mids
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Post by mids on May 2, 2024 8:49:45 GMT
Smash someone's skull to bits and then do their face in plasticine. They probably do something like that in their training but I'd have thought smashing up a skull might be unethical, even if they'd donated their body. They'll probably do it with whole skulls.
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Post by unclejunior on May 2, 2024 9:19:58 GMT
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mids
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Posts: 58,736
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Post by mids on May 2, 2024 9:24:06 GMT
There we have it Pallywood in action. I wonder what happened to that Pal "rescue worker" who appeared in dozens of pics with a pained, wailing expression and always carrying an injured infant in his his arms?
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Post by unclejunior on May 2, 2024 10:05:17 GMT
” BIG BROTHER here- I want this collateral damage in Hainault off the front page on the BBC Internet news page. The suspect is of Spanish Brazilian extraction and not one of Tommy Robinson’s mates as we hoped. Find some Jew story . I think an atrocity happened last November when a 14 year old boy was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier. Get that Jordanian journalest Sara Obeidat and some of her mates on it I reiterate ,we have already covered this Hainault business, enough!!!
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moggyonspeed
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"Anyone who considers protocol unimportant has never dealt with a cat."
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Post by moggyonspeed on May 2, 2024 10:55:25 GMT
The 14-year-old Palestinian boy was, in fact, 8 years old.
Again, never let the complete absence of the facts etc. etc. ...
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Post by unclejunior on May 2, 2024 12:54:50 GMT
Basil 15 & Adam 8 ….possible crime committed during wartime…check with Hamas 🙁
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Post by flatandy on May 2, 2024 13:48:46 GMT
Smash someone's skull to bits and then do their face in the pleistocine. FIFY
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Post by perrykneeham on May 2, 2024 19:38:21 GMT
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Post by flatandy on May 2, 2024 19:52:00 GMT
It does sound like a right old f**k up about the venue, though. Also a bit daft that they're building an almost identical sized music venue 2 miles from another. Surely there are other places that need it more.
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moggyonspeed
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"Anyone who considers protocol unimportant has never dealt with a cat."
Posts: 7,231
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Post by moggyonspeed on May 3, 2024 7:43:35 GMT
Mrs. Mogg and I are due to see The Eagles and The Doobies there in the summer. Gets worse and worse really, as what really tempted me was that The Eagles were originally due to appear with Steely Dan - the main draw for me. Mrs. Mogg is the Eagles fan round here, so perhaps if they can the whole thing then I won’t be too upset.
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mids
New Member
Posts: 58,736
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Post by mids on May 3, 2024 7:49:37 GMT
I blame Burnham.
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mids
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Posts: 58,736
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Post by mids on May 3, 2024 7:52:42 GMT
What a f**k**g mong. "Calling wild African animals by their English names is “jarring”, a Springwatch presenter has said. Gillian Burke said she prefers to refer to animals by their traditional Swahili names rather than those commonly used in the BBC’s acclaimed nature programmes. But the biologist acknowledged naming animals can be a “useful tool for storytelling”, as is often done by Springwatch with Freya the Golden Eagle among others. Writing in BBC Wildlife magazine, Burke said: “The English names for east Africa’s iconic wildlife – so heavily featured in natural history films and in this magazine – jar, at least to my ear. “In my own writing, I prefer re-introducing these familiar animals by their Swahili names: ndovu (elephant), twiga (giraffe), fisi (hyena) and my personal favourite, because I used to love how my dad said it, kongoni (hartebeest).” Burke said Swahili was itself a combination of other languages and she would have to “dig deeper” to find the “true indigenous animal names”." www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/05/02/bbc-presenter-says-calling-animals-english-names-jarring/
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moggyonspeed
New Member
"Anyone who considers protocol unimportant has never dealt with a cat."
Posts: 7,231
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Post by moggyonspeed on May 3, 2024 8:02:59 GMT
What utter nonsense.
Of course, Swahili is the only language on the whole continent, not forgetting that wild animals on the savannah stick within language borders and don’t migrate at all.
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Post by perrykneeham on May 3, 2024 8:11:52 GMT
Burke by name ....
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Post by perrykneeham on May 3, 2024 8:15:28 GMT
"Gillian Burke (born 1974 or 1975)"
Eh?
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Post by Repat Van on May 3, 2024 9:12:46 GMT
What utter nonsense. Of course, Swahili is the only language on the whole continent, not forgetting that wild animals on the savannah stick within language borders and don’t migrate at all. I assume she is referring to her own native language and animals she is familiar with in that regard. I don’t massively see the issue in that context.
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Post by Repat Van on May 3, 2024 9:13:12 GMT
What a f**k**g mong. "Calling wild African animals by their English names is “jarring”, a Springwatch presenter has said. Gillian Burke said she prefers to refer to animals by their traditional Swahili names rather than those commonly used in the BBC’s acclaimed nature programmes. But the biologist acknowledged naming animals can be a “useful tool for storytelling”, as is often done by Springwatch with Freya the Golden Eagle among others. Writing in BBC Wildlife magazine, Burke said: “The English names for east Africa’s iconic wildlife – so heavily featured in natural history films and in this magazine – jar, at least to my ear. “In my own writing, I prefer re-introducing these familiar animals by their Swahili names: ndovu (elephant), twiga (giraffe), fisi (hyena) and my personal favourite, because I used to love how my dad said it, kongoni (hartebeest).” Burke said Swahili was itself a combination of other languages and she would have to “dig deeper” to find the “true indigenous animal names”." www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/05/02/bbc-presenter-says-calling-animals-english-names-jarring/Why is she a mong?
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Post by Repat Van on May 3, 2024 9:13:59 GMT
"Gillian Burke (born 1974 or 1975)" Eh? It means she has not given them her DOB and they are guessing from her age.
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Post by perrykneeham on May 3, 2024 9:23:11 GMT
Perhaps she's trying to obfuscate. I wonder which "international baccalaureate school" she went to.
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mids
New Member
Posts: 58,736
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Post by mids on May 3, 2024 9:38:16 GMT
What a f**k**g mong. "Calling wild African animals by their English names is “jarring”, a Springwatch presenter has said. Gillian Burke said she prefers to refer to animals by their traditional Swahili names rather than those commonly used in the BBC’s acclaimed nature programmes. But the biologist acknowledged naming animals can be a “useful tool for storytelling”, as is often done by Springwatch with Freya the Golden Eagle among others. Writing in BBC Wildlife magazine, Burke said: “The English names for east Africa’s iconic wildlife – so heavily featured in natural history films and in this magazine – jar, at least to my ear. “In my own writing, I prefer re-introducing these familiar animals by their Swahili names: ndovu (elephant), twiga (giraffe), fisi (hyena) and my personal favourite, because I used to love how my dad said it, kongoni (hartebeest).” Burke said Swahili was itself a combination of other languages and she would have to “dig deeper” to find the “true indigenous animal names”." www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/05/02/bbc-presenter-says-calling-animals-english-names-jarring/Why is she a mong? 1. She works for the BBC. 2. As Mogg pointed out there are many more languages in Africa than Swahili. Is it only English names for animals that are "jarring"? 3. She doesn't know when she was born. 4. She doesn't appear to understand that different languages have their own words for animals. 5. She thinks giving wild animals human names is good and somehow not "jarring". 6. She's a mong. 7. She works for the BBC.
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