• Welcome, guest!

    This is a forum devoted to discussion of Wolverhampton Wanderers.
    Why not sign up and contribute? Registered members get a fully ad-free experience!

Keir Starmer at it again..

Well bully for you as the CPS advises not to prosecute solely on the probability of a successful prosecution or lack thereof and none of the spurious bollocks that you will no doubt keep repeating until one of us dies
 
a) are you another of these laugh reaction emoji bellwhiffs because that is getting old

b) please elaborate on the other things that the CPS base such decisions on. Using facts from their guidance rather than what pops into your head
 
a) are you another of these laugh reaction emoji bellwhiffs because that is getting old

b) please elaborate on the other things that the CPS base such decisions on. Using facts from their guidance rather than what pops into your head
I have been through that. You don't agree and that is fine with me.
 
Sarah Champion, the Labour MP says .

"It is clear that nothing less than a national inquiry into the failings of those in authority to both prevent, and be accountable for their failings, in relation to grooming gangs will restore the faith in our safeguarding systems.”

 
Sarah Champion, the Labour MP says .

"It is clear that nothing less than a national inquiry into the failings of those in authority to both prevent, and be accountable for their failings, in relation to grooming gangs will restore the faith in our safeguarding systems.”

Yes, we definitely need to waste more money on a national inquiry into the last national inquiry as to why the results of national inquiry before that weren't implemented...

Or we could just stop fucking around and put the recommended safeguards in place ASAP
 
4

I agree with all this from the article, but still think the police, judiciary and social services should be made accountable and people who decided to not to protect the children should pay the price.

"The abuse, torture and rape of working-class girls by gangs of men, many of whom were of Pakistani heritage, was, and continues to be, an ineffable horror. The failure of the authorities to listen to the girls, let alone protect them, and the reluctance to act against the perpetrators is a scandal and a betrayal. But to pose it purely in racial terms, to transform it into an exercise fostering hatred, to turn the girls’ pain into a weapon to pursue particular reactionary causes: that, too, is a betrayal."
 
Back
Top