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Moving on to prisons, sorry i mean holiday camps.. Quote:
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If you ever visited a one you would see the other side and it ain't very pretty.
Trust me on that. |
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Bah..Spineless lot, no one has the guts to take on Tarzan.:03: |
Tarzan? More like Quisling.
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More like hose them down with cold water. |
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Not before time....these talks are long overdue. |
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Police wake them up and evaluate if they can be trusted to continue on their merry way without interference. If not they are loaded into police van and hauled into jail or 'sobering station' which ever is more appropriate. In those cases where drunk person has injuries they are either treated on scene by ambulance staff or transported by police or ambulance into hospital A&E for treatment. A&E is last resort option for those who really need their assistance, not adult nursery. |
If only Professor Stanley Unwin had gone into politics... he made everything so clear:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBJJ6I5a5pk |
^ :haha:
Very good, but too late. The explanation for an easier "entry into the common market" will be history, and you will soon have it all back, threepence, sixpence, shilling, florin and all :03: Which will be fine by me, at least i can then get all the nuts, bolts and all that for british cars by their original designation, without having to tell Rimmer brs. that i need a bearing with a diametre of 68,85 millimeters, when 2 3/4 inch will do :D |
The latest one to jump ship....jumped before he was pushed morelike.
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As we near the end of 2017 over all I feel the Government has been bloody awful and the Opposition even worst. As we head into 2018 I see no hope what so ever and the down hill slide will continual. We need a big clean up at Westminster with almighty broom that will not be.
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How i see it with an of course outlandish point of view (not that i really know so much about political logic in my country :doh: ), i indeed think that England (which also means the UK, but England setting the course) has bigger problems than "brexit". Some of it is mentioned here in this article:
This is what we really think about Brexit in Germany "The biggest challenge for me was to try and understand those Brexiteers who enjoy all of the advantages that come with belonging to the EU but still decided to demonise it for being either a socialist conspiracy or a particularly grotesque embodiment of capitalism." "We travelled through Northern Ireland, Scotland, the South of England and the Midlands, where very often not a single person had anything positive to say about the EU and believed it was responsible for all problems facing the UK – unemployment, lack of integration, low wages, overcrowded schools and hospitals, traffic and the downfall of British industry." "I was genuinely shocked by the state of some of the towns, and by the many people I met who felt neglected and who were now driven by resentment. It made me feel very German because I longingly thought of the bundesfinanzausgleich (equalisation payment mechanism), a system that aims at balancing the wealth of the Bundesländer and leads to a fairer distribution of funds throughout the country." "In a more or less desperate attempt to view the situation more objectively, I visualised to what extent the EU is an institution particularly profitable to Germany, politically and economically, and the way it has been glorified by the Germans throughout recent history. I came to realise how distorted the German view of the EU is – distorted by affection, as opposed to the hostility I was observing in the UK." Also, that: What do Germans think about Brexit? They pity us. "A couple of Germans will have raised a glass to the British flipping the bird at the EU establishment on Thursday night. But politically that sentiment has been voiced only in minority fringes, such as the Anti-capitalist Left group of the German Left party, or the wilder edges of Alternative für Deutschland, the party that was founded on an anti-euro ticket in 2013 and has since grown on the back of populist anti-refugee messages." The latter is not what Germany thinks now though, i think. But the shock and disbelief was indeed present and felt here. Unfortunately, like in Germany, the big clean up mentioned by Steed will probably never come :shifty: |
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