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[News] Major incident in Newhaven







Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
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Aug 24, 2020
7,081
The weird thing is, I've read that locals pronounce it Darren, but none of the people I've met from there actually do.
This annoys me far more than it should do. :lolol:
My wife says it definitely is a thing. Everyone uses 'Darren'.

I told her about you, and she said the ones you know are probably trying to compete with you by sounding posh.
There you go - your friends think you're posh. (y)
 


Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,063
Faversham
i'd rather learn some German than chance a dingy across the channel.
Me too.

But when you have been told the passage is perfectly safe......

What would be another reason for selecting the UK over Germany if you spoke English and not German?

Could it be that after 13 years in charge, the Tories have now firmly established the UK as the softest of all soft touches? That Rwanda has put off nobody? That migrants see the Tories as useless at controlling our borders, and have set up a useless system for dealing with the people who manage to arrive here?

Or could it be that far more asylum seekers actually do head for Germany rather than the UK? See posts by @Zeberdi :shrug: And that all this asylum seeker hysteria is simply a trope weaponized by the Tories to rope in the gammon for purposes of vote harvesting?

???

(It's the latter, isn't it.)
 
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Zeberdi

“Vorsprung durch Technik”
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
6,905
how do you prove you're at risk? demostrate your religion through recognised conversion and all good.
No not at all. Genuine conversions come with great risk even within family groups. While there are no doubt some dubious ‘conversions’ (there are in the homelessness charity sector and the penal system too as I mentioned above), it certainly isn’t a loophole that can be easily exploited. There are strict protocols relating to the course of inquiry.

The difficulty of discerning Christian conversion (or any religious conversion) is that they are primarily matters of the heart. No human can see into another person’s heart. And despicable though the case of Abdul Ezedi’s acid attack was, his asylum claim can not be merited or demerited on the grounds of Christian conversion. Nor can his ’conversion’ be used to slur other Asylum seekers as is happening to those on the Bibby Stockholm.

However, to answer your question more specifically, if faith does become the grounds for either claiming asylum or appealing a decision to repatriate, the Church is consulted and have certain teachings and guidelines themselves for assessing the strengths of someone’s religious conviction. Once an application has been made, it only becomes an issue if they were already Christians fleeing persecution or their asylum claim fails on other grounds.


See section 4 and 10

 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
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Jul 23, 2003
37,338
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
how do you prove you're at risk? demostrate your religion through recognised conversion and all good.
Nonsense. You won’t have been Christian when you left. Any decent lawyer would knock that down in ten seconds. And religion isn’t the only reason. Are you suggesting people “convert” to gay after a week in the UK???
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,063
Faversham
No not at all. Genuine conversions come with great risk even within family groups. While there are no doubt some dubious ‘conversions’ (there are in the homelessness charity sector and the penal system too as I mentioned above), it certainly isn’t a loophole that can be easily exploited. There are strict protocols relating to the course of inquiry.

The difficulty of discerning Christian conversion (or any religious conversion) is that they are primarily matters of the heart. No human can see into another person’s heart. And despicable though the case of Abdul Ezedi’s acid attack was, his asylum claim can not be merited or demerited on the grounds of Christian conversion. Nor can his ’conversion’ be used to slur other Asylum seekers as is happening to those on the Bibby Stockholm.

However, to answer your question more specifically, if faith does become the grounds for either claiming asylum or appealing a decision to repatriate, the Church is consulted and have certain teachings and guidelines themselves for assessing the strengths of someone’s religious conviction. Once an application has been made, it only becomes an issue if they were already Christians fleeing persecution or their asylum claim fails on other grounds.


See section 4 and 10

I'm thinking of nominating you for an OBE. :bowdown:
 


Sid and the Sharknados

Well-known member
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Sep 4, 2022
5,692
Darlington
My wife says it definitely is a thing. Everyone uses 'Darren'.

I told her about you, and she said the ones you know are probably trying to compete with you by sounding posh.
There you go - your friends think you're posh. (y)
They probably do - although given I'm counting people with Lancastrian farmer accents who I've met in pubs in Manchester and who have basically opened with "I'm from a town called Darwen that you've probably never heard of" I'm slightly dubious about the "trying to match my accent" line.
I'll ask the woman I know from there next time we're in the office at the same time.

Also, tell your wife I live much further north than her (and so do most of my family) and am therefore much more northern than her.
I know this is nonsense (and so do you), but it'll be funny. :lolol:
 
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beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,013
Nonsense. You won’t have been Christian when you left. Any decent lawyer would knock that down in ten seconds. And religion isn’t the only reason. Are you suggesting people “convert” to gay after a week in the UK???
i prefered this response to the essay. suit yourself, if you want to believe people convert, to help the asylum claim because it looks like they are integrating. even though thats not a criteria for asylum. but claiming persecution on religious grounds is. i'm surprised there's any controversy, there's been stories of rogue churches doing this for years. see also sham marriages.
 




Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
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Jul 23, 2003
37,338
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
i prefered this response to the essay. suit yourself, if you want to believe people convert, to help the asylum claim because it looks like they are integrating. even though thats not a criteria for asylum. but claiming persecution on religious grounds is. i'm surprised there's any controversy, there's been stories of rogue churches doing this for years. see also sham marriages.
Yes, people falsely convert and falsely marry. Have you asked yourself why those are feasible options?
 


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,081
They probably do - although given I'm counting people with Lancastrian farmer accents who I've met in pubs in Manchester and who have basically opened with "I'm from a town called Darwen that you've probably never heard of" I'm slightly dubious about the "trying to match my accent" line.
I'll ask the woman I know from there next time we're in the office at the same time.

Also, tell your wife I live much further north than her (and so do most of my family) and am therefore much more northern than her.
I know this is nonsense (and so do you), but it'll be funny. :lolol:
She said 'Tell him to f*** off. I live the other side of the Pennines. Tell him to f*** off'.
(Actually, she has lived with me in Patcham since 1992, but I wasn't going to argue with her).
 


Sid and the Sharknados

Well-known member
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Sep 4, 2022
5,692
Darlington
She said 'Tell him to f*** off. I live the other side of the Pennines. Tell him to f*** off'.
(Actually, she has lived with me in Patcham since 1992, but I wasn't going to argue with her).
My idea of somebody from Accrington:
_99589719_bumble_getty.jpg

:lolol:

I am (in all seriousness) sure she's lovely. I've never met somebody from that part of Lancashire I didn't like. :thumbsup:
 








cunning fergus

Well-known member
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Jan 18, 2009
4,885
When I read that about the Ford factory in Southampton, that was years ago. It’s about two miles away from where I live. That story was dated 2012 - 12 years ago. And it was FORD who decided to move their production to Turkey, not the EU, several years before the word BREXIT had even entered the language, quite possibly. The loan will have helped the working class in Turkey.

and there are plenty of places where EU Finance helped the working classes in the UK. It’s mainly Conservative Governments from Thatcher onwards who have screwed the Working Classes - viz the closure of the coal mines and the failure to do anything major to regenerate some of the places most affected - County Durham, South Wales in particular being two places we know quite well.

The EIB is the investment arm of the EU, it is underwritten by the states, which means in practice their taxpayers. So, when the EIB provides £80m to Ford for them to invest in their Turkish plant, whilst simultaneously closing plants in the U.K. and Belgium, we have an example of political leadership in the U.K. and EU taking a mighty shit on the interests of their a) working class and b) wider electorate.






Your point that this U.K. taxpayer underwrote loans to Ford so that it directly helped the Turkish working class to the expense of their British counterparts really gets to the nub of political discourse on NSC, as this aspect of this scandal sits entirely comfortably with you.

That’s not your issue of course, as this exchange and others on her patently demonstrate, making sure the interests of foreigners (whether in the U.K. or not) is given priority over the interests of the British working class.

It matters not that this was 12 years ago or 2 miles down the road from where you live, it’s totemic in how the U.K. works, and how the middle classes want it to work.

For that I appreciate your candour.
 




chickens

Have you considered masterly inactivity?
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Oct 12, 2022
2,688
The EIB is the investment arm of the EU, it is underwritten by the states, which means in practice their taxpayers. So, when the EIB provides £80m to Ford for them to invest in their Turkish plant, whilst simultaneously closing plants in the U.K. and Belgium, we have an example of political leadership in the U.K. and EU taking a mighty shit on the interests of their a) working class and b) wider electorate.






Your point that this U.K. taxpayer underwrote loans to Ford so that it directly helped the Turkish working class to the expense of their British counterparts really gets to the nub of political discourse on NSC, as this aspect of this scandal sits entirely comfortably with you.

That’s not your issue of course, as this exchange and others on her patently demonstrate, making sure the interests of foreigners (whether in the U.K. or not) is given priority over the interests of the British working class.

It matters not that this was 12 years ago or 2 miles down the road from where you live, it’s totemic in how the U.K. works, and how the middle classes want it to work.

For that I appreciate your candour.

I’m sorry, I thought I’d put you on ignore for exactly this kind of twaddle, but please stop hijacking threads for your own personal causes. You’ve successfully mugged quite a decent individual into rising to your bait, which has given you the opening you need to bang your particularly dull and repetitive drum.

This post has nothing at all to do with the subject under discussion.

Now to find out if ignore has stopped working or I’ve unmuted you somehow.

Edit: it appears I’d not muted him. What took me so long?
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,677
The Fatherland
The EIB is the investment arm of the EU, it is underwritten by the states, which means in practice their taxpayers. So, when the EIB provides £80m to Ford for them to invest in their Turkish plant, whilst simultaneously closing plants in the U.K. and Belgium, we have an example of political leadership in the U.K. and EU taking a mighty shit on the interests of their a) working class and b) wider electorate.






Your point that this U.K. taxpayer underwrote loans to Ford so that it directly helped the Turkish working class to the expense of their British counterparts really gets to the nub of political discourse on NSC, as this aspect of this scandal sits entirely comfortably with you.

That’s not your issue of course, as this exchange and others on her patently demonstrate, making sure the interests of foreigners (whether in the U.K. or not) is given priority over the interests of the British working class.

It matters not that this was 12 years ago or 2 miles down the road from where you live, it’s totemic in how the U.K. works, and how the middle classes want it to work.

For that I appreciate your candour.
Linking this 80m loan to the shafting of the British working class is all very tenuous and involves baseless assumptions which you use to benefit your argument.

The EU is not funded purely by taxpayers/U.K. taxpayers so the 80m loan may have been funded by other sources such as customs revenue from non-EU countries. Obviously the U.K. will now significantly contribute to this but this wasn’t in play at the time.

Its also a loan, which will presumably have been paid back. Maybe with interest?

If this nonsense from 12 years ago, is the best you can dredge up I think it says more good about the EU than bad.

Can we now move onto your other story, the one about Tate and Lyle? We can maybe have your two arguments done and dusted before the weekend is out?

Besides, you have left yet you still get into a frenzy about the EU. Do you have anything else in your life?
 
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sydney

tinky ****in winky
Jul 11, 2003
17,965
town full of eejits
Now you know why, the state of the world 2024 and people are being forced into freezers or onto a death raft seeking some kind of new or in a lot of cases a promised life that will never materialise.
and then if you pop over to x you will read that in Holland the disappointment harboured by these men, when the streets turn out to not be paved with gold and blonde virgins ,has resulted in them burning down numerous hostels and surrounding businesses and parked cars....and they're not forced are they , they pay the gangs thousands of dollars to get into Britain.
 


sydney

tinky ****in winky
Jul 11, 2003
17,965
town full of eejits
I’m sorry, I thought I’d put you on ignore for exactly this kind of twaddle, but please stop hijacking threads for your own personal causes. You’ve successfully mugged quite a decent individual into rising to your bait, which has given you the opening you need to bang your particularly dull and repetitive drum.

This post has nothing at all to do with the subject under discussion.

Now to find out if ignore has stopped working or I’ve unmuted you somehow.

Edit: it appears I’d not muted him. What took me so long?
what he's typed is correct ....they have done the same in Aus Ford now manufactured in Thailand after a brief dalliance with South Africa which resulted in recall after recall and Holden ( Vauxhall/gm) banished completely ...its called globalism mate , you need to wake up to it , it'll be in your town soon.
 






Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,063
Faversham
I’m sorry, I thought I’d put you on ignore for exactly this kind of twaddle, but please stop hijacking threads for your own personal causes. You’ve successfully mugged quite a decent individual into rising to your bait, which has given you the opening you need to bang your particularly dull and repetitive drum.

This post has nothing at all to do with the subject under discussion.

Now to find out if ignore has stopped working or I’ve unmuted you somehow.

Edit: it appears I’d not muted him. What took me so long?
Twit. :wink:

1708253952568.png
 


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