shrimper wrote:Ironically had it not been for the video, the yob may indeed have tried to pursue it.
Not a chance at all of that happening now.
I suspect this was filmed by his chavvy mates as a kind of 'happy-slapping' thing but as it happens it's great evidence for the householder if anyone ever tried to make a claim against him.
He is quite clearly acting in self-defence after provocation that was prolonged and threatening (which, in itself, is a criminal offence); he refrains from taking the attack on the chav any further, even when he could easily have done having put him on the floor.
The householder could, if he wanted, take action against the yob for threatening behaviour, but I reckon he'd just be satisfied with the outcome.
Heysham_Shrimp wrote:whats the chances of the guy who hit the yob ending up in court and the yob receiving compensation !
Trevor wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mg0ov1LUdOU
Chav yob picks on wrong man.
Warning: Comments contain bad language.
sgt major wrote:
Yes - what a pity there wasn't anyone around to protect that person who was robbed at knifepoint on Schola Green Lane (as reported in the Visitor). I would imagine the money would be used for drugs - and they still want the druggies to use the Old Conservative building as a needle exchange. DISC who want to open it admit they could not manage anyone who left the building and the police seem to be stretched all the time - it looks like the only justice on the streets is to come from the normal law abiding people.
Posh wrote:
I read your letter in The Visitor with the same sense of dismay that I read this post.
So you oppose the drug rehabilitation centre. How do you think that helps the problem you refer to?
People addicted to drugs of all kinds including alcohol ae around us everywhere. Some cope with their addiction and we don't notice it. Some have to fund their addiction through crime. And others while under the influence of their chosen drug are a menace to society.
What we need is action to rehabilitate these people, to look at the wider causes for their addiction and to treat it and hence to remove the secondary problems for society such as criminality. That is the intention of this centre and that's why it should be supported.
Yet a centre makes drug addicts visible and that's a problem for Nimbys and people who don't want to recognise the problem. Well the problem is there as spending an hour in Boots in the West End of Morecambe would show you as heroin addicts queue for their methadone. Drug addicts are all around they just don't have a big badge on them saying so.
Closing your eyes and hoping it goes away isn't an option.
Posh wrote:sgt major wrote:
Yes - what a pity there wasn't anyone around to protect that person who was robbed at knifepoint on Schola Green Lane (as reported in the Visitor). I would imagine the money would be used for drugs - and they still want the druggies to use the Old Conservative building as a needle exchange. DISC who want to open it admit they could not manage anyone who left the building and the police seem to be stretched all the time - it looks like the only justice on the streets is to come from the normal law abiding people.
I read your letter in The Visitor with the same sense of dismay that I read this post.
So you oppose the drug rehabilitation centre. How do you think that helps the problem you refer to?
People addicted to drugs of all kinds including alcohol ae around us everywhere. Some cope with their addiction and we don't notice it. Some have to fund their addiction through crime. And others while under the influence of their chosen drug are a menace to society.
What we need is action to rehabilitate these people, to look at the wider causes for their addiction and to treat it and hence to remove the secondary problems for society such as criminality. That is the intention of this centre and that's why it should be supported.
Yet a centre makes drug addicts visible and that's a problem for Nimbys and people who don't want to recognise the problem. Well the problem is there as spending an hour in Boots in the West End of Morecambe would show you as heroin addicts queue for their methadone. Drug addicts are all around they just don't have a big badge on them saying so.
Closing your eyes and hoping it goes away isn't an option.
sgt major wrote:Posh wrote:sgt major wrote:
Yes - what a pity there wasn't anyone around to protect that person who was robbed at knifepoint on Schola Green Lane (as reported in the Visitor). I would imagine the money would be used for drugs - and they still want the druggies to use the Old Conservative building as a needle exchange. DISC who want to open it admit they could not manage anyone who left the building and the police seem to be stretched all the time - it looks like the only justice on the streets is to come from the normal law abiding people.
I read your letter in The Visitor with the same sense of dismay that I read this post.
So you oppose the drug rehabilitation centre. How do you think that helps the problem you refer to?
People addicted to drugs of all kinds including alcohol ae around us everywhere. Some cope with their addiction and we don't notice it. Some have to fund their addiction through crime. And others while under the influence of their chosen drug are a menace to society.
What we need is action to rehabilitate these people, to look at the wider causes for their addiction and to treat it and hence to remove the secondary problems for society such as criminality. That is the intention of this centre and that's why it should be supported.
Yet a centre makes drug addicts visible and that's a problem for Nimbys and people who don't want to recognise the problem. Well the problem is there as spending an hour in Boots in the West End of Morecambe would show you as heroin addicts queue for their methadone. Drug addicts are all around they just don't have a big badge on them saying so.
Closing your eyes and hoping it goes away isn't an option.
Would you be happy with it next to your business premises then Mike, or even just a few yards from your house??????
You could then spend many happy hours looking out for your wife and children and making sure they are not getting mugged.
Stop being politically correct and admit most of them are a menace to society - remember - they had a choice. Take them or don't take them.
sgt major wrote:Would you be happy with it next to your business premises then Mike, or even just a few yards from your house??????
sgt major wrote:Stop being politically correct and admit most of them are a menace to society - remember - they had a choice. Take them or don't take them.
Posh wrote:Of course they had a choice whether they took drugs or not. What some of them didn't have a choice about was when their father regularly beat them in a drunken rage; when their Mother's boyfriend sexually abused them night after night after night; when they were bullied in school and beaten up after it and no one did anything about it; whether their mother had her own drug habit, which for some meant living in a home of incredible deprivation, used for prostitution and a stopover for other addicts...
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