RareForm
Bluelight Crew
Yeah, it's a real country. You could take a train there right now.
Asylum seeker hotel worker, 27, stabbed to death 'with screwdriver' as man, 18, charged with murder - LBC NewsBtw did you guys hear about the Mohammed who beheaded a woman in "Algeria" is that even a real country lol wtf
This is the UK. Worker at one of the 'migrant' hotels, stabbed in the neck with a fucking screwdriver after leaving work, and over a dispute about a packet of biscuits.Rhiannon Skye Whyte, 27, was killed at a railway station after she left work on Sunday night. She was hospitalised after the attack and died three days later.
An 18-year-old has been arrested and was subsequently charged with her murder.
A source told The Sun: “No chances are being taken. Residents have been removed from the hotel where Rhiannon worked.”
The Sun reported that a 'petty' row over a packet of biscuits had taken place at the hotel earlier.
Examples of subtle ways that narratives get shifted to increase or dampen the emotional response of readers. We have less of a filter for that sort of stuff when reading text-based communication vs. hearing someone speaking about it. In the past, news was communicated orally, often in person, or through radio/television. Non-verbal communication is more easily recognized in those contexts. When communication becomes increasingly shared through text-based mediums, those non-verbal cues get hidden and we are left to simply read the words presented to us without necessarily having a way to gauge how honestly or misleading those terms are unless careful inspection occurs.Asylum seeker hotel worker, 27, stabbed to death 'with screwdriver' as man, 18, charged with murder - LBC News
This is the UK. Worker at one of the 'migrant' hotels, stabbed in the neck with a fucking screwdriver after leaving work, and over a dispute about a packet of biscuits.
Note the underlined words:
And people wonder why there was a massive reaction against the Southport incident? Why anger is boiling over? Yeah, this is why. Young woman brutally murdered over a packet of fucking biscuits.. by some illegal immigrant who should not even be in the fucking country. She's dead, family ruined, and he will be banged up at tax payers expense and eventually released one would suspect.
- 'Killed', not murdered
- '18 year old', not '18 year old illegal immigrant/migrant/refugee'
- 'Residents', not 'Other illegal immigrants/migrants/refugees'
- And all over a packet of fucking biscuits
And then you have these MSM liberal shitheaps like LBC, that can't even report on the story with accurate language. Fucking disgrace.
Setting homeless citizens on fire is one thing. Allowing in completely unvetted foreigners and paying for them to be put up in hotels at tax payer expense, is another thing entirely. The two are not comparable and actually what you just wrote, even if sincere and based in compassion, only fans the flames of this nonsense. You do see that, right?Blaming the victims of poverty is not going to solve the problem, though it is more than reasonable to hold individuals accountable for their actions. The actions of this 18 year old kid are unfathomably fucked up - and it's horrible to hear that someone who was trying to do public good was murdered.
Stop the boats and have a proper border policy? It's not fucking rocket science.My goal is always to move beyond rhetoric and work towards solutions for individual and systemic ills.
I apologize if that's how it came across - I was connecting two examples of how our current context creates needless violence. It wasn't meant at all to be a 'whatabout'. I am agreeing that both are terrible and examples of larger systemic failures. To me, what's happening in the UK is an example of the failures of liberal democracy, while what's happening in Costa Rica is an example of the failure of autocracy - the unfulfilled promises of one and the emboldening of our worst impulses in the other.Setting homeless citizens on fire is one thing. Allowing in completely unvetted foreigners and paying for them to be put up in hotels at tax payer expense, is another thing entirely. The two are not comparable and actually what you just wrote, even if sincere and based in compassion, only fans the flames of this nonsense. You do see that, right?
And realistically until there's a global effort - that will probably continue to happen. I live in a state in the US with robust social services. That leads us to hosting a large amount of undocumented immigrants who come here because they know they'll get health insurance and SNAP (food) benefits without needing to be a citizen. It's a perverse incentive to come here which leads to increased overall systems burden. The alternative, eliminating socialized health care and in-kind benefits, would adversely effect our own populace.This person should not have even been allowed into the country in the first place. Countries don't allow other people to enter without documentation, or without going through a stringent approval process. The only exception is refugees fleeing war, and the definition of that is seeking refuge in the closest available state.. not travelling across two entire fucking continents to seek out the most economically generous soft-touch nations for personal gain.
Someone who's hungry and traumatized is my guess. It's fucked up that it happened.Moreover, what sort of person fleeing any sort of violent state would stab a completely innocent citizen in the back of the neck, with a screwdriver, over a packet of biscuits. A person who was trying to help them no less. Genuine refugees do not engage in that sort of behaviour.
how long until we're in the 'Children of Men' version of Britain?Stop the boats and have a proper border policy? It's not fucking rocket science.
First duty of a functioning government that cares about its citizens is to ensure the physical safety of them. That means enforcing border quality control. Period.
That makes me upset as a voting democrat.immigrants who come here because they know they'll get health insurance and SNAP (food) benefits without needing to be a citizen.
It should make us upset - my worry with our current body politic is the lack of willingness to hold members of one's own party accountable (or the party closest to one's voting preferences). We've become comfortable voting for the lesser of two evils, but uncomfortable criticizing the evil within one's own side of the dichotomy.That makes me upset as a voting democrat.
I have had major issues getting SNAP and medicaid in conservative states, even during years I was below the federal poverty line. One time it was because I couldn't find my original birth certificate, and couldn't afford to order a new one. Another time I was disqualified simply because I had a car title registered under my name.
I'm not trying to make a point, other than our immigration system needs a major reform. I think we should make sure all US citizens have health care before we start giving it for free to immigrants. Just socialize it already! FFS, we are so backwards on healthcare and education.
It should make us upset - my worry with our current body politic is the lack of willingness to hold members of one's own party accountable (or the party closest to one's voting preferences). We've become comfortable voting for the lesser of two evils, but uncomfortable criticizing the evil within one's own side of the dichotomy.
I'm of the opinion that the internet is generally to blame for a variety of reasons, but particularly because it acts as conduit for the ultra wealthy to pit us against each other. Keep them looking left stage, while on right stage they line their pockets with a level of wealth and power we haven't seen since the days of monarchies.The world is polarized more now than I can remember in the last 80 some years I have experienced.![]()
The alternative is that we have forums like this one to cross-connect perspectives with less influence (theoretically) by those parties.I'm of the opinion that the internet is generally to blame for a variety of reasons, but particularly because it acts as conduit for the ultra wealthy to pit us against each other. Keep them looking left stage, while on right stage they line their pockets with a level of wealth and power we haven't seen since the days of monarchies.
With the modern internet, it's almost effortless and instantaneous for them to influence people en masse.
It's the same in the UK. The NHS is a free service, so we have 'health tourism' as a result.. where people deliberately fly over here to get treatment that they would either have to pay for or not even have available in their own country. On top of that you have a large settled immigrant base, primarily Muslim's, who can't even speak English after being here for years and so we have to fork out millions on translation services as well as slowing down the treatment queue for everyone else as a result.I'm not trying to make a point, other than our immigration system needs a major reform. I think we should make sure all US citizens have health care before we start giving it for free to immigrants. Just socialize it already! FFS, we are so backwards on healthcare and education.
I owe my social awareness to it. I could have spent decades trying to find the resources I have, or forced to travel far and wide to find obscure books and people. That's the positive side of the internet, it has reduced distance to zero.I'm of the opinion that the internet is generally to blame for a variety of reasons, but particularly because it acts as conduit for the ultra wealthy to pit us against each other. Keep them looking left stage, while on right stage they line their pockets with a level of wealth and power we haven't seen since the days of monarchies.
No absolutely. That's the infuriating about all of this, these things are bloody terrible and clear indications of failures at the highest levels. I have no qualms about calling it a deliberate conspiracy, at least in the case of the UK, because incompetence like this should not be being replicated in parallel in other western nations simultaneously, which is what we can see with our eyes (UK, EU, USA, Canada, Auz, Nz).I apologize if that's how it came across - I was connecting two examples of how our current context creates needless violence. It wasn't meant at all to be a 'whatabout'. I am agreeing that both are terrible and examples of larger systemic failures. To me, what's happening in the UK is an example of the failures of liberal democracy, while what's happening in Costa Rica is an example of the failure of autocracy - the unfulfilled promises of one and the emboldening of our worst impulses in the other.
Not a comparison to say one is worse/better/different than the other.
The thing is, we should have had the conservation in the UK back when Tony Blair started to flood the country by changing the rules up. It could have all been prevented by simply following a stringent immigration policy that requires you speak English after a set period, for example. It's bullshit. I had a friend who got a degree here but couldn't stay because he couldn't get a graduate salary above the £30k threshold and had to go back home, and yet there's people coming here who don't even want to work at all!It may be worth considering citizenship requirements or maximums before benefits automatically end? I think it's a good time to revisit the limits of what progressive idealism can reasonably sustain, because the alternative is people setting homeless folks on fire, and that's probably not too far off in the US if DJT wins the election and moves forward with his mass-deportation plans.
Behavior is the permutation. Color me surprisedAlso - *behaviour* - your British is showing! (just being playful, I love how the English language has permutations influenced by culture)
Rapes a child and local authorities let him out on bail