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Alton Towers trips for wayward kids
15/ 7/2008
YOUNGSTERS at the brink of becoming a menace to their community could be rewarded for good behaviour with a trip to Alton Towers.
As part of a joint venture between police and Rochdale Council’s community safety team, aimed at staving off boredom and keeping youths out of trouble, children from Norden would be treated to a day out at the theme park in Staffordshire.
Well said, The Evangelist33, you are raising once more the banner for The Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ. We must resume the crusade against the evils that threaten our society and our ancient way of life.
Only when we have vanquished the anti-Christ can we enjoy the pleasures of Alton Towers. Is the Corkscrew ride still there? It was brill the last time I went on it.
Only when we have vanquished the anti-Christ can we enjoy the pleasures of Alton Towers. Is the Corkscrew ride still there? It was brill the last time I went on it.
Lady Templar, ex-Bury Road Convent
16/07/2008 at 17:59
16/07/2008 at 17:59
Whilst I can exept that good behaviour should be rewarded, I feel this is wrong as these children need to be shown some morals. What about the tousands of good children who always behave in the correct manner, who rewards them? Come on and relise we are voters and not idiots who have money to throw away on so called great ideas. Thats why Councils up and down the country, along with the Police are controlling the perfect places to live!!
wickedchop, littleborough
16/07/2008 at 13:00
16/07/2008 at 13:00
The comments of Dobbin show that "Looney Labour" are still alive and kicking.
Labour certainly know how to waste taxpayer's cash.
C Ciczlic, Heywood
16/07/2008 at 12:03
16/07/2008 at 12:03
The Evangelist. Since when was a gay march classed as perversion?
And what has that got to do with children going to Alton Towers?
Bible bashers like you are exremely dangerous with your views.
And what has that got to do with children going to Alton Towers?
Bible bashers like you are exremely dangerous with your views.
mandy40
16/07/2008 at 11:58
16/07/2008 at 11:58
I used to get a slap when i was a kid if i caused trouble.
These days they get a treat to Alton towers.
How about punishing these brats for bad behaviour instead of rewarding it?
These days they get a treat to Alton towers.
How about punishing these brats for bad behaviour instead of rewarding it?
mandy40
16/07/2008 at 11:01
16/07/2008 at 11:01
The Real Problem
There are some areas, and they include the human heart, which the law is powerless to reach. A lack of an internal moral compass, which stems from a lack of the fear of God, means the criminal law only comes along afterwards, when the damage has been done. But if the law does not then administer true restorative justice, no-one will fear the law either. On top of that, society and the individuals within it can be further corrupted over generations by bad social legislation. 'There are no quick fixes to solve the problem of increasing crime. Britain is becoming daily more brutal because for the last forty years, a godless elite have been destroying the Christian foundations of our society. Rebuilding that will not happen overnight, and only then if the Church rediscovers some courage in Christ's statements of righteousness. 'If we want to track the roots of knife and gun crime back to its roots, we have to confront the government-inspired collapse of family life, Parliament's abolition of a proportionate penalty for murder, and the coarsening of our society, for which politicians and celebrities alike share responsibility. 'The collapse of family life is down to the legalisation of divorce on demand in the 60s coupled with the state encouraging teenagers to have sex. These two anti-Christian measures taken together mean only around half of children are now growing up with their father. 'Schools are also working behind parents' backs, handing our contraceptives and arranging abortions to children for whom they would need the parents' permission to give an aspirin. Parliament has said fathers aren't even needed in families. How is a mother on her own supposed to restrain an adolescent son? 'The absence of a father in today's families is why young people look to the gang not the family for their sense of identity, as Barbara Wilding, Chief Constable of South Wales Police, said just two weeks ago. In addition, legislators have confused parents about how far they can discipline their children, while social services are only too keen to pounce and disrupt loving families if a child for some reason denounces its parents for the odd smack. 'With the abolition of the death penalty in 1965 and the Abortion Act 1967, Parliament removed the death penalty from the guilty, by the state, where it belongs, and imposed it on the innocent within the family, where it does not. With those two measures, our politicians said innocent human life, made in the image of God, had no value. Restorative justice is God's idea, but only the death penalty, for those found guilty on the evidence of eyewitnesses, can do justice for the victim of murder. Being locked up for 10 or 11 years is not justice. Our lack of compassion for the victims of crime is generating more of them. 'And the more you increase penalties for those carrying knives or guns, the more you decrease the differential between that and murder itself, if the penalty for the latter is just a spell in prison. Having draconian penalties for carrying weapons can increase the use of them. On top of that, our ban on handguns has resulted in more of them on the streets, in the hands of criminals who are only too ready to use them. 'Certainly our culture, especially in film or video games, is glorifying violence and the use of weapons. Drunkenness and the use of foul language coarsen and demean us all. Celebrities and royalty bear a huge responsibility for the growing lack of respect in our increasingly dysfunctional society. Recently, Parliament, thinking there was not quite enough disrespect already, and knowing that regard for man begins with the fear of God, abolished our laws against blasphemy. 'We live in a society where all moral boundaries have been or are being overturned. Those at the top, politicians, celebrities, even chief police officers, set lamentable standards of honesty and decency. The irony of Gordon Brown demanding action from Sir Ian Blair is that Sir Ian himself has such a low regard for innocent human life that he refused to take responsibility for the death of an innocent man shot by his force at Stockwell Tube. Gordon Brown himself was part of a government which sent our troops to die in two illegal wars and is keeping them in Basra , according to the Colonel there, so Iraqi children can play football. 'The Opposition in Parliament is part of the problem. Whilst David Cameron has argued for society to maintain standards of right and wrong, the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, showed that he has no idea of right and wrong by parading at the head of the London 'Gay Pride' march of perversion.
There are some areas, and they include the human heart, which the law is powerless to reach. A lack of an internal moral compass, which stems from a lack of the fear of God, means the criminal law only comes along afterwards, when the damage has been done. But if the law does not then administer true restorative justice, no-one will fear the law either. On top of that, society and the individuals within it can be further corrupted over generations by bad social legislation. 'There are no quick fixes to solve the problem of increasing crime. Britain is becoming daily more brutal because for the last forty years, a godless elite have been destroying the Christian foundations of our society. Rebuilding that will not happen overnight, and only then if the Church rediscovers some courage in Christ's statements of righteousness. 'If we want to track the roots of knife and gun crime back to its roots, we have to confront the government-inspired collapse of family life, Parliament's abolition of a proportionate penalty for murder, and the coarsening of our society, for which politicians and celebrities alike share responsibility. 'The collapse of family life is down to the legalisation of divorce on demand in the 60s coupled with the state encouraging teenagers to have sex. These two anti-Christian measures taken together mean only around half of children are now growing up with their father. 'Schools are also working behind parents' backs, handing our contraceptives and arranging abortions to children for whom they would need the parents' permission to give an aspirin. Parliament has said fathers aren't even needed in families. How is a mother on her own supposed to restrain an adolescent son? 'The absence of a father in today's families is why young people look to the gang not the family for their sense of identity, as Barbara Wilding, Chief Constable of South Wales Police, said just two weeks ago. In addition, legislators have confused parents about how far they can discipline their children, while social services are only too keen to pounce and disrupt loving families if a child for some reason denounces its parents for the odd smack. 'With the abolition of the death penalty in 1965 and the Abortion Act 1967, Parliament removed the death penalty from the guilty, by the state, where it belongs, and imposed it on the innocent within the family, where it does not. With those two measures, our politicians said innocent human life, made in the image of God, had no value. Restorative justice is God's idea, but only the death penalty, for those found guilty on the evidence of eyewitnesses, can do justice for the victim of murder. Being locked up for 10 or 11 years is not justice. Our lack of compassion for the victims of crime is generating more of them. 'And the more you increase penalties for those carrying knives or guns, the more you decrease the differential between that and murder itself, if the penalty for the latter is just a spell in prison. Having draconian penalties for carrying weapons can increase the use of them. On top of that, our ban on handguns has resulted in more of them on the streets, in the hands of criminals who are only too ready to use them. 'Certainly our culture, especially in film or video games, is glorifying violence and the use of weapons. Drunkenness and the use of foul language coarsen and demean us all. Celebrities and royalty bear a huge responsibility for the growing lack of respect in our increasingly dysfunctional society. Recently, Parliament, thinking there was not quite enough disrespect already, and knowing that regard for man begins with the fear of God, abolished our laws against blasphemy. 'We live in a society where all moral boundaries have been or are being overturned. Those at the top, politicians, celebrities, even chief police officers, set lamentable standards of honesty and decency. The irony of Gordon Brown demanding action from Sir Ian Blair is that Sir Ian himself has such a low regard for innocent human life that he refused to take responsibility for the death of an innocent man shot by his force at Stockwell Tube. Gordon Brown himself was part of a government which sent our troops to die in two illegal wars and is keeping them in Basra , according to the Colonel there, so Iraqi children can play football. 'The Opposition in Parliament is part of the problem. Whilst David Cameron has argued for society to maintain standards of right and wrong, the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, showed that he has no idea of right and wrong by parading at the head of the London 'Gay Pride' march of perversion.
The Evangelist33, Rochdale
16/07/2008 at 10:25
16/07/2008 at 10:25
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18/07/2008 at 18:59