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49 minutes ago, Renton said:

:lol: I would love it if the bailiffs arrived mob handed  at his flat at number 11. 

 

This makes him pretty much ineligible for credit or a mortgage. Still, just proves he's one of the lads. 🤷‍♂️

 

Is this why he's "borrowing" money from tory doners? 🤔

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Those quotes look like they were written by an out of touch man knocking on 70.

I can't see young 'woke' activists giving up the fight for equality in order to march for a new economic programme. His advice is to simply ignore the liberal left, did he do that when he repealed section 28 or lowered the age of consent for gay men?

I'd like to read the full essay but from the excerpts I think he's pointing out the obvious problems without providing any viable solutions.

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1 hour ago, PaddockLad said:

 

Two ex-wives, unpaid debts, cadging off his mates, at least six kids (most of which he doesn't see or acknowledge) and shacked up in free government accomodation with a bird who's 23 years his junior. If it weren't for the pure fortune of birth he'd be the star of a Channel 5 poverty documentary.

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28 minutes ago, ewerk said:

Two ex-wives, unpaid debts, cadging off his mates, at least six kids (most of which he doesn't see or acknowledge) and shacked up in free government accomodation with a bird who's 23 years his junior. If it weren't for the pure fortune of birth he'd be the star of a Channel 5 poverty documentary.

 

Someone nearly as clever as you said as much on twitter earlier today ;)

 

 

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7 minutes ago, Renton said:

No.

 

It's funny how you imagine people on here before you meet them. For years I imagined Alex looked like James Dean. Imagine my disappointment! 

 

Dean Norris, more like 

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4 hours ago, Renton said:

 

Is this legit given the incorrect name and address? I can imagine his team making shit up like this so he can prove its false and muddy the waters on his real cases pending. 

 

 

Hmmmm.

 

 

 

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8 minutes ago, Renton said:

 

Hmmmm.

 

 

 

It sounds like a trick I've employed from time to time before with large corporations. You raise a claim then send it to a general address marked for the attention of no one in particular so it gets ignored every time it's sent then the court sides with you because no one from the corporation comes to defend as they don't even know the claim exists.

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10 hours ago, Renton said:

 

Hmmmm.

 

 

 

Might at least pretend that they are going to apply to the Court to have the judgement set aside, before defending it on the basis that it is without merit - rather than just tell the Court to wipe the slate clean because we said so. :smile:

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I see Johnson hasn't even had the decency to offer an apology in the House to the families of the Ballymurphy massacre where ten innocent civilians were shot by the army. Even David Cameron came to the House to apologise for Bloody Sunday after that report was published. He really is a scumbag of the highest order.

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And just a bit of background on Ballymurphy, it wasn't a single event like Bloody Sunday, it was three days of murder by the British army.

Quote

Six civilians were killed on 9 August:

Francis Quinn (19), shot while going to the aid of a wounded man.[13][6]
Father Hugh Mullan (38), a Catholic priest, shot while going to the aid of a wounded man, reputedly while waving a white cloth to indicate his intentions.[13][14][15]
Joan Connolly (44), shot as she stood opposite the army base. It has been claimed she was shot by three soldiers and that she might have survived had she been given medical attention sooner, but she lay injured in a field for several hours.[13][16][17][15]
Daniel Teggart (44) was shot fourteen times. Most of the bullets entered his back, allegedly as he lay injured on the ground.[13][1]
Noel Phillips (20), shot as he stood opposite the army base.[13][18]
Joseph Murphy (41), shot as he stood opposite the army base.[13] Murphy was subsequently taken into army custody and after his release, as he was dying in hospital, he claimed that he had been beaten and shot again while in custody. When his body was exhumed in October 2015, a second bullet was discovered in his body, which activists said corroborated his claim.[19]
One civilian was killed on 10 August:

Edward Doherty (28), shot while walking along Whiterock Road.[20]
Another three civilians were shot on 11 August:

John Laverty (20) and Joseph Corr (43) were shot at separate points at the top of the Whiterock Road. Laverty was shot twice, once in the back and once in the back of the leg. Corr was shot several times and died of his injuries on 27 August.[13][21]
John McKerr (49), was shot in the head by an unknown sniper while standing outside a Catholic church and died of his injuries on 20 August.[6][22][23] The 2021 inquest was unable to establish who had killed him.[24]
An eleventh civilian died on 11 August, following an altercation with a group of soldiers:

Paddy McCarthy (44), McCarthy's family allege that an empty gun was put in his mouth and the trigger pulled, he suffered a heart attack and died shortly after the alleged confrontation.

 

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The late 90s would have been far too early in the peace process to begin that, peace is still fragile but was much more so back then.
 

I don’t think there’s any overarching system that’s going to solve the problem. Every family of a murder victim wants answers. This doesn’t just apply to victims of British forces, this week a man was arrested for the IRA murder of a 23 year old police officer. What the Tory government are proposing would put an end to all prosecutions and that is just going to prolong the feelings of injustice.

The problem with prosecutions, court cases and government enquiries are that they are so expensive and take so long. Some system short of full criminal prosecutions which could accept lower levels of evidence and provide verdicts which don’t carry criminal convictions might work but I’m not sure whether such an idea is even practical or whether if would have the confidence of the unionist and nationalist communities.

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