Religion & Spirituality0 min ago
Bottom Pincher
49 Answers
Did the Police over-react with this bottom pinching incident?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles /news/news.html?in_article_id=472084&in_page_i d=1770
Quote from the web site:
He said a female Channel 4 producer called 999 as she chased after Mr Burdett following the incident.
"I was outside and saw her make the call as she was running after Rufus', he said. "He escaped, but then five police cars turned up. It was ridiculous."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles /news/news.html?in_article_id=472084&in_page_i d=1770
Quote from the web site:
He said a female Channel 4 producer called 999 as she chased after Mr Burdett following the incident.
"I was outside and saw her make the call as she was running after Rufus', he said. "He escaped, but then five police cars turned up. It was ridiculous."
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I guess that I must be a lesbian social worker as per AKA shadow man.
His intention may have been to have a laugh be freindly or whatever, by why should his wants be paramount wihtout considering his impact on her. She was well within her rights to consider this is assault. At what point is a woman allowed to say actually your wish to pinch my bottom is unacceptable, and as an adult you must face the consquences of breaking the law.
His intention may have been to have a laugh be freindly or whatever, by why should his wants be paramount wihtout considering his impact on her. She was well within her rights to consider this is assault. At what point is a woman allowed to say actually your wish to pinch my bottom is unacceptable, and as an adult you must face the consquences of breaking the law.
anotheoldgit
Notice in Tech section you were have some font settings issues.
On my browser, your commas and quotation marks look the same as mine. I assume you have gone into tools and then internet options at the bottom. There are some font preferences and accessibilty ones. Just as a personal preference, I use the Verdana font. It was specialy designed to be legible on screen (unlike Times).
Notice in Tech section you were have some font settings issues.
On my browser, your commas and quotation marks look the same as mine. I assume you have gone into tools and then internet options at the bottom. There are some font preferences and accessibilty ones. Just as a personal preference, I use the Verdana font. It was specialy designed to be legible on screen (unlike Times).
Ruby nobody has denied it was an assault, and nobody has praised loutish behaviour.
But............there are more things to worry about and I am sure the police have more serious criminal to catch.
On the whole, most women would not mind the behaviour. They may not like it, but they wouldn't call the police.
Isn't it odd only fat, smelly, man-hating lesbiens are against such behaviour?
But............there are more things to worry about and I am sure the police have more serious criminal to catch.
On the whole, most women would not mind the behaviour. They may not like it, but they wouldn't call the police.
Isn't it odd only fat, smelly, man-hating lesbiens are against such behaviour?
AOG
Whilst I am on my feminist soap box, I do not think the situation you describe is exactly the same, as a male you have not been fighting male dominance, sexual violence and general oppression since time began. That is a situation that has been reserved for women. However, in the context you describe, the woman behaved in an unacceptable way. Physical contact between people is context dependant is it not. It should be either by mutual agreement and relationship - family, social, employment, health or due to issues of safety, law and order such as restraint or by accident bumping in to each other, sharing a tube train. For all of these contexts there are social rules, written and not written, pinching bum of stranger in that context is not an invitation, but a violation. However, if true 5 police cars is way over the top. He should be condemned to spend time with lesbian social workers, who have not shaved their arm pits.
Whilst I am on my feminist soap box, I do not think the situation you describe is exactly the same, as a male you have not been fighting male dominance, sexual violence and general oppression since time began. That is a situation that has been reserved for women. However, in the context you describe, the woman behaved in an unacceptable way. Physical contact between people is context dependant is it not. It should be either by mutual agreement and relationship - family, social, employment, health or due to issues of safety, law and order such as restraint or by accident bumping in to each other, sharing a tube train. For all of these contexts there are social rules, written and not written, pinching bum of stranger in that context is not an invitation, but a violation. However, if true 5 police cars is way over the top. He should be condemned to spend time with lesbian social workers, who have not shaved their arm pits.
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SM
as usual you are so right. In fact if only we were not so fat and smelly, men probably wouldn�t be repulsed by us, in which case we would get our brain's sh**ged out, would see reason and stop being lessie social workers.
Does this mean I have to get divorced and work for social services? I can already do fat.
as usual you are so right. In fact if only we were not so fat and smelly, men probably wouldn�t be repulsed by us, in which case we would get our brain's sh**ged out, would see reason and stop being lessie social workers.
Does this mean I have to get divorced and work for social services? I can already do fat.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/wiltshire/6 928254.stm
where do you draw the line in these cases?
where do you draw the line in these cases?