I don't know if you've done this recently. What would you send to Room 101? Here ar a few things of which the world would, I think, be well rid:
Bank Holidays: They once had a valid purpose before we had paid holidays, and some had none, but now nearly everyone has, and many work on BH's anyway. They cause confusion as to when or whether the shops will open, the roads are clogged , and millions mooch about retail parks not knowing what to do.
Security Alarms: the only people who benefit from them are those paid to manufacture and install them. To everyone else they are a nuisance, s they so often go off accidentally: to the owners, obliged to fit them for their insurance; to the police who have to investigate false alarms, and above all to the neighbours who are kept awake. I'm sure hardly anyone takes them seriously; they say 'Oh, its just an alarm going off'.
Celebrity 'novelists': writing a novel is hard work. Virginia Woolf re-wrote her first novel five times from beginning to end. And there must be many hard-working novelists enraged by some TV chef or gardening presenter being credited with creating best-sellers. For me it's a symptom of the hypocrisy of this century.
Bank Holidays: They once had a valid purpose before we had paid holidays, and some had none, but now nearly everyone has, and many work on BH's anyway. They cause confusion as to when or whether the shops will open, the roads are clogged , and millions mooch about retail parks not knowing what to do.
Security Alarms: the only people who benefit from them are those paid to manufacture and install them. To everyone else they are a nuisance, s they so often go off accidentally: to the owners, obliged to fit them for their insurance; to the police who have to investigate false alarms, and above all to the neighbours who are kept awake. I'm sure hardly anyone takes them seriously; they say 'Oh, its just an alarm going off'.
Celebrity 'novelists': writing a novel is hard work. Virginia Woolf re-wrote her first novel five times from beginning to end. And there must be many hard-working novelists enraged by some TV chef or gardening presenter being credited with creating best-sellers. For me it's a symptom of the hypocrisy of this century.
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