Is it really good to be Bush's poodle?
By royster
@royster (8)
June 28, 2007 3:46pm CST
It was just so sad to see Blair leaving.
The life of a poodle is often underrated. As dogs go, many enjoy the most pampered of existences and are smart enough to xo the most intellectually demanding of tasks. Poodle owners are often passionate about their pets, catering to their every whim, manipulated by their guile and tolerating their sometimes snippy relationships with other dogs. In many cases-and this is not restricted to poodles, of course-it's hard to tell, after a while, who controls whom. This master routinely finds his days wrapped around catering for the poodle: walking it, grooming it, pandering to it. If the tail often wags the dog, the dog can also wag the human. And often does.
I've never understood, in this respect, why calling a British PM a poodle of the president of the United States of America is therefore always to the detriment of the Brit. Most postwar British PMs have intuitively understood this, however strongly their publics have sometimes balked, The global power of a British premier is nowhere near that of an American president, but the Brits' leverage over such power is arguably greater than any other country's-precisely because of their treasured, special, pampered poodle status.
1 person likes this
2 responses
@protectorate (185)
•
28 Jun 07
how do you find your own GP by the way? i've moved my dwelling a few times in this couple of years. can't recall who the hell my GP was, can you think of if there is any way to track them down? libertine