- Oct 17, 2008
- 14,488
Sad story. Nothing else to say but RIP and thoughts with the family of the deceased.
"musically" you say?Ha! I was around back in those times but that is out of my comfort zone musically!
Statistically, over the past 20 years, the number of incidents of violent crime have tripled, but the number of those that are ‘random’ I suspect are still relatively small.I wouldn’t, not at all.
There has always been violence, but there never used to be means of hearing about it much beyond your own circle. I simply think we are exposed to a lot more knowledge of it because of the number of ways we get news these days, you read about it online, see it on tv etc.
We simply hear about it much, much more.
I understand and accept your point about random attacks.
Will you accept that there is more terminal violence in society than there used to be?
Not the place for it to become political, as someone said before on this thread, but 'preconceptions, prejudices, and freedom' form an interesting trio of adjectives which can simply conflict with one-another or offer antithesis. Well that is what I thought anyway..."musically" you say?
Music aside.....I remember hearing that in the early 80s and thinking about preconceptions, prejudices, and freedom. A powerful piece.
Nowhere is safe, anything can happen, anywhere, at any time. Don't have nightmares, but the murder rate in Malta is worse than the UK. If you don't have the teenage gangs stabbing each other up over there, as we do and drives the numbers up here, it probably means you personally are even more likely to be a murder victim in Malta than in the UK than just the basic rate would suggest.The UK is not safe these days?
It's the same when folk say they wish Brighton was like it used to be decades back. I don't remember it being any more an enjoyable place to live than it is now.I went back to Brighton, Hastings, and other places that I used to frequent, for a holiday last year after not going back for over 13 years.
To be honest I found little had changed in that respect, I felt as comfortable getting around as I always had.
Things and people had got older, but other than that, no difference.
Those by and large are not random events. A huge proportion are gang-related or resulting from some previous interaction between the people involved.
My point was that if you’re not in a gang, or caught up in some other criminal activity, the chances of you being attacked in the UK are broadly very small indeed.
These attacks happened and were undertaken by teenagers in the 70s, 80s, & 90sReally? What about the massive number of stabbings by or on teenagers?
These attacks happened and were undertaken by teenagers in the 70s, 80s, & 90s
probably reported more now due to social and national media, better policing.
Really?Nowhere is safe, anything can happen, anywhere, at any time. Don't have nightmares, but the murder rate in Malta is worse than the UK. If you don't have the teenage gangs stabbing each other up over there, as we do and drives the numbers up here, it probably means you personally are even more likely to be a murder victim in Malta than in the UK than just the basic rate would suggest.
Meanwhile, the lowest homicide rate was found in Malta, amounting to only 0.39 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.
But equally:Really?
Homicide rate in Europe 2021, by country
Published by Statista Research Department, Nov 21, 2023
In Europe, the Baltic countries of Latvia and Lithuania had the highest homicide rates in 2021. Of these, Latvia had the highest rate, reaching almost 5.2 intentional homicides per 100,000 inhabitants. Meanwhile, the lowest homicide rate was found in Malta, amounting to only 0.39 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.
Nature is stronger than nurture in some for sure. I know folk that have endured terrible abuse through their formative years that have gone onto be incredibly strong, doing great things for their community and globally. Others with all the love and care that then turn to self destruction.Personally I feel some people are sadly just born evil. These two by all accounts had fairly normal upbringings, and whilst there could never be an excuse for something so awful, you can't even fathom how they came to do it at all.
In fairness that’s the worst anecdote I’ve heard this year.I don´t live in the UK but from reading and watching the news, I wasn´t sure how safe even Brighton was any more.
I went to the Marseille game at the Amex and stayed in a hotel in Western road. I left nearly all my valuables in my room and took my phone and one debit card and my ID card from Malta just in case. I kept my phone in an inside pocket too.
Nothing happened ! But I would be very worried walking around town very late at night.
Quite right, back then I got attacked by skinheads with a baseball bat and a metal pole, stiches to the head, etc police did not turn up, and I could not be bothered. Folks did not trust the police especially if you were in a youth gang or tribe, the police were very authoritarian back then, and worse still if your skin colour was not pasty white.and simply methods of communication, cell phones, make it easier to report & notify the public of crimes.
I don't usually reply to my own posts. On radio 5 now a journalist is making the case for naming the killersAs @WATFORD zero said....no.
The only purpose this would serve would be to satisfy the public's morbid curiosity, and allow the creation of narratives that somehow blame the parents (who would now also be named by proxy) and provide a bit more granularity to the making of whatever has succeeded Dinenage's "Lets get into the mind of these evil killers" series.