That's What You Call A Near Miss!
ChatterBank1 min ago
..... called for asylum seekers' hotels to be set on fire.
Compassionate Conservatism at work.
No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. 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.Violence may be the thing that some will resort to when it is obvious that governments aren't prepared to take effective action to deal with the situation.
The Tories vainly tried Rwanda but Labour have abandoned that & seem to be following an open door policy which will eventually result in disaster - probably worse than anything we have seen so far.
the nazis believed in murdering "undesirable" demographics and considered jews to be their principal "undesirable" yes ynna. i fail to see the difference when someone simply applies the same logic to another group of vulnerable people.
this woman called for hotels full of people to be burned down in order to remove asylum seekers from british society... no "concerns" over immigration can possibly validate such a view and anybody who holds them is a nazi.
Coming off a long flight, tired, stressed, and likely jet lagged, tempers could easily be frayed.
To take them to court you'd need to be prepared to try and explain police officers stamping on people's heads.
I think this case could never see a courtroom because of the egregious behaviour of the police officers involved.
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It’s worth bearing in mind what happened to Tyler Kay who reposted Connolly’s words.
The 26-year-old Northampton man received 38 months - and he pleaded guilty as soon as he could, thereby receiving the maximum one third discount.
Given his crime would not have occurred had it not been for Connnolly’s words, and Connolly did not plead guilty at her first hearing, it is hard to see how she could receive a shorter term than him.
However, there may be something exceptional in her personal consequences that, when presented to the court by her lawyer, requires a degree of judicial mercy.
//To take them to court you'd need to be prepared to try and explain police officers stamping on people's heads.//
I might agree sandyRoe if the police had stamped on their heads first , but that's not what we saw- they were punching the policemen and woman before the headstamp occurred. (Of course the police conduct wasn't acceptable either.)
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