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Thread: Is this "racist"?

  1. #1

    Is this "racist"?

    Let's go tarmacking with Teabag, Tess and Toby

    Are you sitting comfortably, children? Then I'll begin. Once upon a time there was Janet and John, who lived with their mummy and daddy in a neat suburban house. Their harmless adventures helped millions of children to read.

    Now meet Tess the Traveller, her son Toby and their dog Teabag, the new stars of a reading book for three to seven-year-olds being distributed in primary schools across the country. It's part of a government initiative aimed at promoting tolerance and understanding towards gipsies and travellers.

    Needless to say, Tess, Toby and Teabag lead an airbrushed, romanticised existence. This well-scrubbed trio roam the land, attending traditional gipsy dances, horse fairs and even an eco-camp.
    Nowhere is there any mention of Toby's father. Tess is a strong, capable single mum who can turn her hand to anything, including mending a flat tyre on their caravan.

    The 'diversity' brigade can't bring themselves to acknowledge that fathers have any part to play in bringing up children. I'm surprised that they didn't make Tess a lesbian, who became pregnant by artificial insemination using sperm donated by a transgendered friend.

    If they were really striving for authenticity, Tess would be married, probably from the age of 14. Travellers are one of the last bastions of both the nuclear and extended family. In a nod to accuracy, Tess makes her money at car boot sales, although the stories don't elaborate on where she gets her merchandise. Car boot sales are notorious for the disposal of stolen property.

    Here in the real world, Tess would be claiming welfare benefits while pocketing the cash without declaring it to the taxman. She would be driving a £50,000 Toyota Landcruiser (running on red agricultural diesel) with a stolen lawn-mower in the boot; living on either an illegal camp site or in a subsidised council house; and running a Tarmacking gang.

    Toby wouldn't look like one of the gang from Scooby Doo. He'd be a snot-nosed scruff begging outside the local pound shop, accompanied by Teabag, a snarling, mangy mutt on a piece of string, rather than a playful contender for Crufts.
    Over the past few years, travellers have been transformed into a protected species, their lifestyle subsidised and proselytised.

    They are treated as an oppressed ethnic minority, even though the term 'travelling community' encompasses everyone from genuine gipsies and Irish tinkers to Roma criminal gangs and assorted hippie throwback layabouts.

    One thing they all seem to have in common is a reluctance to travel anywhere - or, at least, in the case of the Irish and Eastern European contingents, to stay put once they've arrived in England, where a buffet of benefits is laid before them.

    Many live blameless lives of self-sufficiency, in particular law-abiding circus folk, who move from town to town providing innocent pleasure at rip-off prices. Others, though, are a menace to society, earning a living from dubious practice and outright criminality.

    I bet the horse fair attended by Tess, Toby and Teabag didn't have to be stormed by a police armed response unit, as happened recently at a similar gathering in Kenilworth, following reports that revellers were firing guns and shoplifting.
    There's a whole industry dedicated to pandering to the needs of travellers, even though most contribute absolutely nothing to society.

    Yesterday, as Irish tinkers demonstrated in Basildon, Essex, against a long-overdue order to evict them from Europe's largest illegal settlement, it was revealed that £4.7million of Lottery money has been spent helping travellers to subvert the planning laws.

    Wherever these camps are established, there is invariably an increase in crime. Even when they do move on, they leave behind scorched earth and piles of rubbish. Yet the travellers are indulged by the authorities, while law-abiding, taxpaying local householders who voice their complaints are routinely threatened with prosecution for 'racism'.

    As I reported recently, Warwickshire Constabulary even threw a pikeys' picnic on the lawn of police headquarters in an effort to improve relations with the 'community' following the shootout at the Kenilworth horse fair.

    Elsewhere, police have been offering free driving lessons to travellers to try to persuade them to take a test, tax and insure their cars, all of which are apparently alien to their 'culture'.

    Mobile benefit offices have been set up at illegal camps to spare them the inconvenience of having to travel in to town to sign on. And the NHS has ordered that gipsies be fast-tracked at GPs' surgeries. But our children won't be reading about any of this in the fantasy world of Tess, Toby and Teabag.

    Are you still sitting comfortably?


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar...#ixzz0Nu5iFjP9

  2. #2
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    Hmmm, maybe if you'd read the books as a child you would have developed a little more tolerance yourself, instead of systematically tarmacking ( well I thought it was funny) all travellers with the same brush.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lennon Saviour of E View Post
    Let's go tarmacking with Teabag, Tess and Toby

    Are you sitting comfortably, children? Then I'll begin. Once upon a time there was Janet and John, who lived with their mummy and daddy in a neat suburban house. Their harmless adventures helped millions of children to read.

    Now meet Tess the Traveller, her son Toby and their dog Teabag, the new stars of a reading book for three to seven-year-olds being distributed in primary schools across the country. It's part of a government initiative aimed at promoting tolerance and understanding towards gipsies and travellers.

    Needless to say, Tess, Toby and Teabag lead an airbrushed, romanticised existence. This well-scrubbed trio roam the land, attending traditional gipsy dances, horse fairs and even an eco-camp.
    Nowhere is there any mention of Toby's father. Tess is a strong, capable single mum who can turn her hand to anything, including mending a flat tyre on their caravan.

    The 'diversity' brigade can't bring themselves to acknowledge that fathers have any part to play in bringing up children. I'm surprised that they didn't make Tess a lesbian, who became pregnant by artificial insemination using sperm donated by a transgendered friend.

    If they were really striving for authenticity, Tess would be married, probably from the age of 14. Travellers are one of the last bastions of both the nuclear and extended family. In a nod to accuracy, Tess makes her money at car boot sales, although the stories don't elaborate on where she gets her merchandise. Car boot sales are notorious for the disposal of stolen property.

    Here in the real world, Tess would be claiming welfare benefits while pocketing the cash without declaring it to the taxman. She would be driving a £50,000 Toyota Landcruiser (running on red agricultural diesel) with a stolen lawn-mower in the boot; living on either an illegal camp site or in a subsidised council house; and running a Tarmacking gang.

    Toby wouldn't look like one of the gang from Scooby Doo. He'd be a snot-nosed scruff begging outside the local pound shop, accompanied by Teabag, a snarling, mangy mutt on a piece of string, rather than a playful contender for Crufts.
    Over the past few years, travellers have been transformed into a protected species, their lifestyle subsidised and proselytised.

    They are treated as an oppressed ethnic minority, even though the term 'travelling community' encompasses everyone from genuine gipsies and Irish tinkers to Roma criminal gangs and assorted hippie throwback layabouts.

    One thing they all seem to have in common is a reluctance to travel anywhere - or, at least, in the case of the Irish and Eastern European contingents, to stay put once they've arrived in England, where a buffet of benefits is laid before them.

    Many live blameless lives of self-sufficiency, in particular law-abiding circus folk, who move from town to town providing innocent pleasure at rip-off prices. Others, though, are a menace to society, earning a living from dubious practice and outright criminality.

    I bet the horse fair attended by Tess, Toby and Teabag didn't have to be stormed by a police armed response unit, as happened recently at a similar gathering in Kenilworth, following reports that revellers were firing guns and shoplifting.
    There's a whole industry dedicated to pandering to the needs of travellers, even though most contribute absolutely nothing to society.

    Yesterday, as Irish tinkers demonstrated in Basildon, Essex, against a long-overdue order to evict them from Europe's largest illegal settlement, it was revealed that £4.7million of Lottery money has been spent helping travellers to subvert the planning laws.

    Wherever these camps are established, there is invariably an increase in crime. Even when they do move on, they leave behind scorched earth and piles of rubbish. Yet the travellers are indulged by the authorities, while law-abiding, taxpaying local householders who voice their complaints are routinely threatened with prosecution for 'racism'.

    As I reported recently, Warwickshire Constabulary even threw a pikeys' picnic on the lawn of police headquarters in an effort to improve relations with the 'community' following the shootout at the Kenilworth horse fair.

    Elsewhere, police have been offering free driving lessons to travellers to try to persuade them to take a test, tax and insure their cars, all of which are apparently alien to their 'culture'.

    Mobile benefit offices have been set up at illegal camps to spare them the inconvenience of having to travel in to town to sign on. And the NHS has ordered that gipsies be fast-tracked at GPs' surgeries. But our children won't be reading about any of this in the fantasy world of Tess, Toby and Teabag.

    Are you still sitting comfortably?


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar...#ixzz0Nu5iFjP9
    Proper winds me up, whats the point of paying taxes when these ***** do what they want and get fast tracked to their GP after paying nothing in taxes!!!


  4. #4
    Football Fan Darren has a good reputation
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    Quote Originally Posted by Michael View Post
    Proper winds me up, whats the point of paying taxes when these ***** do what they want and get fast tracked to their GP after paying nothing in taxes!!!
    The thing is though that doesn't happen mate.
    Last edited by Darren; Tuesday 11th August 2009 at 22:44.

  5. #5
    The Saviour Of MFF Simonutd has a great reputation
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    can we have a sshorter version, i have a life to get on with, dont want to spend half of today readin this

  6. #6
    The Pro from Dover itownvillan has a great reputation itownvillan has a great reputation itownvillan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Simonutd View Post
    can we have a sshorter version, i have a life to get on with, dont want to spend half of today readin this
    agree, lets have the readers digest version.

    BORING BORING VILLA

  7. #7
    The Saviour Of MFF Simonutd has a great reputation
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    i read it now, we have some about 10 miles away from here, but i have drive past it oftern, it sticks when you pass of burning stuff, sets the wife off with her astmha,

    funny thing is one of them got a part time job , whith someone i know well, basicly he was made to take it,

    anyway, they said they love the enviroment and want to make it the best, and someone brought about all the bubbish round the place and the awefull smell, and he didnt like it, but got sacked in the end for drug abuse in work time,lol

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Simonutd View Post
    can we have a sshorter version, i have a life to get on with, dont want to spend half of today readin this
    It was only part of a column in a tabloid.

    God help you if you actually had to read a
    newspaper.

  9. #9
    The Saviour Of MFF Simonutd has a great reputation
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    i do i read the times, or the telegraph, not the mail generally cause of all the rubbish in it

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Simonutd View Post
    i do i read the times, or the telegraph, not the mail generally cause of all the rubbish in it
    a) That's not the point now is it.

    b) Like any newspaper including those you mentioned will have stuff in you are not interested in. You leave those bits.

  11. #11
    There's an interesting story today about a family of nine "travellers" living in a £1m house at taxpayers expense:

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-benefits.html

  12. #12
    Football Fan Darren has a good reputation
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lennon Saviour of E View Post
    There's an interesting story today about a family of nine "travellers" living in a £1m house at taxpayers expense:

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-benefits.html
    The page you have requested is not available, or no longer exists.

  13. #13
    geordieloon
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darren View Post
    The page you have requested is not available, or no longer exists.
    Thats what i got as well

  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Darren View Post
    The page you have requested is not available, or no longer exists.
    This should do the trick:

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-benefits.html

  15. #15
    Football Fan Darren has a good reputation
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    So after all that it's just typical Daily Mail stuff.

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