Falmer Flutter ©
Well-known member
Is 'missing the point' on here now an official passtime?
You think this "prevailing attitude" is exclusive to inner-city kids and to kids of this generation? Nope, you've completely lost me.
Is 'missing the point' on here now an official passtime?
Silly comments ? Distraction ? distraction from what Alf ? There are a lot less guns in the UK than there are in America, thats effectively what I said, you disagree on principle because you have to be contrary or are you going to argue the numbers ?
no mate , you said we dont have easy access to guns , i contradicted you , admittedly wevdont have as easy access as america , you never mentioned numbers etc , then in response you started asking childishly cryptic questions like "why would that be ?" in short , grow up.
You think this "prevailing attitude" is exclusive to inner-city kids and to kids of this generation? Nope, you've completely lost me.
Maybe, just maybe, there was no gang violence, because there were no gangs?
Strange that no one has mentioned that this comment is an echo of a statement made by a Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner less than two weeks ago,and quoted extensively on news media.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-43491155/police-are-black-knife-deaths-being-ignored
"Knife deaths aren't causing the outrage they should because the majority of victims come from black communities, a top UK officer says.
Twenty-six people have been murdered with knives this year so far in London – the majority from black communities.
Martin Hewitt, Met Police Assistant Commissioner, is calling for more efforts to prevent this."
Black on Black . Who really cares ?
I'm struggling to see your point as it's as flimsy as usual. I and another poster were comparing NYC to ourselves and we don't have as easy access to guns in the UK. You have just admitted it yourself, so why do you persist on arguing ? Yes, why would it be that "you could get a gun if you wanted one ". So just to clarify so you can get it clearly in your head, in an earlier post I said " It's harder to gain access to guns in the UK than it is NYC " and you have managed to agree and disagree with that sentence, you are amazing.
I think it's ADHD.... Not on my part might I add.He’s found a friend to argue with I see.
And another murder tonight in Hackney...
The point is about the skewed idea of what they think they can realistically earn and the chances of them actually succeeding in these fields to do so. The majority were from ethnic minorities and deprived backgrounds. How else are they going to think they can get rich quick when they realise they haven't got a chance of being the next Danny Rose or Stormzy? Join a gang, sell some drugs etc. The fact that he was a nuclear physicist is beside the point, he could have been anything other than those chosen professions and they wouldn't have been any different. They genuinely thought he was a) joking and b) on shit money. Surely that's a concern? He was specifically asked to do this tough gig because, apart from being a physicist, he was relatively young, a bit of a hipster and also played in a band, so the teachers hoped the kids would relate to him....no chance. Clearer?
And that mirrors my experiences too. I've done a few projects with kids and that's the prevailing attitude.
I'm not convinced that it's always been the case: I don't recall a single person from my classes at primary or secondary school saying they wanted to be footballer or pop star when they were old. In fact, I quite specifically recall in my final year at primary school, that the boy who was, by some distance, the best footballer saying that he had no thoughts of playing professionally as he knew he wouldn't be good enough and he had to get a proper job (he became an accountant).
If someone at any of my schools had any glamorous plans, he or she kept very quiet about them.
A lot of this is being fueled by gangs, and the selling of drugs. I doubt if the people supplying drugs to the gangs care too much. I doubt they are the same colour as the kids in these gangs either.
Theres also the influence from the USA, that being in a gang is somehow glamorous.
Seven murders in a week in London... have we heard anything from the Mayor Sadiq Khan? Has he made an public statements, interviews, visited communities or bereaved families?
I would have expected him to be 'front and centre' on this. It seem a bit odd to me.