Bin Laden Highbury ban prompts despot crackdown
Manson family "not welcome" at Quarry Lane
by John Leyden
Taliban morale has collapsed on news that fanatical gooner Osama bin Laden
has been banned from Arsenal's home ground of Highbury.
Hopes among Taliban soliders that they might resist opposition forces have
diminished along with the prospect of the regime's leaders watching Arsenal
reach the knockout stage in the Champion's League.
In the wake of the ban, other football clubs have moved to ensure that
notorious despots will not make it through the turnstiles.
There's no place in the modern game for recipe-swapping in the Norwich City
director's box between Idi Amin and Delia Smith, the club has confirmed.
Mansfield Town has announced that Charles Manson, or any other member of the
Mason family (including Marilyn Manson), will not be welcome if they turn up
at Quarry Lane. "The last time he [Manson] came to a home match, he picked a
fight with the mascot," a spokesman said. "It was a bloodbath."
August Pinochet has been excluded by Plymouth Argyle and Myra Hindley can
forget any hopes of she might have of seeing Halifax Town play live.
Meanwhile, The Rockall Times has obtained a full list of proscribed
madmen, which includes:
- Pol Pot (Gillingham)
- David Koresh (Sunderland)
- Emperor Jean-Bédel Bokassa (Rotherham)
- Joseph Mengele (Dover FC)
A spokesman for the FA today endorsed the clubs' actions, noting: "Teams
didn't spend huge sums converting to family-friendly all-seater stadiums
simply to have them filled with genocidal dictators, homosexual mass
murderers and messianic psychopaths."