If you are like me, you hate Job worthy bureaucrats well I came across this article in the Daily Mail. I thought it was hilarious, and deserved to be shared on my blog, sadly the book is out of print now maybe an updated version should be created. Anyway here it is the article in full, maybe it will give you some ideas if you ever come across the modern version of what Sir Patrick Moore called Twitmarshes.
Sir Patrick Moore, who died earlier
this month aged 89, is best remembered as the motor-mouthed frontman of
television’s longest running show with the same presenter, The Sky At
Night on BBC1.
But the astronomer and entertainer had another side, as a self-appointed scourge of bureaucracy.
In
1981, under the pen-name R. T. Fishall, he published an irreverent
guide to causing havoc and taking vengeance on the people who were
burying Britain under paperwork and tying the country up in red tape.
The book, now sadly out of print, was
called Bureaucrats: How To Annoy Them, and it was inspired by a
correspondence with a man named Whitmarsh from the Southern Gas Company,
who had sent Moore a final demand for £10 of repairs, despite the fact
that the central heating at his cottage in Selsey, West Sussex, was
oil‑fired.
The great astronomer snapped. He realised that Britons
everywhere were being harangued, overcharged, harassed, bullied and
driven to distraction by the Whitmarshes of this world — or Twitmarshes,
as he renamed them.
‘We are
not ruled directly by Parliament,’ he wrote, ‘but by minor officials —
bureaucrats of all descriptions, safely embraced in the arms of the
civil service, with immunity from dismissal and nice, inflation-proof
pensions.’
The dedication of
the book made his intentions clear: ‘To all bureaucrats and civil
servants, everywhere. If this book makes your lives even the tiniest bit
more difficult, it will have been well worth writing.’
Here, in blistering extracts, he sets out his manifesto ...
Ten commandments for bureaucrat bashing
1.
Never say anything clearly. When writing to jobsworths and timeservers,
word your letter so that it could mean almost anything…or nothing.
2. Don’t be legible. Always write letters by hand, and make your verbose scrawl as impenetrable as possible.
3.
Garble your opponent’s name. Misread the signature. If the
correspondence is signed ‘M. Harris’, address your reply to ‘N. Hayes’
or ‘W. Hardy’. Don’t get too flippant though — the penpushers might
lack a sense of humour, but if you write to ‘M. Hedgehog’, they will
sense a legpull.
4. Give
fake references. If you have a letter from the tax office, ref:
EH/4/PNG/H8, mark your reply with some other code in the same format,
such as DC/5/IMH/R9. This should ensure that the taxman wastes minutes,
or hopefully hours, rooting for a file that doesn’t exist.
5. The same goes for dates. Get them slightly wrong, every time.
Stamp away: And make sure it's in the wrong place
6. Follow up your fakes. Write to request
a reply to letters that you haven’t sent, and include bogus reference
numbers. This is a surefire timewaster and might even, if your Twitmarsh
is of a sensitive disposition, reduce him to tears.
7. Never pay the right amount. Include
a discrepancy in every envelope — never too much, but always more than a
few pence. A sum between £1.20 and £2.80 is recommended. Then you can
start an interminable correspondence to reclaim the overpayment (or
dispute the underpayment).
8.
When enclosing a cheque, staple it to the letter. With two staples. Or
three. Right in the middle of the cheque. At the least, you’ll waste
someone’s time — at best, you might wreck their computer.
9.
As a point of honour, never give up on a correspondence before at least
six pointless letters have been exchanged. Think big and aim for double
figures.
10. If a
postage-paid envelope is not supplied by your Twitmarsh, send off your
reply without a stamp. The bureaucrats will have to pay much more at the
other end.
Stamp with fury
By way of a variation on point 10, you could put the wrong postage on, in the wrong place.
One
man who got into a war of letters with the Royal Mail itself persisted
in sticking his stamp right in the middle of the envelope. This makes it
difficult for the franking machines.
This
petty but effective tactic riled every official in the postal
hierarchy, right up to the district chief manager. He wrote to the
rebel, warning him never to stick a stamp anywhere but the top
right‑hand corner of the envelope.
By
return came an envelope with the stamp dead centre, and a little rhyme
enclosed: ‘Hey diddle diddle, the stamp’s in the middle.’
Grease is the word
Endless invention can be employed, providing you follow the Fundamental Rules.
For
example, when filling in a form, always keep a candle handy. Whenever
you come to a box marked ‘For official use only — do not write in this
space’, rub the candle gently over the box. A thin layer of grease will
make it impossible for your Twitmarsh to write on the paper, and might
muck up his ballpoint, too.
When
filing in forms, do not feel obliged to use English. Why not employ
that smattering of Spanish you picked up on your holidays, or the
residue of schoolroom French from your third-year days?
If you or a friend speak a really obscure language, so much the better — especially one that doesn’t use the Roman alphabet.
Nothing
makes Twitmarsh’s brow perspire more freely than the sight of a form
filled out in squiggly script. Do the first page in Russian, the second
in Chinese and the third in Hindi.
For extra marks, find someone who speaks Klingon, the language of Star Trek’s aliens.
Tax the Taxman
Public enemy No 1, of course, is Twitmarsh the Taxman.
The
inland revenue strives to give the impression of a service staffed by
kindly, conscientious, basically decent officials who are doing their
jobs efficiently and who are always ready to help and advise.
Alas, this is not always the case. Sometimes one encounters a real maggot.
The
tax inspector, unfortunately, occupies an unassailable position. He can
persecute his victims to the point of breakdown — that’s his job.
Confusion is the solution: An annoyed civil servant equals a job well done
It sometimes seems that the tax office
is staffed by specially selected sadists. Take Twitmarsh of the VAT
office. He has everything to gain by pursuing excessive demands, and
nothing to lose. It isn’t his money at stake, and the worst that can
happen is a gentle reprimand from the ombudsman, who has all the
ferocity of a raspberry blancmange.
He
must be fought. Have no mercy. Bombard him with convoluted enquiries,
in bad handwriting and worse English. Scatter invented Latin phrases
throughout — my favourite is the schoolboy motto, ‘Itisapis potitis
andatino ne’ (I’m not going to translate it, but you can work out the
meaning if you move the spaces around).
The
reply you receive will probably be terse. Leave things for a few days,
and then send a photocopy of exactly the same letter, requesting a
reply. You needn’t say that it has already been answered — that will
only dawn on Twitmarsh after he has wasted more time.
Another
useful tip is to send the tax man, out of the blue, a small cheque (or
better still, a postal order) for which he hasn’t asked. Make it a
really trifling sum, say £7.86 — certainly no more than a tenner.
Enclose
a grumpy letter, to the effect that you really can’t understand why
this piffling sum is being demanded but that of course you will pay, as
ordered.
If the cheque is
returned, write back, demanding to know why the tax office requested it
in the first place, and whether they have nothing better to do but waste
your time. Be sure to add bogus reference numbers in the appropriate
format — that really sends them running in circles.
When
you pay your next genuine tax demand, be sure to hold back that £7.86,
with a note reminding Twitmarsh that you have already paid.
When
eventually it is decided that you still, in fact, owe that money,
jumble up the numbers on the cheque – send them £6.87, or £8.76. Then
send a letter querying the discrepancy. Repeat ad infinitum.
The
revenue offices never stop complaining that their staff are overworked
and their departments underfunded. Unless something is done to alleviate
the crisis, they insist, the entire tax system could break down.
This is your goal. Never cease to dream.
Jobsworths’ jargon and what it really means
Do
not be fooled by the conciliatory tone of a bureaucrat. The Twitmarsh
is at his most dangerous when using bland officialese. Study the
following guide to official jargon:
Your letter has been carefully considered and its contents noted = I haven’t looked at it.
A full survey of the problem has been put in hand = Nothing will be done.
I assure you that action will be taken as soon as possible = Nothing will ever be done.
Urgent action will be taken in the very near future = Nothing will be done until hell freezes over.
I fully appreciate the problem = I couldn’t care less.
I have every sympathy with your point of view = I’ve already forgotten your existence.
You are fully entitled to make your views known = Nobody here takes the blindest bit of notice.
Your complaint is being fully investigated = Your letters have been filed in the wastepaper basket.
Your complaint appears to have some validity, and will be thoroughly investigated = Your letters were torn into small squares before being dropped in the wastepaper basket.
I will refer the matter to the appropriate department
= Your letters have been shredded, your computer file has been deleted
and all future correspondence will go straight into the wastepaper
basket unopened.
A full and detailed reply will be sent to you in the near future = You’ll never hear another word from us.
The possibility of an administrative/computer error is being investigated = Life in this office is one foul‑up after another, but you’ll never get us to admit it.
You will appreciate the complex nature of this matter = I just can’t be bothered to think about it.
The increase in our charges is, regrettably, unavoidable = You are going to pay for my bonus.
This department endeavours to process all matters outstanding with the minimum of delay = I’m playing golf this afternoon.
I will be delighted to see you to discuss the matter at your convenience = Just try getting past my secretary.
I do not really feel that any useful purpose is to be served in pursuing this matter further = Get stuffed.
May I assure you of our attention and consideration at all times = Go and boil your head. And then get stuffed.
Plods on parade
Beat a bobby: The simplest way to annoy an officer
Special care must be taken with PC Twitmarsh.
The
police do a splendid job, on the whole, but most police constables go
through a difficult stage, a sort of puberty, usually after being passed
over for their sergeant’s stripes for the first time.
They look for someone to take out their frustrations upon, and the most convenient victim is invariably a motorist.
Drunken,
incompetent and reckless drivers deserve no sympathy. The menace of PC
Twitmarsh is that he’s out to catch the motorist who is doing a few
miles per hour too many on a safely deserted road.
When he pulls you over, he will adopt one of two personae: Good Twitmarsh and Bad Twitmarsh.
GT
is affable, charming, even apologetic. He’ll say: “I’m sorry to trouble
you, sir, but were you aware that this is a 30mph area and you, in
fact, were doing 34mph?”
BT
is intimidating, blustering, even rude: “Who do we think we are, James
Bond? Been drinking, have you? Martinis, was it? Come on, licence and
insurance, let’s be seeing them.”
In both cases, the end result is the same — a fine and the risk of losing your licence.
About
traffic wardens I will not write here, in view of the laws regulating
the use of obscene language. Suffice to say that these wretched
creatures, sub-human and depraved, are the worst of all manifestations
of modern civilisation. Let’s leave it at that.
Plan your attack
A
good opening gambit is to write to the planning officer, putting
forward some constructive comments about the local one-way system. Make
them just sane enough to be taken seriously.
You
will probably get a rational reply, and before Twitmarsh knows it he
will be embroiled in a long and quite futile correspondence.
You could suggest, for instance, an elaborate underpass below a level crossing, and a flyover to replace the mini roundabout.
Extra
marks if you can induce the planning department to enter into a
discussion on the feasibility of introducing trams into a pedestrianised
area. Or a monorail. Planners can never see the farcical element in
monorails.
When the
correspondence is well under way, leak it to the local paper. Use an
assumed name, such as Mrs U. Rynall. Nothing is more calculated to make a
pompous Twitmarsh grind his teeth in rage.
Troublesome priests
Stock
phrases, all of which I have tried with degrees of success, when
confronted by a missionary from some sect or other on my doorstep:
1. ‘I’m sorry, I’m a druid. And I’m a busy druid. I have a sacrifice to perform. Good afternoon.’
2. ‘No, I haven’t looked at the Bible lately. I really don’t have time to be delving into science fiction.’
3.
‘I happen to know that my friend Dr Alonzo Schmidt is very keen to talk
to someone like you. A very probable convert, I should say. You must
visit him. He lives at 52 Mulberry St…(and then name some town at least
six miles away).’
There probably won’t be a Mulberry Street, and there certainly won’t be a Dr Alonzo Schmidt.
© Patrick Moore.
2 comments:
Quite the troublemaker, he was. Although I agree with him. Sadly, there is too much government these days and too many people making an effort to muddle the laws they keep changing. Almost as though government workers are following Sir Patrick Moore's handy guide.
Totally agree with you Joss, too many chiefs as the saying goes.
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