Young Britons Get That Ol’ Time Religion
18- to 24-year-olds are the second most likely age group to attend church.
18- to 24-year-olds are the second most likely age group to attend church.
Clearly, British police have got too much time on their hands.
It’s nothing like hunting, nor is it anything to do with race.
The bigger problem I foresee is that such a law could easily be co-opted to support the endless campaigns against shooting game in the UK.
I will continue to comment but I have to be careful in what I report and the language that I use.
Employed, unemployed, very ancient, young, professional, non-professional, tax payer, tax imbiber: all are part of the body politic and all may have their say.
Can trust be rebuilt? Maybe, but not with apologies, hashtags and press releases. Because if the people who follow the rules lose faith in the rules and the establishment, what’s left? Nothing but the sceptics. And we’re not wrong.
Sex offender keeps finding ways to hang around kids.
British girl banned from celebrating her indigenous heritage.
I ask myself why didn’t other priests, pastors, and ministers stand up against this tyranny like Father Hughes did. And why was his disgraceful treatment by the Irish state tolerated?
My grandfather fought with the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and in retracing his footsteps, I have felt a sense of pride while also collating an array of questions.
Proscribing Palestine Action was justified, but, in a deeply divided country, the government faces a minefield: enforce the law selectively and lose trust or enforce it strictly and risk unrest.
Some might blame Jane and her mum for being scroungers. As it happens I don’t: they seem to me to be making a perfectly logical, if short-term, financial decision. £72 a week is available so why not take it?