anyone want to work with you?
Posted by George Harris aka woodworker on 03/04/10 at 10:20 AM
Re #4
Yeah, right, woody.
But as the children you ‘work’ with (or used to before the election, hahaha) would answer, “mirrors”.
Posted by Russell Langfield on 03/04/10 at 12:55 PM
David, will probably retire very comfortably on his property on the George River outside St Helens, known as ‘The Pryory’ and I hope he doesn’t continue to use biocidal and toxic chemicals on his vineyard that risk contaminating the river or adjoining land. Mr Llewellyn is quoted today in the Mercury saying the name “George River Wines” may not be a ‘good brand’ any more after the water controversy!
Chris’ cartoon (today) of ‘Llewey’s Easter’ is rather apt as Mr Llewellyn was one of the Ministers DIRECTLY responsible for the oversight of “the largest egg-associated Salmonella food poisoning outbreak in the southern hemisphere” during 2005 to 2008. [There’s also a significant worry over his incompetent Department’s handling of this long saga!] This fiasco was due to one dodgy producer (who was named) selling cracked and dirty eggs into the market place over several years and creating 9 separate public health incidents!
Another feather in David’s Ministerial retirement cap will therefore be the Minister for cracked eggs. Absolutely shameful!
Posted by David Obendorf on 03/04/10 at 04:36 PM
Lewy thought he had all the bases covered.
Sadly, he had forgotten who was lending him his power. The divine irony was he was pushed into retirement by one of his own. His public life had become increasingly dominated by his obsessive ideas. Ideas he had become too arrogant to reveal.
Posted by no pulp mill on 03/04/10 at 08:33 PM
With a new minister for the environment perhaps our standard of care for it will actually increase, instead of continual degradation.
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