As I was leaving my local off-licence at around 9:50pm tonight with four cans of the downmarket but rather drinkable Tennentâs lager (the first one of which I have opened mid-writing this sentence), I held the door open for a black gentleman who was entering the premisesâŚ
As I walked away from the off-licence, (the black gentleman was by now inside the premises) I saw and heard a group 19/20 year olds (estimate) sniggering (deliberate use of the term by me) and grunting, upon which one shouted ânigger, nigger, niggerâ at the off-licence, and then walked away, holding two crutches.
I thought this was interesting for two reasons:
i) The chap with the crutches had no discernible limp.
ii) Because as I previously noted, the black gentleman was by now inside the premises, he could not hear the abuse being directed at him, which I suspect the chap with the crutches did not want him to do.
[QUOTE=âSidney, post: 920252, member: 183â]As I was leaving my local off-licence at around 9:50pm tonight with four cans of the downmarket but rather drinkable Tennentâs lager (the first one of which I have opened mid-writing this sentence), I held the door open for a black gentleman who was entering the premisesâŚ
As I walked away from the off-licence, (the black gentleman was by now inside the premises) I saw and heard a group 19/20 year olds (estimate) sniggering (deliberate use of the term by me) and grunting, upon which one shouted ânigger, nigger, niggerâ at the off-licence, and then walked away, holding two crutches.
I thought this was interesting for two reasons:
i) The chap with the crutches had no discernible limp.
ii) Because as I previously noted, the black gentleman was by now inside the premises, he could not hear the abuse being directed at him, which I suspect the chap with the crutches did not want him to do.[/QUOTE]
Ciaran Kilkenny?
Look pal, the guards are too busy listening in on phone calls in the station and squaring penalty points for rugby players to be getting excited about a fellow stealing kitkats
They have enough to issue 45,000 penalty point notices though. They are merely another revenue generating tool for the Government and shame on them for allowing it to happen.
Yeah we were talking about penalty points too and how the ads say they put them at accident black spots. No way, the traffic lads out them wherever they think theyâll catch people.
There is a gatso van almost permanently stationed on the Dunmore road out of Waterford on a stretch with an artificially low speed limit of 50kph, where I have never seen or heard of an accident. Itâs a pure revenue generating tool and whatâs worse because us locals are wise to it, it only catches tourists and day trippers. Welcome to Waterford, hereâs two penalty points and an 80euro fine. Do come back.
Same all over, they have two regular spots in limerick they do the same and the same in Lissycasey on the way to Kilkee. My mate was saying how stupid it was too. It seems there is a Rawls from the Wire up there somewhere more interesting in filing the stats than genuine po-leece work.
The stupidity of it is that the speed cameras donât work on black spots because you need a long straight of road to get a proper reading. Therefore people are only ever done for speeding on safe stretches of road while you could do 120kph on a series of hairpin bends with impunity.
The city of Dublin is great . Thereâs a castle and gorgeous architecture, there are renowned colleges and green spaces, and there are many other things to see and do that go beyond the tired âIrish culture equals pubsâ stereotype. The Temple Bar area of Dublin, however, is a prime example of the rampant fleecing of drunken tourists that should be avoided at all costs. This small area caters to visitors competing to see how drunk they can get in âauthenticâ bars and nightclubs (aka overpriced tourist traps). Avoid it at all costs and seek out a pub literally anywhere else in Dublin for a better experience.
The city of Dublin is great . Thereâs a castle and gorgeous architecture, there are renowned colleges and green spaces, and there are many other things to see and do that go beyond the tired âIrish culture equals pubsâ stereotype. The Temple Bar area of Dublin, however, is a prime example of the rampant fleecing of drunken tourists that should be avoided at all costs. This small area caters to visitors competing to see how drunk they can get in âauthenticâ bars and nightclubs (aka overpriced tourist traps). Avoid it at all costs and seek out a pub literally anywhere else in Dublin for a better experience.[/QUOTE]
Whats wrong with fleecing drunken tourists? See any strip Club in Easter Europe, the cunts.