User avatar
By Boiler
#96827
davidjay wrote: Fri Sep 19, 2025 12:35 am There is a point on there though - what does make him so angry? Answer that and we'll have a much better society.
Piece on the BBC today:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0q751vlxw1o
When I eventually encounter the gang, I'm faced with a 14-year-old girl in pink leggings and Crocs.

"I'm not claiming to be innocent because I'm not," she tells us. "I've threatened people and I've hit people, I'll admit to that."

Her mouth is blue with bubblegum and expletives. "The second you get into one bit of trouble with the police, you fall into it too deep and you can't get out," she adds.

She says an injury forced her to give up sport and that behaving badly offers an alternative energy release. "I found that I get the same adrenaline boost from being in trouble with the police and being missing and stuff."

But there's little remorse. "I regret what I do, but I don't say sorry," she says to cheers from the rest of the gang.
Again: why so angry?
By Youngian
#96830
The problem with the police ignoring these attacks is that traders may have a whip round and hire their own 'police.' And little girls end up getting very hurt and crying for their mum.
By davidjay
#96872
Bones McCoy wrote: Tue Sep 23, 2025 10:05 am Classic bait and switch, beloved of scammers.


I know this is the celebrity age where a know nothing off the morning telly gets an automatic IN to political debate.
The absurd is strong in this one.

Should we really elevate somebody's mum's opinion just because an offspring can swim fast+.
Is there a heirarchy:
* Speaking as a muvva.
* Speaking as a sportsman's muvva.


+ Mother of an athlete, not mother of a soldier / sailor / airman.
Read the article and:
It's not her flag
It's not on her property
It's not affected her.

And of all the people who could have been interviewed it just happens to be one with a son who does it for Britain. What are the chances, eh?
User avatar
By kreuzberger
#98009
Recent travels have suggested that flag-shagging is not solely a British past-time. It's just that in India, they do it rather better.
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User avatar
By AOB
#100189
I saw a clip on Instagram recently ,which was from a few weeks ago, of some knuckledraggers putting up a flag on a lamppost outside a pensioner's house. He came out and politely asked them not to do it. He received dogs abuse in return. I'd like to think he has a couple of sons with the tenacity of Liam Neeson's character from Taken, who saw that clip, and settled the score at a later date, but will have to be content with the probability of it being taken down a couple of days later.

On the plus side, I've noticed sentiment against flagshaggers and also Reform, likes and comments wise on posts, are consistently as high as far right YouTube video viewing figures, which are depressingly high. It may seem from the one sided barrage from the media that the far right are currently the majority, but that's far from the case in reality, the distain for those people and what they stand for is there in abundance. You just have to search for it, unlike the stuff coming the other way which unfortunately as I say is a barrage.


Labour shouldn't be kowtowing to these people today with the immigration policy changes. They won't gain their votes, but might lose some of their own. They need to focus on the economic side of government, get better PR in and go after corporate tax dodgers.
By davidjay
#100193
If it's the clip I saw, one of the flagshaggers was filming the elderly couple while another said, "You're going to be famous." Doing that outside someone's house is intimidating and surely breaks the law. It's also a long way from ordinary people showing patriotism.
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