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  4. Anti-teen device?

Anti-teen device?

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  • R R Giskard Reventlov

    You lost me there Stan.

    bin the spin home

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Stan Shannon
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    Well, you just associated the hooliganism of the young with christianity. If that is true now, why was it not similarly true in the past? If christianity is the problem you are trying to imply it is, it should have been even more so when it was providing the entire cultural underpinnings of your civilization.

    Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

    R 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • L Lost User

      fat_boy wrote:

      Because you are not violent scum like most of the English.

      Bullshit. Just because you used to live in a shit-hole doesn't mean the rest of the country is as bad. And didn't you used to be one of those scumbags when you were younger fat_boy? I seem to recall tales of a feckless youth racing cars around and getting into trouble with the law. If so, then it's a bit rich to sound off about it when it would seem you used to be part of the fucking problem. However, you grew up and calmed down like the rest of us no?

      L Offline
      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #33

      Rob Caldecott wrote:

      Just because you used to live in a sh*t-hole

      The West Country is a long way from being a shit hole, and even there one sees daily exhibitions of the baseness of Englishness. The big cities are even worse.

      Rob Caldecott wrote:

      And didn't you used to be one of those scumbags when you were younger fat_boy? I seem to recall tales of a feckless youth racing cars around and getting into trouble with the law

      I was exhuberant yes, but never viiolent and never commited any crimes.

      Rob Caldecott wrote:

      If so, then it's a bit rich to sound off about it when it would seem you used to be part of the f***ing problem

      If I were though I would be even better qualified to make such comments.

      Rob Caldecott wrote:

      you grew up and calmed down like the rest of us no

      Its not just the youth, its all age groups. Thuggish, violent brutality are traits very common in English people. In France, when you walk up to a pizza van, every one says good evening. Try that in a takeaway in the UK and you stand a good chance of getting into trouble.

      Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • I Ilion

        73Zeppelin wrote:

        I got that impression. What's the root cause of that?

        Adults *refusung* to be adults. Society-as-a-whole letting human-hating lefties destroy the very society that humans need to live and flourish. People who ask about "root causes" but never *look* at human reality. People who still buy into anti-human leftist propagada for the very policies that cause these problems.

        7 Offline
        7 Offline
        73Zeppelin
        wrote on last edited by
        #34

        Shut up shithead.


        1 Reply Last reply
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        • L Lost User

          73Zeppelin wrote:

          laughed at this at first and then thought "what the hell?!!?". Just what is going on over there in England? Sharia law discussions, anti-teen devices, telling people they have "anti-social behaviour"? Are you guys in big trouble over there, or what?

          Er, just pop over to England and hang out on a street corner in an average housing estate and you will soon see why these devices are needed.

          Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

          7 Offline
          7 Offline
          73Zeppelin
          wrote on last edited by
          #35

          fat_boy wrote:

          Er, just pop over to England and hang out on a street corner in an average housing estate and you will soon see why these devices are needed.

          Yeah? I don't know, I only lived in the North Yorkshire moors for a time - I'm not so familiar with the larger English cities.


          1 Reply Last reply
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          • L Lost User

            Similar to what Digital Man said. When I were young there existed places such as youth clubs, scouts, and so on where kids could congregate and have fun without causing harm or potential harm to anyone. Youth clubs were generally closed because they were expensive to run, scouting became out-of-fashion but kids still need to be catered for. Nobody caters for them consequently they make their own fun all of this without adult supervision. So they congregate around shops. Shouting, spitting, and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Shoppers can and do feel threatened by largish groups of youths, as do shopkeepers. Police are often called to break-up such groups, after a while, the Police go to their next job, and the youths re-congregate. So this continues day after day. Thus the charge of Anti-social behaviour. Kids are bored. They have no supervised activities to keep their interest and to keep them off the streets. Spending money on supervised activities will go along way to alleviate the problem but local authorities have little if none spare cash for that. Shops wishing to reduce the congregating of youths, thus protecting their businesses, do try different things. Use of sonic speakers that emit an annoying noise that apparantly only below around 25 years can hear do, to some extent, persuade youngsters to move away. But that only moves the kids away from the front of the shop to another place. The solution - give kids something to do that stops them being bored. It will cost money. It will need dedicated adults to supervise such activities.

            I Offline
            I Offline
            Ilion
            wrote on last edited by
            #36

            Richard A. Abbott wrote:

            Kids are bored. . The solution - give kids something to do that stops them being bored. It will cost money. It will need dedicated adults to supervise such activities.

            They're not merely bored, as though "activities" and "social programs" are going to solve these problems. They've been *raised* to be warped entities who know that they are nothing and worth nothing. Consequently, they know that you(and I) too are nothing and worth nothing. This is not a problem which can be solved with even more materialism-based ideas; it it materialism which led (and inevitably leads) to this.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • J John Carson

              Megan Forbes wrote:

              Large, safe green areas for kids would do much to alleviate the problems facing urban youths (and the societies living around them). Given a chance to play outdoors daily I believe most kids would grow up a lot happier. Plus they'd have a chance to run their energy out instead of using it aggressively. A healthy diet containing the nutrients needed by their developing brains would go a long way too - the kind of food you most likely had growing up in the country.

              I live in a beach-side "village" in Australia. The parents are affluent and the kids don't lack for opportunities for exercise or anything else. I was talking to the owner of the local bread shop a couple of days ago. They regularly get hassled by local youths who are out and about at 2am on a regular basis. When I entered the bread shop, one of the kids who hassles them (he looked about 10) was there with his mother, who apparently knew nothing about what he gets up to. If the shop owners say anything to the kids, the kids just tell them to fuck off. There is an informal memorial by the side of the road leading out of the village where a car ran off the road, killing one of the occupants. The bread shop owner saw the four youthful occupants just before they drove off in the early hours of the morning --- all drunk. Interestingly enough, if you stop and look at the memorial, you will see (alongside photos and such) liquor bottles scattered all around. This is part of their tribute, you see, a celebration of the culture of drunkenness that led to the death. I'm sure there are lots of great kids with great parents. But some parents are doing a crappy job and it shows.

              John Carson

              I Offline
              I Offline
              Ilion
              wrote on last edited by
              #37

              John Carson wrote:

              I'm sure there are lots of great kids with great parents. But some parents are doing a crappy job and it shows.

              In other words, the greatness of the parents, as parents, is questionable.

              J 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • L Lost User

                Similar to what Digital Man said. When I were young there existed places such as youth clubs, scouts, and so on where kids could congregate and have fun without causing harm or potential harm to anyone. Youth clubs were generally closed because they were expensive to run, scouting became out-of-fashion but kids still need to be catered for. Nobody caters for them consequently they make their own fun all of this without adult supervision. So they congregate around shops. Shouting, spitting, and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Shoppers can and do feel threatened by largish groups of youths, as do shopkeepers. Police are often called to break-up such groups, after a while, the Police go to their next job, and the youths re-congregate. So this continues day after day. Thus the charge of Anti-social behaviour. Kids are bored. They have no supervised activities to keep their interest and to keep them off the streets. Spending money on supervised activities will go along way to alleviate the problem but local authorities have little if none spare cash for that. Shops wishing to reduce the congregating of youths, thus protecting their businesses, do try different things. Use of sonic speakers that emit an annoying noise that apparantly only below around 25 years can hear do, to some extent, persuade youngsters to move away. But that only moves the kids away from the front of the shop to another place. The solution - give kids something to do that stops them being bored. It will cost money. It will need dedicated adults to supervise such activities.

                H Offline
                H Offline
                hairy_hats
                wrote on last edited by
                #38

                Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                Kids are bored. They have no supervised activities to keep their interest

                FFS can't they amuse themselves? Don't they have the mental faculties to come up with constructive things to do? I had no supervised activities but I filled my time and never mugged a granny or smashed a window because I was bored.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • L Lost User

                  Johnny ² wrote:

                  The same (or similar) problems exist in other countries, so I don't think Englishness is the root cause.

                  Really, there is something quite unique about the level of stupid, brutal, thugisnhess one finds in England.

                  Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Johnny
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #39

                  fat_boy wrote:

                  Really, there is something quite unique about the level of stupid, brutal, thugisnhess one finds in England.

                  People generally are stupid, brutal, and thuggish. I've seen the same in other countries.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • S Stan Shannon

                    Well, you just associated the hooliganism of the young with christianity. If that is true now, why was it not similarly true in the past? If christianity is the problem you are trying to imply it is, it should have been even more so when it was providing the entire cultural underpinnings of your civilization.

                    Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                    R Offline
                    R Offline
                    R Giskard Reventlov
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #40

                    Well they are mostly christian is why. They tend to be white, teenage and unemployed or not at school. In a chrsitain country it's afair bet that they are, if not practicing, from christian stock. Apart from one or 2 odd cases other ethnic minorities don't see too much of this. And I've never seen or heard of a group of atheist kids doing it.

                    bin the spin home

                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M martin_hughes

                      73Zeppelin wrote:

                      Are you guys in big trouble over there, or what?

                      Yup! Just yesterday there was a report which said that attacks by young thugs on Firemen attending calls was up! Until 2 years ago, I would never have thought that Firemen would be the target of abuse until I saw it in person. Who in their right mind attacks the men and women attending to an inferno??!!?? And then this morning on the BBC News, that muppet of a children's commissioner came out with this lefty super-liberal mumbo jumbo about how these Wasp devices infringe children's rights! He encouraged us all to engage in dialog with the thugs they're aimed at - I sent him a letter this morning explaining that those young thugs are not children, and any attempt to "engage in dialog" will more than likely see one kicked to death[^], stabbed[^] or worse[^].

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      Le centriste
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #41

                      martin_hughes wrote:

                      I sent him a letter this morning explaining that those young thugs are not children, and any attempt to "engage in dialog" will more than likely see one kicked to death[^], stabbed[^] or worse[^].

                      The dialog simply did not happen until it was too late.

                      ----- You seem eager to impose your preference of preventing others from imposing their preferences on others. -- Red Stateler, Master of Circular Reasoning and other fallacies If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby. -- Unknown God is the only being who, to rule, does not need to exist. -- Charles Baudelaire

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • R R Giskard Reventlov

                        Well they are mostly christian is why. They tend to be white, teenage and unemployed or not at school. In a chrsitain country it's afair bet that they are, if not practicing, from christian stock. Apart from one or 2 odd cases other ethnic minorities don't see too much of this. And I've never seen or heard of a group of atheist kids doing it.

                        bin the spin home

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Stan Shannon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #42

                        Than clearly, you have not done enough to free your civilization of the vile influence of christianity. You must keep pushing until it has been entirely irradicated. That is the only thing that can save you!

                        Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                        R 7 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • I Ilion

                          John Carson wrote:

                          I'm sure there are lots of great kids with great parents. But some parents are doing a crappy job and it shows.

                          In other words, the greatness of the parents, as parents, is questionable.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          John Carson
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #43

                          Ilíon wrote:

                          In other words, the greatness of the parents, as parents, is questionable.

                          My meaning was that some parents are great (the ones with great kids) and some parents aren't great (the ones doing a crappy job that shows).

                          John Carson

                          I 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • J John Carson

                            Ilíon wrote:

                            In other words, the greatness of the parents, as parents, is questionable.

                            My meaning was that some parents are great (the ones with great kids) and some parents aren't great (the ones doing a crappy job that shows).

                            John Carson

                            I Offline
                            I Offline
                            Ilion
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #44

                            John Carson wrote:

                            My meaning was that ...

                            Yes it was, and what you wrote was clear in that regard (and we two actually explicitly agree on something) ... though, at the same time, I would insist that even great parents can have a kid who turns out to be worthless, just as worthless parents can have a kid who is a model citizen or even an exemplar of all that is best in human beings. But now, consider what you said just before that:

                            ... This is part of their tribute, you see, a celebration of the culture of drunkenness that led to the death.

                            These problems are personal and cultural. As a *culture* we Westerners have rejected the very roots of our culture, we have rejected and despised what makes us what we are (in comparison to other cultures). Neither as individuals, nor collectively as a culture, can we have it both ways. Either every every human life has worth (and if that is so, then there must be rational reasons to support the claim/belief) or none does. We are seeing worked out the denial of the worth and dignity of humans as beings made in the image of God. The problem isn't merely a "culture of drunkenness," it is a "culture of death."

                            J 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M martin_hughes

                              73Zeppelin wrote:

                              Are you guys in big trouble over there, or what?

                              Yup! Just yesterday there was a report which said that attacks by young thugs on Firemen attending calls was up! Until 2 years ago, I would never have thought that Firemen would be the target of abuse until I saw it in person. Who in their right mind attacks the men and women attending to an inferno??!!?? And then this morning on the BBC News, that muppet of a children's commissioner came out with this lefty super-liberal mumbo jumbo about how these Wasp devices infringe children's rights! He encouraged us all to engage in dialog with the thugs they're aimed at - I sent him a letter this morning explaining that those young thugs are not children, and any attempt to "engage in dialog" will more than likely see one kicked to death[^], stabbed[^] or worse[^].

                              D Offline
                              D Offline
                              Dan Neely
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #45

                              martin_hughes wrote:

                              Just yesterday there was a report which said that attacks by young thugs on Firemen attending calls was up! Until 2 years ago, I would never have thought that Firemen would be the target of abuse until I saw it in person. Who in their right mind attacks the men and women attending to an inferno??!!??

                              There's an easy solution to this. Supply the firemen with handcuffs, ankle shackles, and a catapult. Once a few of those scum get used as water balloons the rest should get the message loud and clear. And even if they don't it's not like society will be any poorer for their loss.

                              Otherwise [Microsoft is] toast in the long term no matter how much money they've got. They would be already if the Linux community didn't have it's head so firmly up it's own command line buffer that it looks like taking 15 years to find the desktop. -- Matthew Faithfull

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • S Stan Shannon

                                Than clearly, you have not done enough to free your civilization of the vile influence of christianity. You must keep pushing until it has been entirely irradicated. That is the only thing that can save you!

                                Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                                R Offline
                                R Offline
                                R Giskard Reventlov
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #46

                                That's right Stan, avoid the issue.

                                bin the spin home

                                S 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • R R Giskard Reventlov

                                  That's right Stan, avoid the issue.

                                  bin the spin home

                                  S Offline
                                  S Offline
                                  Stan Shannon
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #47

                                  digital man wrote:

                                  avoid the issue

                                  I'm actually quite certain that I have nailed the issue with my typical laser like precision. Your civilization is crumbling all around you precisely because of the implementation of your own philosophical/political principles, yet you are such an arrogant true believer that you insist upon finding some way to blame the problem on the very source of morality that once held everything together. Quite brilliant of you actually, in a very sad and self destructive way. Buy, hey, keep it up. Don't let me stop you. Extinction is indeed an excellent cure for stupidity. Why bother to fight your enemy when you can just stand and watch them gleefully destroying themselves?

                                  Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                                  O R 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • S Stan Shannon

                                    digital man wrote:

                                    avoid the issue

                                    I'm actually quite certain that I have nailed the issue with my typical laser like precision. Your civilization is crumbling all around you precisely because of the implementation of your own philosophical/political principles, yet you are such an arrogant true believer that you insist upon finding some way to blame the problem on the very source of morality that once held everything together. Quite brilliant of you actually, in a very sad and self destructive way. Buy, hey, keep it up. Don't let me stop you. Extinction is indeed an excellent cure for stupidity. Why bother to fight your enemy when you can just stand and watch them gleefully destroying themselves?

                                    Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                                    O Offline
                                    O Offline
                                    oilFactotum
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #48

                                    Stan Shannon wrote:

                                    with my typical laser like precision.

                                    :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • I Ilion

                                      John Carson wrote:

                                      My meaning was that ...

                                      Yes it was, and what you wrote was clear in that regard (and we two actually explicitly agree on something) ... though, at the same time, I would insist that even great parents can have a kid who turns out to be worthless, just as worthless parents can have a kid who is a model citizen or even an exemplar of all that is best in human beings. But now, consider what you said just before that:

                                      ... This is part of their tribute, you see, a celebration of the culture of drunkenness that led to the death.

                                      These problems are personal and cultural. As a *culture* we Westerners have rejected the very roots of our culture, we have rejected and despised what makes us what we are (in comparison to other cultures). Neither as individuals, nor collectively as a culture, can we have it both ways. Either every every human life has worth (and if that is so, then there must be rational reasons to support the claim/belief) or none does. We are seeing worked out the denial of the worth and dignity of humans as beings made in the image of God. The problem isn't merely a "culture of drunkenness," it is a "culture of death."

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      John Carson
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #49

                                      Ilíon wrote:

                                      at the same time, I would insist that even great parents can have a kid who turns out to be worthless, just as worthless parents can have a kid who is a model citizen or even an exemplar of all that is best in human beings.

                                      I agree...but it is unusual.

                                      Ilíon wrote:

                                      We are seeing worked out the denial of the worth and dignity of humans as beings made in the image of God.

                                      Here, of course, we disagree. I actually don't think theology or philosophy have a great deal of direct influence on most people's lives; most people aren't intellectual enough for their happiness or sense of purpose to be greatly influenced by abstract things. For example, coming from a loving and stable family who insist upon "good citizen" behaviour --- or having the opposite background --- is generally a much more important influence on a person's personality and character than any views that a person may have on religious or philosophical matters. Religion or secular philosophy can have virulent effects on "practical" attitudes and thus affect practical things like family in destructive ways. They can also have positive effects --- it depends on the form they take. I do not accept that belief in the supernatural is necessary in order for society to provide a hospitable environment for good families and the like. On this point, you presumably disagree.

                                      John Carson

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • L Lost User

                                        Similar to what Digital Man said. When I were young there existed places such as youth clubs, scouts, and so on where kids could congregate and have fun without causing harm or potential harm to anyone. Youth clubs were generally closed because they were expensive to run, scouting became out-of-fashion but kids still need to be catered for. Nobody caters for them consequently they make their own fun all of this without adult supervision. So they congregate around shops. Shouting, spitting, and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Shoppers can and do feel threatened by largish groups of youths, as do shopkeepers. Police are often called to break-up such groups, after a while, the Police go to their next job, and the youths re-congregate. So this continues day after day. Thus the charge of Anti-social behaviour. Kids are bored. They have no supervised activities to keep their interest and to keep them off the streets. Spending money on supervised activities will go along way to alleviate the problem but local authorities have little if none spare cash for that. Shops wishing to reduce the congregating of youths, thus protecting their businesses, do try different things. Use of sonic speakers that emit an annoying noise that apparantly only below around 25 years can hear do, to some extent, persuade youngsters to move away. But that only moves the kids away from the front of the shop to another place. The solution - give kids something to do that stops them being bored. It will cost money. It will need dedicated adults to supervise such activities.

                                        S Offline
                                        S Offline
                                        Shog9 0
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #50

                                        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                                        The solution - give kids something to do that stops them being bored. It will cost money. It will need dedicated adults to supervise such activities.

                                        Ditch the minimum wage laws and open up the factories. Then eliminate all monies paid to the parents of children over, say, 8 years of age. Problem solved...

                                        But who is the king of all of these folks?

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S Stan Shannon

                                          digital man wrote:

                                          avoid the issue

                                          I'm actually quite certain that I have nailed the issue with my typical laser like precision. Your civilization is crumbling all around you precisely because of the implementation of your own philosophical/political principles, yet you are such an arrogant true believer that you insist upon finding some way to blame the problem on the very source of morality that once held everything together. Quite brilliant of you actually, in a very sad and self destructive way. Buy, hey, keep it up. Don't let me stop you. Extinction is indeed an excellent cure for stupidity. Why bother to fight your enemy when you can just stand and watch them gleefully destroying themselves?

                                          Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

                                          R Offline
                                          R Offline
                                          R Giskard Reventlov
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #51

                                          It seems to me that christianity is on the path to self destruction: us atheists just stand by and shake our heads in disbelief that a once proud religion is allowing itself to be displaced by islam. The difference between you and me is that I don't care what you believe as long as you obey the law of the land and am, generally, happy that you are happy with your beliefs, however wierd and zany I may think they are. You, on the other hand, will do whatever you can to make me believe what you think is right regardless of whether I'd be happy doing so. How very christian of you.

                                          bin the spin home

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