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Jedit posted:Why was the SNP women's rights meeting not advertised? Pretty sure it’s because it’s actually the transphobe meeting.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:18 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 07:25 |
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Jose posted:Extreme angry bald man energy
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:20 |
Part of the outrage about say, sentencing for rape or sexual assault isn't that it isn't rehabilitating the abusers - it's that it's letting of abusers "too lightly". That even if it's best for the perpetrators better functioning in society in the future for a light sentence to be given for sexual assault, it is wrong to do so - that it is unjust to the victim. If we only imprisoned people to rehabilitate them, they'd be some violent criminals we release imminently since the risk of reoffending is so low.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:21 |
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I really hate that at some point in the last 5 years I went from just assuming a "women's rights" meeting was obviously a good thing to now where I instantly assume it's anti-trans bigots.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:22 |
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forkboy84 posted:I really hate that at some point in the last 5 years I went from just assuming a "women's rights" meeting was obviously a good thing to now where I instantly assume it's anti-trans bigots. Equality! Men's Rights has been trash forever so it's great that women are on the same level now
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:29 |
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Ms Fuchi posted:So apparently this is a thing? I'm guessing it's a load of poo poo I love that I'm supposed to read this and think it's a bad thing, I'd love it if Big John was leader.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:32 |
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Nothingtoseehere posted:Part of the outrage about say, sentencing for rape or sexual assault isn't that it isn't rehabilitating the abusers - it's that it's letting of abusers "too lightly". That even if it's best for the perpetrators better functioning in society in the future for a light sentence to be given for sexual assault, it is wrong to do so - that it is unjust to the victim. If we only imprisoned people to rehabilitate them, they'd be some violent criminals we release imminently since the risk of reoffending is so low. Which places particular strain on marginalized families when the offender is someone within the family, because it puts them in the double bind where if they report the person, they lose someone who is also providing for the family, but if they don't, it encourages the person to believe that they have immunity to continue. That's why restorative justice is taking off in some quarters for dealing with these types of issues, it doesn't involve court cases and lawyers and mass public disclosure, it doesn't mean prison, but it also means making reparation and making clear that it was unacceptable conduct. It's also better at resolving issues with the abysmal conviction rate, but people who like dividing the world into "those that done it and want hanging" and "good lads who meant well" hate it.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:38 |
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ronya posted:Sentencing is not, in fact, just about harm reduction; some amount of vengeance and dignity for victims, and removal of criminals from streets, are both established and generally legitimate parts of the process (these would be the "retribution" and "incapacitation" parts of the system) But long sentences are a bad method of incapacitation too. You're spending tons of money to just sideline the issue for a while without actually doing anything about the problem, and then sentence is up and you throw an institutionalised and probably socially-nonfunctional person back onto the streets with no support. It's almost designed to maximise recidivism.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:42 |
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The Lone Badger posted:But long sentences are a bad method of incapacitation too. You're spending tons of money to just sideline the issue for a while without actually doing anything about the problem, and then sentence is up and you throw an institutionalised and probably socially-nonfunctional person back onto the streets with no support. It's almost designed to maximise recidivism. Yeah, but it polls well so actually that's all that matters.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:44 |
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The Lone Badger posted:But long sentences are a bad method of incapacitation too. You're spending tons of money to just sideline the issue for a while without actually doing anything about the problem, and then sentence is up and you throw an institutionalised and probably socially-nonfunctional person back onto the streets with no support. It's almost designed to maximise recidivism. It's not almost designed to maximise recidivism, it IS designed to maximise recidivism, because for profit prisons are a thing that, horrifyingly, exists, and this kind of doctrine comes from them.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:45 |
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Did anyone else get made to watch the state opening of parliament in school? Have memories of being a restless 10 year old having to sit through this interminable old fashioned ceremony to show us how great our democracy is. Clearly it worked.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 09:54 |
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thespaceinvader posted:I love that I'm supposed to read this and think it's a bad thing, I'd love it if Big John was leader. It's also hilarious that it's acting like Big John and Jezza have different circles to any significant extent.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:04 |
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Good moooorningquote:It was a gathering to mark Extinction Rebellion’s week of disruption. The group is asking people... to ‘take two weeks off work’ and join the revolt against the ‘climate and ecological crisis’. You can tell who they’re trying to appeal to. Working-class people and the poor of New Delhi, Mumbai and Cape Town – some of the cities in which Extinction Rebellion will be causing disruption – of course cannot afford to take two weeks off work. But then, these protests aren’t for those people. In fact, they’re against those people... quote:Think about it: they want us to halt a vast array of human activity that produces carbon. All that Australian digging for coal; all those Chinese factories employing millions of people and producing billions of things used by people around the world; all those jobs in the UK in the fossil-fuel industries; all those coal-fired power stations; all that flying; all that driving… cut it all back, rein it in, stop it. And the people who rely on these things for their work and their food and their warmth? Screw them. They’re only humans. Horrible, destructive, stupid humans. quote:They complained, hysterically, about modernity. One of them bemoaned all the electricity that is used in a city like London. So the very lighting up and warming of cities, the electricity that powers homes and workplaces and transport systems and life-support machines, is offensive to these hair-shirted, self-flagellating loathers of arrogant humankind. ‘Switch it all off’, is their alarmingly immoral cry.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:06 |
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forkboy84 posted:Did anyone else get made to watch the state opening of parliament in school? Have memories of being a restless 10 year old having to sit through this interminable old fashioned ceremony to show us how great our democracy is. Clearly it worked. Things I was forced to watch on tv as a kid (under 10) but not at school: Winston Churchill's funeral. I was not quite 5 years old. So so bored. Apollo (11?) moon landing. Boring. Ditto splash down. Boring. A state opening of parliament but I can't recall which one. Boring. I was also 'forced' to watch Charles and Di wedding in 1981 because my extremely-fond-of-the-royals nan had a tea-party that day and we all had to watch it. At school we got to watch Merry Go Round programmes for schools once a week. Lots of Eds: Oh and I forgot, at secondary school in the 70s we all had to watch a preparing for nuclear war film Jaeluni Asjil fucked around with this message at 10:19 on Oct 14, 2019 |
# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:08 |
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CGI Stardust posted:Good moooorning forkboy84 posted:Did anyone else get made to watch the state opening of parliament in school? Have memories of being a restless 10 year old having to sit through this interminable old fashioned ceremony to show us how great our democracy is. Clearly it worked.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:10 |
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Haven't almost all state opening of parliament in the modern era been in the summer? Pretty sure I woulda been on school holiday for them, not that my school would have had us watch them anyway.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:16 |
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CGI Stardust posted:Good moooorning Asking your boss for a holiday is now industrial action, how radical Guavanaut posted:We had an MP come to our school and do bouncy ball tricks. It wasn’t a Tory, was it?
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:19 |
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he's such a loving ghoul and didn't even change his name for halloween to reflect it https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1183296949157597184?s=20 https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1183661105366867968?s=20
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:19 |
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This sounds like one of those people who spell out of the age of consent not to clarify, but to bemoan.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:23 |
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Sanitary Naptime posted:It wasn’t a Tory, was it? We most likely had a notorious pedophile come to our school and do bouncy ball tricks.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:24 |
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Steve2911 posted:Maybe we should just ban tweets. A plan with no downsides
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:27 |
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Cerv posted:A plan with no downsides -Dommy Cummy, for the eighth time
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:28 |
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https://news.sky.com/story/corbyn-allies-fear-under-the-radar-power-grab-as-labour-leaders-office-undergoes-major-shake-up-11835507quote:But WhatsApp messages between members of Mr Corbyn's core team, also seen by Sky News, show they fear the review goes well beyond election preparation. I hear much skwawking in the distance
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:33 |
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Guavanaut posted:I looked up who it was likely to be, I only remember that it was a white guy and it was Labour and it was Leicester West in the 80s, and holy gently caress holy gently caress Lmao, I loving hate being right
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:39 |
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The big boy has his big lube dispenser out and his sleeves up for a quick wank:
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:40 |
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Whole lot of 'Labour in crisis!!1!' stories over the last few days. Almost like the media has to get their smears in before campaigning starts. On that note, looking forward to the queen's speech being voted down and the government falling today. In the meantime, have some existential dread about 'AI' (i.e lovely decision trees) starving people with no recourse to an actual human. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/oct/14/automating-poverty-algorithms-punish-poor Computer says no dole.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:41 |
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ronya posted:same underlying unease that makes LAB's Diane Abbott, noted fan of the police, promise to put ten thousand more police on the streets by reversing Tory cuts to police forces that are bringing KNIFE CRIMES to a street near you. I've said before that my wife works in the civilian side of the police, so I can't give out stats, but things are not good. They're struggling to keep up with not only the background radiation of crimes that present a danger to the public like murder, cuckooing, intimidation and chinese gold thefts (which can be loving vicious); they're also having to deal with a huge increase in poverty-driven and racially motivated crime. They are struggling to keep up because Tory cuts to funding didn't just pluck a number of officers off the street. With less funding, recruitment haven't been able to keep up a rolling intake to cover old officers retiring, injured officers recuperating or new intakes leaving from the increased stress or failing to pass the physical. Tories want to recruit 20k nationwide, which will barely cover the amount of officers lost thanks to the cuts. Plus, not all of them will pass training, many drop out from stress once recruited, and new officers need to be partnered with experienced officers as probationers. Just adding more new officers doesn't help. The cuts have also impacted on resilience in the contact centre, who organise where officers are deployed and prioritise which jobs are immediate / urgent / require incident management. They've impacted a potential pathway for officers to go into investigative-only roles and solve a long standing issue of the police primarily attracting boot boys with right wing authoritarian views who just want to swing a truncheon around and feel powerful. They've impacted on the civilian investigator role, on custody, on cooperation with the CPS. I know people like to pretend that the police exist only to kettle black people, but while we still live under the effects of global inequality-led capitalism, there is still going to need to be a police service. Tory policy is to reintroduce a number of officers that is less than there were before the cuts, without increasing funding to the behind-the-scenes services like civilian investigators and contact hubs. They also want to have more officers 'on the beat' which is childlike in its pandering to old people who don't know how modern policing works - with the exception of Friday & Saturday nights in city centres, an officer patrolling on foot is a resource that is ridiculously less mobile and therefore far less useful without adequate support from the contact centre. Abbott's Labour policy reverses the cuts and enables the service to do it's job again, reinstitute the investigative role, manage and deploy officers better and increase civilian roles. It allows the service to improve under a progressive government rather than providing palliative care under an authoritarian one. But it also comes alongside a social programme designed to cut out the inequality that motivates desperate people toward crime, a brexit policy designed to knock the legs out from under Farage etc and return them to crazy minority status (and negate the need to constantly dealing with mass marches), and an environmental policy that gets XR off the streets and back browsing canapees in Waitrose. Yet again it's a better policy, it's just more nuanced than the Tories and not a straightforward answer that appeals to idiots. So obviously: forkboy84 posted:Yeah, but it polls well so actually that's all that matters. kingturnip posted:The public are thick; that's all you had to say
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:46 |
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StarkingBarfish posted:The big boy has his big lube dispenser out and his sleeves up for a quick wank: The tassels on his very curtain tie backs look like the arse head Steve Bell paints him as
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:49 |
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Bobby Deluxe posted:cuckooing Who he? Friend is a probation officer and the service is in meltdown thanks to the cuts.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:55 |
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RockyB posted:Whole lot of 'Labour in crisis!!1!' stories over the last few days. Almost like the media has to get their smears in before campaigning starts. Comically enough, according to the Graun, the FTPA has once again hosed that up too: quote:Before the Fixed-terms Parliaments Act was passed in 2011, the Queen’s speech vote counted as a confidence matter and a government that lost was expected to resign. That is what happened in 1886, 1892 and 1924. Those votes all took place after general elections, and on each occasion a new administration took power without another election being called.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:55 |
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Bobby Deluxe posted:I know thread policy is ACAB and therefore less police obviously seems better, but I don't think it's fair to compare Labour's 'reverse cuts to policing' to the Tory line of 'recruit some officers and string up the criminals we do catch.' the 10,000 refers to the number of officers Abbott wants to add to community beats, fwiw "bobbies on the beat" polls well and LAB is not run by idiots
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:56 |
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ronya posted:LAB is not run by idiots who are you and what have you done with ronya? please keep doing it
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 10:58 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Who he? Bobby Deluxe posted:chinese gold thefts
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:01 |
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Tesseraction posted:Comically enough, according to the Graun, the FTPA has once again hosed that up too: Yeah, losing the QS will just be another in a string of humiliations leading up to his corpse being found in a ditch on thursday. Odds on some protesters turning up outside downing street with some bags of farmyard manure to make him a nice, warm ditch outside No. 10?
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:07 |
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https://twitter.com/SamCoatesSky/status/1183687057757147136?s=20
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:16 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Who he? It's awful because you have very vulnerable adults who are not in a position to say no, then once the cuckoo is in their house, they're afraid to call the police. By the time a neighbour or friend reports it and you have a likely enough profile (and the report back from a social worker) the police can go in, separate the victim from the cuckoos and ask if everything is OK. Then a ton of resources are needed to protect the victim from repercussions (either from the cuckoos mates or the cuckoos themselves when CPS inevitably lets them go) until they can be moved. Guavanaut posted:otoh I'm less sure about this. Thefts of Chinese gold? Thefts of gold by Chinese people? Fun fact! They frequently target Japanese and Polynesian families, who do not generally keep gold in the house, and just beat the everloving poo poo out of them then trash their houses anyway. Bobby Deluxe fucked around with this message at 11:20 on Oct 14, 2019 |
# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:17 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Things I was forced to watch on tv as a kid (under 10) but not at school: I remember being shown the raising of the Mary Rose live on TV at school. I lived in Fareham at the time so it was literally happening about a mile away. 5 year old nerd me was quite excited Can recommend going to see it btw.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:17 |
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Bobby Deluxe posted:Gangs breaking into the houses of Chinese families to steal the gold which culturally, they tend to keep their wealth in. Unlike normal burglaries which tend to be opportunists who avoid violence, gold gangs tend to go in when the family is there and beat the crap out of them until they tell them where it is.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:23 |
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ronya posted:the 10,000 refers to the number of officers Abbott wants to add to community beats, fwiw I think this is your shortest ever post. Keep it up!
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:32 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 07:25 |
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Bobby Deluxe posted:Fun fact! They frequently target Japanese and Polynesian families, who do not generally keep gold in the house, and just beat the everloving poo poo out of them then trash their houses anyway. [in Chinese] "revenge for Nanking"
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 11:32 |