View Full Version : Better than Legoland...
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3080769/Raoul-Moat-fans-sick-funeral-boast.html
she's nice
Electro
04-08-10, 09:38 AM
Not even worth the paper its printed on, dirty scummy tramp.
Just read that while waiting in the butty shop.
She sounds like a nice gal.
Not even worth the paper its printed on, dirty scummy tramp.
aye. i wonder why its been reported to be truthful? clearly for reaction purposes only as its clearly not news. the way of the world i guess
Lovely, balanced piece of journalism there. Reason why I never buy a newspaper.
Jayneflakes
04-08-10, 09:59 AM
Wow, thanks for that!
Is that really news or just filler for an other wise low quality tabloid?
It saddens me that people will buy that rag.
GeneticBubble
04-08-10, 10:06 AM
this is a load of bull**** everyone knows legoland is a more enjoyable day out for the family
Fair play, legoland is sh*t
Owenski
04-08-10, 10:12 AM
So much of that is laughable just her quotes the pick of teh bunch coming at the end.
"That's what started me off, really. I just thought, 'This isn't right, they're not giving him a chance."
he shot an officer point blank in the face!!! He didnt deserve a chance, personally I think they should have set a perimeter up and torched the woods he was hiding in let the ****er burn.
Words cannot describe how ****ed up that woman is.
Jamesy D
04-08-10, 10:17 AM
Fair play, legoland is sh*t
He's right, it is.
But I think this pretty much sums everything up:
"I think his morals were good, too. He only did what he did because of what his girlfriend did to him. I know he shot those people but I haven't really thought about them."
A very probably unstable racist nutjob. The fact she was planning to go and lay flowers everywhere he shot someone, not to remember the people he killed and injured but to remember him. It just sickens me.
warrenhewitt10
04-08-10, 10:21 AM
Good to know I'm paying for her to live in a big ass house, get a job, it's not fair the rest of us do
The Guru
04-08-10, 11:30 AM
Nice tattoos
I particularly like the gold sovereign rings.
Bluefish
04-08-10, 05:52 PM
So come on all the org parents, get all the papers and find a nice funeral to take the kids to, slogan- it's better than Legoland. Twisted sick bitch.
BigBaddad
04-08-10, 06:13 PM
Fecking northern monkeys, can't take 'em anywhere.
hindle8907
04-08-10, 06:20 PM
Fair play, legoland is sh*t
:smt046
dirty bag-ed anit she ..... ewww people like that need shooting.
BigBaddad
04-08-10, 06:29 PM
:smt046
dirty bag-ed anit she ..... ewww people like that need shooting.
Irony.
maviczap
04-08-10, 06:39 PM
Its a crazy ****ed up world when people identifiy with the Raoul Moats as being hero's worth spending money on flowers. Although she'd probably nicked them, or you and me have paid for via her benefit payments
What did Moat ever do for the community, he's hardly a modern day Robin Hood FFS.
Real hero's are working in Afganistan and Iraq
Milky Bar Kid
04-08-10, 07:00 PM
I love how her swastika is, according to her, a hindu peace symbol......idiot!
gettin2dizzy
04-08-10, 07:08 PM
If there isn't an interesting story, just invent one and sell it as the truth :thumbsup:
The Guru
04-08-10, 07:34 PM
I love how her swastika is, according to her, a hindu peace symbol......idiot!
IIRC a swastika, or form of it actually is religious.
But this numb nut probably didn't get it for that reason.
EDIT:
Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swastika)
gettin2dizzy
04-08-10, 07:47 PM
And 'white power' is just a free tattoo given away with promotional packs of Daz washing powder. Simples :thumbsup:
sloppy joe
04-08-10, 08:24 PM
And the truly sad thing is that the Sun makes its living from these kinds of 'stories'. We love to read about the dumb people and get all angry. Still, what an idiotic woman. At least she will no doubt be guiding her many state supported children into being pillars of society.
I don't know anyone who would consider taking the kids to a funeral was a good dayout, still less one 200+ miles away, and as for it being this man... let's hope social services pay her a visit soon.
Real hero's are working in Afganistan and Iraq
Can we just clarify one thing please.
That thing is the definition of a hero.
In recent times this over-used word has become a new way of describing any serviceman or woman serving formerly in Iraq, and more recently in Afghanistan.
Let's get this very clear; not every soldier/sailor/marine/airman is a hero. Heros do heroic things, normal troops simply do a job. The guys and girls out there are all told they are going there, they don't put themselves forward for the trip. The majority joined in peacetime knowing they might be called upon to go to a combat zone, and it so happened that they were shipped out to fight - That alone does not make them heroes.
Heroes are a different breed of serviceman, They are the ones who go beyond the call of duty and knowingly put their own lives in danger to secure a position, save a colleague and some will even risk their own lives to save the lives of others etc. They are the guys who crawl on their bellies through a known mined area to administer first aid to someone who's triggered an explosive device and then drag them to safety, they're the ones who lay themselves open to a sniper and draw his fire so others can get a good idea of where the sniper is and then take action. Those are heroes and not all servicemen or women would be able to rise to the challenges these people take head on.
Please stop describing all servicemen and women as heroes, it seriously devalues the efforts and acheivements of those who really deserve this particular distinction.
Before anyone says I'm being disrespectful to the people serving out there, remember this - I've done my time in uniform, and I would hate to have been called a hero just because I was simply doing my job, when others who'd been far braver than me were having their efforts undermined by the public's misguided misuse of a four letter word. Personally I blame the popular media for splashing the word here there and everywhere in the wrong context, and I blame the general public for being so gullible and naive that they took it up too.
Please stop describing all servicemen and women as heroes, it seriously devalues the efforts and acheivements of those who really deserve this particular distinction.
He didn't. M's quote doesn't support the bollocking.
Ed - It's a general thing. I'm just tired of seeing all servicemen/women being described as heroes, in fact it really boils my p1ss. "Real hero's(sic) are working in Afganistan and Iraq" implies that all those out there are heroes, when they plainly are not.
Bluefish
04-08-10, 09:57 PM
Totally agree Lozzo, by their reasoning i am a hero :smt046
Well... I admire anyone who has the balls to sign for the Queen's Shilling.
Electro
04-08-10, 10:03 PM
The servicemen and women who are serving in war zones at the moment are classed as heroes nowadays for different reasons than the yesteryear heroes. The olden day hero served their country in a time of war when war was declared upon our country and those people stood head and shoulders above the rest to earn the hero tag. One thing in their favour was the olden day wars were in fighting values, proper scraps unlike todays techno wars where a click of a mouse has killed more than hand to hand combat. Now the new heroes are earning the tag because of the way the enemy has changed being underhand and more devious. The other fact that the public see is that most believe its not our war in the middle east and in a way the servicemen/women have in a way been sent to war under protest as its not our war. I`d say they all deserve it myself and the bloke who flushes a sniper is like me, a bit of an idiot :)
BoltonSte
04-08-10, 10:06 PM
Totally agree Lozzo, by their reasoning i am a hero :smt046
You are to me, you rode the 5hitty bandit from Rivvy to Belmont at a reasonable pace:smt046
Now dangerous dave on the other hand...
Sorry for the derail folks.
Ste
I`d say they all deserve it myself and the bloke who flushes a sniper is like me, a bit of an idiot :)
The last seven words of your post sum it up far better than I ever could :)
Electro
04-08-10, 10:20 PM
The last seven words of your post sum it up far better than I ever could :)
Haha, like it mate
lukemillar
05-08-10, 03:03 AM
I love how her swastika is, according to her, a hindu peace symbol......idiot!
Actually it is and was adopted by the Nazis. I was watching a program on Tibet with footage from 20s-30s the other day and the symbol featured on a lot of the textiles.
Just a shame the meaning of the symbol has now been irreversibly associated with Nazism.
The "White Power" tattoo on the other hand is pretty indisputable unless she has a penchant for Dutch motorcycle suspension :lol:
If she had said 'Better than Alton Towers' I would have had to disagree.
Can we just clarify one thing please.
That thing is the definition of a hero.
In recent times this over-used word has become a new way of describing any serviceman or woman serving formerly in Iraq, and more recently in Afghanistan.
Let's get this very clear; not every soldier/sailor/marine/airman is a hero. Heros do heroic things, normal troops simply do a job. The guys and girls out there are all told they are going there, they don't put themselves forward for the trip. The majority joined in peacetime knowing they might be called upon to go to a combat zone, and it so happened that they were shipped out to fight - That alone does not make them heroes.
Heroes are a different breed of serviceman, They are the ones who go beyond the call of duty and knowingly put their own lives in danger to secure a position, save a colleague and some will even risk their own lives to save the lives of others etc. They are the guys who crawl on their bellies through a known mined area to administer first aid to someone who's triggered an explosive device and then drag them to safety, they're the ones who lay themselves open to a sniper and draw his fire so others can get a good idea of where the sniper is and then take action. Those are heroes and not all servicemen or women would be able to rise to the challenges these people take head on.
Please stop describing all servicemen and women as heroes, it seriously devalues the efforts and acheivements of those who really deserve this particular distinction.
Before anyone says I'm being disrespectful to the people serving out there, remember this - I've done my time in uniform, and I would hate to have been called a hero just because I was simply doing my job, when others who'd been far braver than me were having their efforts undermined by the public's misguided misuse of a four letter word. Personally I blame the popular media for splashing the word here there and everywhere in the wrong context, and I blame the general public for being so gullible and naive that they took it up too.
Oh crikey, I find myself agreeing with you Lozzo. Must be AR time of year again.
The term 'hero' is seriously misused these day, and this does a diservice to the real ones
Oh crikey, I find myself agreeing with you Lozzo. Must be AR time of year again.
I'm sorry, Miss.
Go and have a lie down, I'm sure the feeling of agreement will soon pass, it usually does.
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