Nick Dixon’s Best Moments of 2022
Perhaps a touch late, but here are my highlights of the past year, as we enter a new one that is hopefully even more progressive and diverse AF.
Our brave stand in Qatar
While other football teams stood up to Qatar by standing up, England did it by kneeling down, thus outdoing all the lazy teams who don’t care about social justice.
Gary Neville proved the best way to criticise a tyrannical foreign regime is by taking money from it. This shows you really mean it, because you risk losing your fee. That’s why it’s best to start the criticism after the bank transfer has gone through. Get your PA to check, then once those digits hit your account, start mouthing off immediately.
Our apology for Love Actually
Richard Curtis bravely apologised for his highly popular film, and its appalling lack of diversity. When the movie was released in 2003, Curtis was embarrassingly unaware of the safe political standpoints of 2022. Thus he packed his film with a repellent albino race, known at the time as ‘white people’. Luckily this obscure ethnic group, whose primitive societies were characterised by fascism and sunburn, died out around 2010.
Watching the movie now feels roughly the same as sitting through a four hour Holocaust documentary. A necessary reminder of what must never happen again. The philosopher Jeremy Vine did great work in 2022 condemning this vile propaganda to the dustbin of history.
The anointing of Queen Greta
In 2022 we officially recognised Greta Thunberg as Queen and Ruler of the Western Territories. Although we all loved Her Majesty already, she did not officially become Queen until her father logged into her Twitter account and made a penis joke at the expense of a former kickboxer.
Europe has, of course, now been renamed Saint Gretasburg, and Christmas has been replaced with ‘Greta Totally Owning Tate With Her Dick Joke’ day, more simply known as ‘GOTDJD’.
Harry and Meghan stole our hearts
I hardly need to tell readers, but 2022 was the year Harry and Meghan made us fall in love with them all over again, with their brilliant Netflix documentary, My Family Are Mean.
Until this year, Britain, and indeed the world, had loved our royal family, particularly the late Queen Elizabeth II. But with the release of MFAM (as it became known to cool people) our affection shifted violently towards the ginger prince and his beautiful diverse owner, Meghan.
So strong was our love for the couple, that the once popular television presenter Jeremy Clarkson was brutally condemned for writing a disgusting piece of serious journalism about the enchanting Meghan. Ironically, after calling for our beloved Duchess to suffer a medieval punishment, it was Clarkson who was stretched on a rack for several days in the public square, until he finally recanted by uttering the words, “Ok, she was quite hot in Suits.”
At this point, Clarkson was allowed down from the torture device, but later died anyway due to his new-found extreme love of our great Duchess. Sad, but what a way to go! We are totes jealous, Jezza.
The Devil bought Twitter
This might seem strange to include in a list of best moments, but 2022 was the year we finally identified the Devil in his human form. ‘Elon Musk’ bought the popular social media app, Twitter, and in doing so exposed himself as the dark prince of evil.
He began his reign of terror by immediately reinstating various depraved people who believe in cruel, archaic practices like free speech and claiming that women exist.
While this ‘best moment’ is not a wholly good thing, in that Satan himself is now in charge of an influential online platform, at least we know who and what we are dealing with. In 2023, we have a good chance of destroying the Prince of Darkness by getting the EU to pass some new laws protecting us all from his deadly memes.
We discovered Zelenskyy
Though the outbreak of war in Europe is arguably not a positive, 2022 was the year we discovered the bravest man to have ever lived, our hero Volodymyr Zelenskyyy.
Zelenskyyyy proved himself the most capable military leader of all time when it came to asking for large sums of money. Also, as my female friends never tire of telling me, he made the swamp green woolly jumper sexy again.
I probably shouldn’t say this, but part of me wants the war to continue as long as possible just so I can see more of this rugged new hero. It’s a toss-up between Prince Harry and Zelenskyyyyy for most eligible man of 2022. Or it would be if they weren’t both already married, dammit!
Biden rescued Brittney Griner
Speaking of war, a clear highlight of 2022 was the Biden administration bravely rescuing basketball player and criminal Brittney Griner, in exchange for a minor Russian arms dealer known as the ‘Merchant of Death’.
War has changed. Modern conflicts are not resolved by having a fleet of more than 60 cargo aircraft packed with weapons, or training entire armies of children to kill. No, they are won by refusing to stand for the national anthem and throwing an orange ball around while being a lesbian.
The fact that Biden recognised this is why he is the shrewdest president of all time.
That’s all, folks!
Well, those are my top moments of 2022. Feel free to comment with your own, and let’s look forward to 2023.
With a bit of luck this will be the year we finally eradicate the human race completely and save the planet. And if that happens, I for one can’t wait to write about it!
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You forgot the bit about Boris Johnson when he saved the world from Russian domination and was rewarded by his loyal team with early retirement and untold riches doing what he does best – acting as his wife’s ventriloquist’s dummy.
Something I saw in Caversham today (but it was very likely already there yesterday): A NHS poster marketing this winter’s flu jab which didn’t mention COVID.
It’s dead, Jim.
I suspect too many people are now suspicious of the C1984 injections so our ‘authorities’ are hoping to trap a few more by offering the nice, friendly ‘flu jab. That should get mRNA in to a few more arms.
I don’t think there is a mRNA-based flu vaccine yet and the important bit about this poster was that it didn’t mention COVID at all, just as if it had never existed. Anything else I’ve seen from the NHS about vaccines this autumn/ winter was always trying to market both flu shots and COVID boosters.
There are a few Chinks in their armour though , bringing some sort of new moronic ( I mean omicron🤦🏼♂️😉 ) type variant to our shores to keep the story that never ends going !!..
I feel duly inspired! But what about Andrew Tate? I don’t really know who he is or why I should care. But not knowing might be another blessing.
The highlight of the year has to be the brief few minutes when the temperature next to a busy runway at RAF Coningsby rose above 40 degrees.
At a time when the Great Barrier Reef is in excellent health, arctic sea ice refuses to disappear, and polar bears just won’t go extinct it proves that our leaders are right and we all need to face an impoverished future of high energy prices and potential blackouts to prevent such a catastrophic event ever happening again.
Thanks very much Nick – very enjoyable.
https://youtu.be/AQGerPlshww
I must remember to re-post tomorrow.
The world’s greatest philanthropist. He’s a firkin Saint.
You’ve got to take the masses with you if you are going to be enabled to implement your evil plan. Pure evil dressed up as philanthropy.
What I appreciate the most about Rishi Sunak is his banning fracking again, which has allowed American gas producers to frack even more gas to liquify and sell us, and more foreign flagged gas tankers to carry this LNG to our shores where it can be used. This enables American to get richer and the UK poorer but feeling so much more virtuous about not producing carbon-generating fossil fuels. You know it makes sense.
The best thing about this is that he didn’t even ban fracking. He banned the exploration of fracking as potentially worthwhile energy source in the UK on the grounds that people really don’t want to know that because it’s sort-of new and therefore, must be dangerous.
No problem was ever solved by someone firmly committed to putting his head in the sand at sight of anything remotely uncommon.