A Kombat Blog! Huffing! and Puffing! trying to blow the house down! Spitting in the face of these badlands! Raging against the dying of the light! Preaching to the converted? Converting the preached to? A challenge to the intellect? or Intellectually challenged? Totally Random! Creative Chaos! Is it art? music? Politics? or Yarbles!?
Pages
▼
Thursday, 19 July 2012
19/7/12
I heard on the BBC News today that the
level of crime has dropped, especially the number of homicides. The
number of what? Homicides....Fuck off! This is the UK not the USA,
and it's murder here!
They can read what they like into statistics and the media well...."you and me we know better, it's only propaganda" Police brutality...Liddle Towers, James Kelly, Blair Peach etc, and now Ian Tomlinson. Bring back The Rockford Files, Homicide may not be an American word, but its useage for describing the killing of someone has primarily been in the good old US of A, and I've rarely heard it used on the BBC news before. Cheers for yer comments good people.
What you have to say is always read, I may not always respond, as I've often said all I wanna say so I leave the rest up to you good folk to have your say, cos it aint just about me! Thanks to all of you who've taken time out to post replies/responses/information/links etc. KEEP ON KEEPING ON AND STAY FREE!
bullshit anyway, theres more murders than ever
ReplyDeleteNow it's legal for the Met Police to murder I imagine that statistic will need to be revised upwards. Too much CSI is to blame.
ReplyDelete1) Homicide isn't an American word... Or somebody should have told 999 all those years ago.
ReplyDelete2) As regards the police's right to kill - "I believe in justice / I believe in vengeance / I believe in getting the bastard".
They can read what they like into statistics and the media well...."you and me we know better, it's only propaganda" Police brutality...Liddle Towers, James Kelly, Blair Peach etc, and now Ian Tomlinson. Bring back The Rockford Files, Homicide may not be an American word, but its useage for describing the killing of someone has primarily been in the good old US of A, and I've rarely heard it used on the BBC news before. Cheers for yer comments good people.
ReplyDelete