Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
Are Rioting youths anything new?
// The Bullingdon Club was founded in the 19th century as a hunting and cricket club, but is now devoted to drink and dining. Membership is by invitation only and normally limited to alumni of leading public schools. New recruits are secretly elected before being informed of their good fortune by having their college bedroom invaded by way of a window and methodically "trashed".
The club's notorious dinners typically involve members booking a private dining room (under an assumed name) and drinking themselves silly before destroying it elaborately. They wear royal blue tailcoats with ivory lapels, and - having made merry - pride themselves in politely paying the restaurant's owners compensation in high-denomination banknotes. One former Bullingdon member, the journalist Harry Mount, has recalled "being rolled down a hill by a Hungarian count". Boris Johnson once admitted to "dark deeds involving plastic cones and letterboxes".
Yet the "high jinks" that took place on the night the photo was taken (at Canterbury Quad, Christchurch) are up there with the best of them. At some point after the dinner, the group walked through Oxford when one (thought to be Fergusson, though exact recollections differ) threw a plant pot through the window of a restaurant.
The burglar alarm was activated and police descended with sniffer dogs. Six of the group were collared and spent the night at Cowley police station before being released without charge.
"David Cameron was one of the four people who escaped," a witness says. "If it wasn't for his foresight, he'd have spent a night in the clink. //
http://www.independen...ass-of-87-436192.html
But everyone deserves a second chance, don't they?
The club's notorious dinners typically involve members booking a private dining room (under an assumed name) and drinking themselves silly before destroying it elaborately. They wear royal blue tailcoats with ivory lapels, and - having made merry - pride themselves in politely paying the restaurant's owners compensation in high-denomination banknotes. One former Bullingdon member, the journalist Harry Mount, has recalled "being rolled down a hill by a Hungarian count". Boris Johnson once admitted to "dark deeds involving plastic cones and letterboxes".
Yet the "high jinks" that took place on the night the photo was taken (at Canterbury Quad, Christchurch) are up there with the best of them. At some point after the dinner, the group walked through Oxford when one (thought to be Fergusson, though exact recollections differ) threw a plant pot through the window of a restaurant.
The burglar alarm was activated and police descended with sniffer dogs. Six of the group were collared and spent the night at Cowley police station before being released without charge.
"David Cameron was one of the four people who escaped," a witness says. "If it wasn't for his foresight, he'd have spent a night in the clink. //
http://www.independen...ass-of-87-436192.html
But everyone deserves a second chance, don't they?
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No, rioting youths are nothing new. There were plenty of student riots in the sixties. There have been plenty of riots overseas too - remember Sydney?
These riots took the whole concept to a new level though. Apart from the fundamental reasons why they rioted (social disaffection, lack of discipline etc) they have social media now that can whip people into a mob mentality and the riots spread in a way they never have before (apart from LA maybe). That`s why I think it could happen again, God forbid.
These riots took the whole concept to a new level though. Apart from the fundamental reasons why they rioted (social disaffection, lack of discipline etc) they have social media now that can whip people into a mob mentality and the riots spread in a way they never have before (apart from LA maybe). That`s why I think it could happen again, God forbid.
-- answer removed --
Brendan, the Burlington Club Hooray Henrys bought themselves out of trouble. Most rioters couldn't afford to do that.
I'm saying it's wrong that the children of the rich can behave like the worst chavs and walk away while for the same actions chavs would be enjoying a spell as a guest of Her Majesty
I'm saying it's wrong that the children of the rich can behave like the worst chavs and walk away while for the same actions chavs would be enjoying a spell as a guest of Her Majesty
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