Which was the entire point of what has been a deliberate campaign to redefine and enfeeble the word. Genocide is and should be anything but a meaningless term, but it has been made, as you say, so "subjective it's ultimately pointless" by people with no respect for the word or its history throwing it around at anything they don't like very much.
On page 1 of this thread, there is mention of the water table affecting the muddiness at Glastonbury, and the suggestion that current rainfall might therefore affect it. This is bollocks. The water table is somewhere between 30m and 60m below the ground in the Pilton area, and there are no magical monsoons that will raise it by this amount - the water table varies by maybe 2 or 3m max. across the year. If the water table ever did rise to the surface, then all the buildings and roads would collapse, sink, turn turtle or float away, and you'd be looking at a staggering natural disaster where the rescuers would be relying on hovercraft and helicopters....
Even if it pisses down, non-stop, between now and the end of May, all it would take would be a warm, dry June and we'd still have firm (albeit majorly chewed-up) ground by the time the festival started. As always, the time to start worrying about the weather is late May.
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.