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#1 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oxonia
Posts: 4,253
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/s...re/5176802.stm
We're all doomed. I've been working abroad a lot this year. Half of Europe kiss each other as a form of greeting. In my travels I have had both Arab and Russian policemen kiss me on the cheek. When I left Palestine one or 2 of the guys kissed me on the lips (in a non-sexual way you understand :roll: ). We are in danger of becoming the saddest nation in Europe, if not the world, when a congratulatory kiss on the cheek in public becomes the cause of a complete waste of police time and wrecks the career of someone. We will become a cultural backwater devoid of humanity and obsessed with being PC to the exclusion of everything else. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Welwyn Hatfield (Herts.)
Posts: 1,878
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Just to be clear, he doesn't seem to have lost his job. He has, though, stepped down as a school governor.
It seems to be the mother who complained. I don't think we have enough detail to make a firm judgement on this incident, but I take your general point. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Uber Member
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Yes more detail requried.
If he was forced out, then this is sick. If he just got sick of being questioned, then that's his personal choice.The woman whop complained is pathetic.
__________________
http://brits4ronpaul.blogspot.com/ http://wokinglibertarians.blogspot.com/ http://lpuk.org My ignore list Labour, Lib Dems |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Welwyn Hatfield (Herts.)
Posts: 1,878
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I'm not awfully interested in this, but more background in The Telegraph -
Quote:
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#5 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 361
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Sadly because of the furore about this sort of thing and the dangers of being accused of inappropriate behaviour I decided some 5 years ago it was no longer sensible or wise to be a good Samaritan. If you decide to help a woman or child you stand a significant risk of having a knock on the door at 6 a.m from the police.
It is no wonder society is dead and people are concerned only about themselves and immediate family. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oxonia
Posts: 4,253
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In the good old days I was asked to cover for Santa at a playgroup that my daughter had previously attended. Every child, boy or girl, sat on my knee while I asked them, in full view and hearing of their mothers, what they wanted for Xmas. I may have patted heads and backs and lifted the kids up and down. Nobody objected and many of the mothers thanked me. It was a lovely experience looking into innocent and trusting eyes, but I never thought anything more until this recent obsession with paedophiles.
I wouldn't dare cover for Santa ever again. The mother in this case sounds particularly strange and vindictive. I think her child is more at risk from having her as a parent than she would be getting the odd peck from a tactile vicar. The child is going to be gobsmacked if she travels abroad. In the last year I have, because of my international work, been kissed by people, all women, of German, Dutch, French, Italian, Lithuanian, Macedonian and Belarussian origin to name a few. I've hugged one or two. I have shaken hands with people of another 20 nationalities. I have been kissed by a few foreign blokes. Humans are supposed to touch other. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 181
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Hi everybody,
I agree with jim and Aardvark. It is so very sad that innocent behaviour of yesteryear is now a criminal offence. The mother of the child involved does indeed seem a very vindictive person, and is probably a serious threat to the child. I would NEVER help a female in trouble, and have packed up being a First Aider for fear of litigation. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Uber Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Dorset.
Posts: 3,252
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The mother has a real problem. I feel sorry for the little girl, fancy having a vindictive PC person for a mother. Common assault, what nonsense :shock:
This woman definately needs the help of a psychiatrist. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Newbie
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 9
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I think the woman should be charged with wasting police and social services time and pay compensation to the vicar who will now be stigmatised for the rest of his life.
The church authorities should be up before a tribunal for requesting that the vicar resign, as too should the board of governors of the school. Staffordshire education authority should also compensate Mr Barrett. Phillip Noyes of the NSPCC should grow up. He is the type of person who will advocate children growing up without any physical contact even with their parents. That poor child will grow up now with the stigma that a vicar “molested” her. That is the conditioning her mother will instil in her, and it will ruin her life forever. |
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