Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
17 February 2009
4 minute(s) read
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Alastair, your loyalty is mind-blowing and highly commendable! I renew my calls for Oxford to take the word “loyalty” out of the dictionary and place your picture there instead. Then, they should include in their explanation an exhaustive list of all the people/things/activities/places to which you have been loyal for decades! As they say, an ounce of loyalty is worth a pound of cleverness. You’re very wise! Keighley is lucky to be able to associate itself with you!
Best,
Alina
Ah Keighley is a nice place! So is everywhere in Yorkshire, I miss is greatly.
But you were close weren’t you Alastair – cricket for Scotland, football for Yorkshire, and rugby league for Burnley.
It’s interesting to me that as I grow older, and use more and more technology to connect beyond my usual networks, I return more to my identity [in-part] as a Brummie. I am more involved in voluntay work there, and use social media to try to effectchange there.
I wonder whether we just have more opportunity to re-connect now, or whether there is something in our sense of self that is nostalgic for our [collective] past?
BTW you missed out the Timmy Taylor Brewery! Their Best and Mild are to-die for!
Shame you left the “terrible accident involving a pig” anecdote hanging…
That little write-up is very nice. But it’s all about you. There is nothing in it about Keighley. I have a feeling they wanted you to talk about the place.
Dear Alistair Ann says thank you for your kind comments and can i take it you and family will be attending/doing Keighley Show ?
Best Regards on behalf of AC.
Keighley is a fine old place. I remember years ago travelling up there to see Batley RL play Keighley RL in the years before it was all Americanised and was Bulldogs versus Cougars. I was over the moon that it still had trolley buses.
Who cares ?
Football for Scotland? There are so many takes on that. But the main was is that you’re English me old chum.
I liked your post on Keighley and yet it’s a shame isn’t it that the ‘great’ and the ‘good’ tend to leave their home towns in order to become ‘great’ and ‘good’ (I’m originally from Colne, btw, and a BFC fan, tho only occasionally seen as great by my kids on fish n’ chip night). London, particularly, is a gravitational well when it comes to talent.