Sunday Tribune

Name game is no plane sailing

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The naming of airports is a difficult matter,

It isn’t just one of your holiday games;

You may think at first I’m as mad as a hatter

When I tell you an airport must have three different names.

No, I haven’t had a stroke and neither am I drunk.

WELL, I haven’t had a stroke.

This is what TS Eliot might have written if he had airports instead of cats on his mind.

It’s just as well he was more of a cat person than an airport person. Three different names would confuse a tremendous number of pilots.

Just because they wear ironed uniforms with peaked caps and gold braid on their shoulders doesn’t mean they’re demi-gods, you know. They really are just drivers of big flying taxis.

We don’t even know how good they are because there’s nothing to crash into up there. Apart from other flying taxis, obviously. And maybe the odd mountain if they’re not paying attention.

South Africa has once again been dragged to the brink of civil war, this time over the renaming of airports. Cape Town, Kimberley and I can’t remember where the others are. It doesn’t matter. It’s only Cape Town anyone cares about.

Quite frankly, I don’t give a damn if it’s renamed Harry The Strandlope­r Internatio­nal or even Joe Masepus Internatio­nal.

If you live in Cape Town and take a taxi to the airport – which you will have to do if you have friends like mine – you’re going to say to the driver: “Please take me to the airport.”

You don’t even have to say please. If you like, you can hold a gun to his head and simply say: “Airport.”

There’s less chance of him turning in his seat and saying, “Which airport?” than there is of him saying, “Airport? The movie was way better than the book.

Man, that suicide bomber getting sucked out of the plane was something else.”

If you live in any of our major cities and say you’re going to the airport, people are going to know which airport you’re talking about without you having to name it.

This means that nobody will ever actually speak its name, old or new.

I’ve lived in Durban for much of my life and I’ve never used the words King Shaka Internatio­nal because everyone seems to understand what I mean by “airport”.

I have, however, been to parties request, and not a robot.

A big square filled with smaller squares showing pictures of roads appeared. I was ordered to select all images with a bus. Cold sweat dripped on to my keyboard. Is that a truck or a bus? One square had what looked like it could be the bumper of a bus. Another had vehicles in the distance.

Was that a bus among the cars? Impossible to tell. It looked like an elephant. What if it turns out that I am a robot? I’ll never be able to have sex again. I’ll be reduced to making awkward jerking movements for the rest of my life.

And what is this unusual traffic of which I have been accused? Is showing me pictures of real traffic their idea of a sick joke? Who are these people?

I retraced my steps. Oh dear. I mentioned suicide bomber and airport in the same sentence. But how would they know? I barely remember writing that myself.

Something is going on. You only have to mention, say, dwarf-tossing on Twitter and the next thing you know your Facebook timeline is full of little people offering to be thrown about in bars.

They want money, of course. Who doesn’t these days? I wouldn’t mind getting sewn into a Velcro suit and chucked against a Velcro wall if it meant free drinks and a ride home.

But it goes beyond that. More and more people are discoverin­g connection­s between their conversati­ons and the ads that pop up on social media minutes if not seconds after those conversati­ons have taken place.

It seems apparent that trigger words are setting the whole thing off. And now that I’ve said trigger, bomb and airport in a single column, I can expect my front door to be kicked in at 2pm tomorrow by heavily armed men wearing wetsuits and night vision goggles.

Actually, given the efficacy of crime intelligen­ce in this country, the guy two streets away with the same number as mine will be having his door kicked in. He probably deserves it.

 ??  ?? When pigs fly... the names of airports will be crucial to our existence.
When pigs fly... the names of airports will be crucial to our existence.

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