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Post by stokeharry on Oct 2, 2015 16:50:08 GMT
Most can see through it mate You've got this horribly mixed up. Son of the Hood indeed. Yep defo not a full bag of shopping you
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Post by stokeharry on Oct 2, 2015 16:52:48 GMT
Yep defo not a full bag of shopping you You'll figure that out soon enough. Winton manor ;-)
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Post by stokeharry on Oct 2, 2015 16:55:52 GMT
Keep trying kiddo. You probably need a bit of a fillip with it. And the cleethorpes ;-)
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Post by mermaidsal on Oct 2, 2015 19:57:51 GMT
After recent reports - since derrida says he's not **************, please confine your arguments to agreeing or disagreeing with derrida as he is now constituted as a random collection of atoms? Think of it like Peter Capaldi as the Dr...
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Post by crapslinger on Oct 2, 2015 20:39:52 GMT
Ah, the traditional Derrida/************** ploy of deliberately misinterpreting something to make a point and take the discussion off at a tangent. Most can see through it mate Tries hard must do better as his ex teacher mate would say, his mentalism shows through every time as mad as f**k.
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Post by crapslinger on Oct 2, 2015 20:43:41 GMT
After recent reports - since derrida says he's not **************, please confine your arguments to agreeing or disagreeing with derrida as he is now constituted as a random collection of atoms? Think of it like Peter Capaldi as the Dr... He will be back as Arnie says, in fact there are possibly another three of him still on here why would any sane rational person behave this way , sad really is it a cry for help perhaps.
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Post by mermaidsal on Oct 2, 2015 21:38:48 GMT
After recent reports - since derrida says he's not **************, please confine your arguments to agreeing or disagreeing with derrida as he is now constituted as a random collection of atoms? Think of it like Peter Capaldi as the Dr... He will be back as Arnie says, in fact there are possibly another three of him still on here why would any sane rational person behave this way , sad really is it a cry for help perhaps.
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Post by ukcstokie on Oct 9, 2015 11:55:52 GMT
Now this could prove very worrying... www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-34483681The Greek islands have reported a surge of the number of refugees arriving of over 50% (cf. to September). If this is reflected elsewhere, then Germany (and many other States) are in for a hell of a problem in the next few weeks. They have struggled to cope with much lower numbers already. Is the rise down to the weather, the Russian air strikes, or even that people have seen that the initial wave of refugees have been accepted and looked after, and want to get to Europe before the shutters come down?
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Post by Deleted on Oct 9, 2015 12:10:31 GMT
Will this give the EU a credible reason to write off greece's debt so others dunner ask for some of the same They've literally invited these people and could have stopped it at any point
Long shots know, but I've always been a cynical cunt
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Post by The Drunken Communist on Oct 16, 2015 8:48:57 GMT
EU to offer Turkey $3.4billion to stop refugees crossing into Europe. The European Union has offered Turkey a possible three billion euros ($3.41bn) in aid and the prospect of easier travel visas and "re-energised" talks on joining the bloc in return for its help stemming the flow of refugees to Europe.Read More
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Post by ukcstokie on Oct 16, 2015 9:03:49 GMT
EU to offer Turkey $3.4billion to stop refugees crossing into Europe. The European Union has offered Turkey a possible three billion euros ($3.41bn) in aid and the prospect of easier travel visas and "re-energised" talks on joining the bloc in return for its help stemming the flow of refugees to Europe.Read MoreSo on the one hand we have Germany encouraging refugees over - offering that they will be looked after when they arrive, then on the other we have the EU trying to stop them travelling. Joined up or what? And the people who suffer are the refugees who will try and travel and then have Turkey blocking them.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 16, 2015 9:08:04 GMT
EU to offer Turkey $3.4billion to stop refugees crossing into Europe. The European Union has offered Turkey a possible three billion euros ($3.41bn) in aid and the prospect of easier travel visas and "re-energised" talks on joining the bloc in return for its help stemming the flow of refugees to Europe.Read MoreAnd we are handing over full control of our country to these morons
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Post by nietzsche on Feb 21, 2016 21:17:15 GMT
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Post by ukcstokie on Feb 21, 2016 23:20:26 GMT
It's a shame that it's come to this: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35625595The refugees needed helping, but the open door policy pushed by Merkel could very well turn out to be one of the biggest mistakes in recent times.
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Post by stayingupfor GermanStokie on Feb 22, 2016 2:05:47 GMT
It's a shame that it's come to this: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35625595The refugees needed helping, but the open door policy pushed by Merkel could very well turn out to be one of the biggest mistakes in recent times. It doesn't surprise me in the slightest.... Don't forget that the east is still very nationalist and has been since before reunification.... Despite the repeated attempts by the Bundestag trying to subdue any movement.... I have a large number of Family in Halle, Saxon and there is still a lot of pain from what the soviets did fuelling nationalistic viewpoints that are hard to shake off... The right scores quite highly in the former DDR... And increasingly so the longer this goes on...
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Post by britsabroad on Feb 22, 2016 10:31:10 GMT
It's a shame that it's come to this: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35625595The refugees needed helping, but the open door policy pushed by Merkel could very well turn out to be one of the biggest mistakes in recent times. Her legacy may very well be as the woman who collapsed the EU. Certainly now will end up as the worst Chancellor since 1945.
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Post by crapslinger on Feb 22, 2016 10:58:04 GMT
It's a shame that it's come to this: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35625595The refugees needed helping, but the open door policy pushed by Merkel could very well turn out to be one of the biggest mistakes in recent times. Her legacy may very well be as the woman who collapsed the EU. Certainly now will end up as the worst Chancellor since 1945. Stupid cow has fcuked her own country up and is looking to offload the migrants she invited on to others, self inflicted pain do we want to share it not in a million years.
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Post by starkiller on Feb 22, 2016 12:28:53 GMT
Her legacy may very well be as the woman who collapsed the EU. Certainly now will end up as the worst Chancellor since 1945. Stupid cow has fcuked her own country up and is looking to offload the migrants she invited on to others, self inflicted pain do we want to share it not in a million years. She did it according to her masters' bidding.
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Post by ukcstokie on Feb 22, 2016 21:38:36 GMT
It's a shame that it's come to this: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35625595The refugees needed helping, but the open door policy pushed by Merkel could very well turn out to be one of the biggest mistakes in recent times. It doesn't surprise me in the slightest.... Don't forget that the east is still very nationalist and has been since before reunification.... Despite the repeated attempts by the Bundestag trying to subdue any movement.... I have a large number of Family in Halle, Saxon and there is still a lot of pain from what the soviets did fuelling nationalistic viewpoints that are hard to shake off... The right scores quite highly in the former DDR... And increasingly so the longer this goes on... Yes, it's hardly surprising is it? More trouble: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35633471Very sad that these poor people are subjected to this but also that the authorities - who must be concious of the prevailing local sentiment - aren't more flexible to prevent the refugees being put into that position. But I guess when you have the scale of immigration that Merkel has encouraged, then you will be forced to put some refugees in places where the existing inhabitants are less than welcoming. Also, I'm wondering if the reporting of this is done with the same reluctance that problems caused by the refugees is subjected to?
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Post by bigjohnritchie on Feb 24, 2016 7:56:44 GMT
This EU malarkey is proving expensive Taxpayers face bill of millions to tackle EU migrant crisis dailym.ai/21ecs1a
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Post by ryan4england on Feb 24, 2016 9:34:15 GMT
Its Funny how the majority of these refugees are young single men/lads
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Moosehead
Youth Player
Posts: 306
Location: Nottingham
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Post by Moosehead on Feb 24, 2016 9:58:07 GMT
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Post by metalhead on Feb 24, 2016 13:07:07 GMT
I find this whole debate very conflicting. On the one hand, I feel genuinely sorry for the families, especially children who's only crime was to be unlucky enough to be born into a war-torn country. These kids aren't interested in killing people, or 'inflicting jihad'. They're poor and very unfortunate.
Then on the other hand, you have numerous absolute villains who are taking advantage of a very creaky system which we've implemented. What happened in Germany was utterly disgusting and reprehensible, and the media covering it up doesn't help.
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Post by crapslinger on Feb 24, 2016 13:13:39 GMT
I find this whole debate very conflicting. On the one hand, I feel genuinely sorry for the families, especially children who's only crime was to be unlucky enough to be born into a war-torn country. These kids aren't interested in killing people, or 'inflicting jihad'. They're poor and very unfortunate. Then on the other hand, you have numerous absolute villains who are taking advantage of a very creaky system which we've implemented. What happened in Germany was utterly disgusting and reprehensible, and the media covering it up doesn't help. It is concerning the way this has or has not been reported on in the media as you say, if those criminals had been football hooligans it would have been splashed all over the news etc. within hours, it begs the question why it was kept under wraps along with such atrocities as Rotherham in this country.
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Post by bigjohnritchie on Feb 25, 2016 22:20:05 GMT
The EU's migration system is just ten days from 'completely breaking down' if it does not curb the number of people arriving in Europe, the bloc's migration commissioner has warned. Europe has until a March 7 summit with Turkey to restrict the flow of refugees into the continent or face a melt down in the EU's migration set up, according to Dimitris Avramopoulos. He told a meeting of interior ministers in Brussels today: 'In the next 10 days, we need tangible and clear results on the ground. Otherwise there is a risk that the whole system will completely break down.' From: dailym.ai/21iCNLE................. Can our infrastructure cope with this? The latest ONS statistics/The NET figure does not tell the full story.....617,000 entered the country in the year to 2015. In the 12 months to September 2015: 617,000 people arrived in the UK. This is up 0.3 per cent on the previous year. 257,000, or 42 per cent, arrived from the European Union. This figure is up 4 per cent on the year. 130,000, or 21 per cent, arrived from the 'EU15' group of countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Sweden. This figure is up 5 per cent on the previous year. 69,000, or 11 per cent, came from the 'EU8' group of countries: Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. This figure fell on the year by 9 per cent. 55,000, or 9 per cent, came from Bulgaria and Romania. This was up 38 per cent on the year. The remaining 2,00 (0.3 per cent) came from Malta, Cyprus and Croatia. This figure was down by 60 per cent on the previous year.
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Post by bigjohnritchie on Mar 5, 2016 21:06:44 GMT
Being a refugee should not mean that you are subject to rape, male or female. Is the apparent reported rape of boys at Calais a consequence of the refugees' circumstances or is it a cultural norm? Refugee boys are being raped in the Calais Jungle dailym.ai/21dixpr
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Post by mumf on Mar 5, 2016 22:14:18 GMT
Being a refugee should not mean that you are subject to rape, male or female. Is the apparent reported rape of boys at Calais a consent the refugees' circumstances or is it a cultural norm? Refugee boys are being raped in the Calais Jungle dailym.ai/21dixprMy argument has and always will be that customs and it's equipment such as scanners can detect loads of things,but cannot fathom what's going on between the ears. It's the bit in the middle that's the most dangerous. If they don't have a passport then you have no idea of what you're dealing with or its motives and intention.
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Post by crapslinger on Mar 6, 2016 9:19:09 GMT
Being a refugee should not mean that you are subject to rape, male or female. Is the apparent reported rape of boys at Calais a consent the refugees' circumstances or is it a cultural norm? Refugee boys are being raped in the Calais Jungle dailym.ai/21dixprMy argument has and always will be that customs and it's equipment such as scanners can detect loads of things,but cannot fathom what's going on between the ears. It's the bit in the middle that's the most dangerous. If they don't have a passport then you have no idea of what you're dealing with or its motives and intention. They are illegals end of, they want to come here for an easy life this country does not need them, we are far to soft yet we keep hearing from the yoghurt knitters that we need to be more tolerant !, well that is not working so feck it let's grow a pair and sort this mess out.
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Post by mtrstudent on Mar 8, 2016 2:48:43 GMT
It sucks but I think we need to agree to cough up a decent wad of cash to get this sorted asap.
The way I see it is that we need to help out refugees where possible but this is causing so much strain that those just coming over for jobs need to be shipped back pronto. They already have rules for deciding who counts as a refugee anyways. Then we need the cash to get countries like Turkey on board to stem the flow a bit while we take in those who we can and have the money to house them and school their kids. Hopefully when Syria and Iraq get stable again many of them will be able to return home and like and understand us more than before.
Even if you're against spending our money to help desperate people now, a few hundred thousand friends in the Middle East a few years down the line has got to be worth an investment.
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Post by desman2 on Mar 8, 2016 12:02:56 GMT
It sucks but I think we need to agree to cough up a decent wad of cash to get this sorted asap. The way I see it is that we need to help out refugees where possible but this is causing so much strain that those just coming over for jobs need to be shipped back pronto. They already have rules for deciding who counts as a refugee anyways. Then we need the cash to get countries like Turkey on board to stem the flow a bit while we take in those who we can and have the money to house them and school their kids. Hopefully when Syria and Iraq get stable again many of them will be able to return home and like and understand us more than before. Even if you're against spending our money to help desperate people now, a few hundred thousand friends in the Middle East a few years down the line has got to be worth an investment. Most want to help refugees. But at the same time most have no wish to do anything for men who think they can do what they like.
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