Tear down all road signs, Blunkett tells Britain
New emergency measures aim to hinder Taliban forces
by Lester Haines
Home Secretary David Blunkett has ordered all of Britain's 100,000,000
roadsigns torn down amid fears that they might aid invading Taliban armies. The
plan is just one aspect of new measures ordered after Britain was officially
put under a state of emergency this morning.
A spokesman for the Home Secretary said: "As long as we live under the very
real threat of invasion it is imperative that we deny the enemy any military
advantage."
A defence analyst today backed the emergency edict, noting: "Any aggressive
incursion into Britain would be seriously hampered at every beach, in very
field, at signless crossroads, and at every umarked junction."
Blunkett's emergency proclamation is not, however, without its very own "New
Labour" benefit. "Every roadsign will be replaced with a braille equivalent,"
Blunkett's spokesman declared. "It's all part of our five-year plan to make
Britain's road system more touchy-feely."
An Islamic specialist today told The Rockall Times: "Blunkett's
strategy is a stroke of genius. The Taliban have neglected braille studies in
recent years, preferring instead to simply execute blind people. Their chances
of finding their way from Channel invasion ports to London would be practically
zero."
Meanwhile, the MOD has refused to confirm rumours that it is training crack
suicide squads of guide dogs for the blind to run at Taliban armour and
detonate explosive charges strapped to their bodies.