RiffRaff Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 They are all stork raven mad, I tell you. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Salt n Vinegar Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 Whoever started with these bird puns deserves to have an albatross round their neck. Hopefully we'll branch out into something else -maybe old TV classics like The Partridge Family, Robin's Nest or Birds of a Feather. I'll be Donald Ducked if I'm going to carry on with this nonsense. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 Nothing to see here just your Normal Island media blaming Engerlands defeat on Saka despite him only playing 25 minutes, no hint of racism here at all, nope. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BFTD Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 I like the Sun's picture with Saka as the puppet master, pulling the strings on the hamster running the wheel in Gareth Southgate's mind. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cosmic Joe Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 5 hours ago, Empty It said: Nothing to see here just your Normal Island media blaming Engerlands defeat on Saka despite him only playing 25 minutes, no hint of racism here at all, nope. Surely that Star headline is racist 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
parsforlife Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 22 minutes ago, Cosmic Joe said: Surely that Star headline is racist Not even going to check what is or the subject before agreeing 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Connolly Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 Meanwhile, at the Daily Mail... 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Miguel Sanchez Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 19 minutes ago, Mark Connolly said: Meanwhile, at the Daily Mail... I read the tweet text before I saw the image and I don't think "Schnorrer" is really the most outrageous part of that byeline. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottsdad Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 41 minutes ago, Mark Connolly said: Meanwhile, at the Daily Mail... Just think back to him cutting his holiday short to fly home after the Truss implosion, to stand again for leader, and losing to Rishi Sunak. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thane of Cawdor Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 25 minutes ago, Miguel Sanchez said: I read the tweet text before I saw the image and I don't think "Schnorrer" is really the most outrageous part of that byeline. I presume you are alluding to the "ball=chewing gimp" image. I think the use of the word "punk" in this context is even worse. Slang : a young man used as a sexual partner by another man especially in a prison He must have been very drunk when he wrote that piece. Fortunately, or unfortunately, most of his dullard/dotard readership won't understand his cretinous and vile imagery.. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottsdad Posted June 8 Share Posted June 8 My mum buys the Heil on a Saturday. She likes the TV pull out. When I visited today, I checked in it where the Sunak D Day story was. Page 12. After the missing doctor and some royal getting married. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hk blues Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 7 hours ago, scottsdad said: Page 12. After the missing doctor and some royal getting married. That news must have been some shock for his wife. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ICTChris Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 That Boris Johnson article is really weird. I saw someone say that it reads like he's written it for a different audience - it reads like it's for Americans. Schnorrer is a yiddish word to describe someone as a scrounger - kind of like someone who shows up whenever there's free food. It's not really applicable in the context he gives it, it sounds like he's just wanted to use a Yiddish word for whatever reason. I thinkt he term is more used in the States where those sorts of Jewish cracks have more cultural cut through. "Punk" in the UK generally means someone who listens to punk music, has a mohawk and a leather jacket etc. In the US it can also mean someone who is raped in prison - if you fancy a miserable read google 'Donny The Punk'. I don't think anyone, least of all Daily Mail readers, would appreciate the differences between these usage. "Ball chewing gimp" is bizarre. I grew up in a world where the Tory press and politicians used to campaign to "ban this filth" when people talked about ball chewing gimps, now it;s the headline in a column by a former Tory PM. I prefered the old world to be honest. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moomintroll Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 13 hours ago, Mark Connolly said: Meanwhile, at the Daily Mail... Yeah that was unhinged to say the least. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ICTChris Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 Not sure this is the thread for this but https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd1ddegp8zvo Children starting primary one in nappies, unable to communicate properly. Parents saying "he wasn't interested in potty training so we never did it". Were you waiting for him to send you a formal communication? Fucking hell. The details of the anxiety experienced by the older children are insane as well. Kids who literally cannot go into school, turning back at the car park or reception. Forest schools, in my experience, are for nursery aged kids but apparently secondary aged pupils attend them now to learn 'bushcraft'. It's a massive cliche to say "oh you can't be coddled in the workplace like you are at school/university" but fucking hell, what's going to happen to kids who are too anxious to go into the school building when they try to have a life as adults? Has it always been like this? Were a significant percentage of kids in school always just extremely miserable and uncomfortable and it was just glossed over? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
strichener Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 42 minutes ago, ICTChris said: Not sure this is the thread for this but https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd1ddegp8zvo Children starting primary one in nappies, unable to communicate properly. Parents saying "he wasn't interested in potty training so we never did it". Were you waiting for him to send you a formal communication? Fucking hell. The details of the anxiety experienced by the older children are insane as well. Kids who literally cannot go into school, turning back at the car park or reception. Forest schools, in my experience, are for nursery aged kids but apparently secondary aged pupils attend them now to learn 'bushcraft'. It's a massive cliche to say "oh you can't be coddled in the workplace like you are at school/university" but fucking hell, what's going to happen to kids who are too anxious to go into the school building when they try to have a life as adults? Has it always been like this? Were a significant percentage of kids in school always just extremely miserable and uncomfortable and it was just glossed over? No. This has been the result of many years of government policy whereby they want children to be treated in the same way as adults as if a child always knows what they want or what is best for them. Care settings have to ask the child what they want when it comes to eating, playing etc. instead of treating them like children and having them do things that they may not choose to do but actually increases their experiences and helps them deal with other worldly situations where they may not naturally feel confident. Parents have been conditioned like this as well. It's amazing how many children that I see that will eat and behave differently when they are removed for their home environment. Why cook them special meals when you have been told by the nursery/childminder that they eat all these foods that they tell parents they don't like. The parents take the easy option and don't force issues. In particular kids that "only eat pizza" or other such nonsense. 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moomintroll Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 As much as I despise them, this isn't on the Tories. Entitled arseholes who live on benefits because "Mental Health" are the problem here, thir little ones are trained to get get ADHD and Autism from birth bcos phree munny! I married into scum like that & they freely swop tips to move to areas where the GPs will sign off anything to get some, very well paid peace. -21 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
101 Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 1 hour ago, ICTChris said: Has it always been like this? Were a significant percentage of kids in school always just extremely miserable and uncomfortable and it was just glossed over? People are literally destroying their children’s brains by putting a screen in front of them 24/7. At least before if you stuck a child in front of kids TV it was occasionally educational and wasn’t designed to be like crack for them, but there is basically no control on what you can put on your phone or tablet for them. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MazzyStar Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 hwfg 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MazzyStar Posted June 9 Share Posted June 9 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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