Thursday, 1 October 2015

Right - Lets Try This Again...



I must insist that you return my content to me, restore to me the service I have paid for (in advance) and stop disrupting my work and my affairs.

I am not in breach of Guidelines, nor have I violated the terms of your contract with my of July this year.

Please restore my content to me, including all links, descriptions and metatags and kindly explain why exactly you think this kind of pathological behaviour constitutes sound business practice or good customer service.

I am asking nicely.

Spike









Every single video currently hosted on my account is my own original work, created by me under Creative Commons, and I can document and prove it.

Kindly state your reason for implying otherwise.



Right - Fuck You Lot.

With bells on.


"But the matter came to the ears of the Apolloniats, who forthwith brought Evenius to trial, and condemned him to lose his eyes, because he had gone to sleep upon his post. 

Now when Evenius was blinded, straightway the sheep had no young, and the land ceased to bear its wonted harvests. 

Then the Apolloniats sent to Dodona, and to Delphi, and asked the prophets, what had caused the woes which so afflicted them. The answer which they received was this —

“The woes were come for Evenius, the guardian of the sacred sheep, whom the Apolloniats had wrongfully deprived of sight. 

They (the gods) had themselves sent the wolves; nor would they ever cease to exact vengeance for Evenius, till the Apolloniats made him whatever atonement he liked to ask. 

When this was paid, they would likewise give him a gift, which would make many men call him blessed.”

Such was the tenor of the prophecies. 

The Apolloniats kept them close, but charged some of their citizens to go and make terms with Evenius; and these men managed the business for them in the way which I will now describe. They found Evenius upon a bench, and, approaching him, they sat down by his side, and began to talk: at first they spoke of quite other matters, but in the end they mentioned his misfortune, and offered him their condolence. Having thus beguiled him, at last they put the question —

“What atonement would he desire, if the Apolloniats were willing to make him satisfaction for the wrong which they had done to him?” 

Hereupon Evenius, who had not heard of the oracle, made answer —

“If I were given the lands of this man and that-” (here he named the two men whom he knew to have the finest farms in Apollonia), “and likewise the house of this other”—(and here he mentioned the house which he knew to be the handsomest in the town), 

“I would, when master of these, be quite content, and my wrath would cease altogether.” 

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