Originally posted by Flosshilde
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Room 101 - what single aspect of modern life should be consigned to oblivion?
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amateur51
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOdd isn't it how no-one ever seeks to reclaim the 'original' meanings of queer, nancy, faggot, etc.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, down our way the primary meaning of 'faggot' is still a sort of meatball.
Nowadays it has an additional meaning, of course,
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Lateralthinking1
teamsaint - Thank you ever so much. Absolutely horrific. Basically work that was undertaken without the proper Notice and commitments. Council said "take it up with them". They said "see you in court". Obviously they are "in" property. So then pay for a surveyor who says "it should be alright I think". There's a shared drain that they altered without consulting seven others, a soakaway that is questionable, earth removal like you wouldn't believe up to the boundary, refusal to put in a retaining wall with the Council saying it "probably" isn't needed, fences that are illegal and too high, subsequently replaced. And then to find out after months of evasion that the landscaping plans have never even been submitted and are allegedly in Canada. Mechanical diggers already in full flow. And a gas leak near to the "explosive" reading. Workmen outside for six hours repairing the damage.
The plans are then submitted three years late and retrospectively approved, ongoing issues not fully addressed, a Stage 1 complaints procedure, an FOI request, both half dealt with, and then a letter seeking clarity not acknowledged for two and a half months. Council says all must be complete by mid-Jan. A load of muck and mess left since Oct for no apparent reason. This morning it all kicks off again, way past the deadline, with a "don't park here" notice "we're doing building again", back onto the Ombudsman and the Council. There have been two visits from the Council today. It's paving. They regret how it is being done but of course believe that it is all more or less in order. They "hope" to reply to the remaining points soon. Oh and now the work won't commence until later, there will be a lot of noise, they can't give a completion date and yet somehow it is authorised - Lat.Last edited by Guest; 27-02-12, 19:12.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostNeighbours who create a building site on the boundary for a year and don't comply with the requirements set by the Council.
Councils who set requirements, don't enforce them, and when asked to do so repeatedly, don't communicate.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by decantor View PostWell, if you are genuinely suffering loss of amenity or material damage, why not try an action in the Small Claims' Court against the Council for negligence or some such? (Then again, my solicitor seems to charge £75 for picking up the phone when it rings.)
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Postteamsaint - Thank you ever so much. Absolutely horrific. Basically work that was undertaken without the proper Notice and commitments. Council said "take it up with them". They said "see you in court". Obviosuly they are "in" property. So then pay for a surveyor who says "it should be alright I think". There's a shared drain that they altered without consulting seven others, a soakaway that is questionable, earth removal like you wouldn't believe up to the boundary, refusal to put in a retaining wall with the Council saying it "probably" isn't needed, fences that are illegal and too high, subsequently replaced. And then to find out after months of evasion that the landscaping plans have never even been submitted and are allegedly in Canada. Mechanical diggers already in full flow. And a gas leak near to the "explosive" reading. Workmen outside for six hours repairing the damage.
The plans are then submitted three years late and retrospectively approved, ongoing issues not fully addressed, a Stage 1 complaints procedure, an FOI request, both half dealt with, and then a letter seeking clarity not acknowledged for two and a half months. Council says all must be complete by mid-Jan. A load of muck and mess left since Oct for no apparent reason. This morning it all kicks off again, way past the deadline, with a "don't park here" notice "we're doing building again", back onto the Ombudsman and the Council. There have been two visits from the Council today. They regret how it is being done but of course believe that it is all more or less in order. They hope to reply to the remaining points soon. Oh and now the work won't commence until later, there will be a lot of noise, they can't give a completion date and yet somehow it is authorised - Lat.
I do know somebody who is involved in getting substantial plans passed, (in an absolutely above board and highly responsible way, I might add).I will ask if he has any hints on ways to proceed, or to exert pressure.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by teamsaint View Posti really don't know how to reply. It must be unbearable.
I do know somebody who is involved in getting substantial plans passed, (in an absolutely above board and highly responsible way, I might add).I will ask if he has any hints on ways to proceed, or to exert pressure.
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How about a campaign to promote 'jocund'? That's a rather nice Shakespearian word which fits quite a few situations!
(Even further OT) My grandfather, who grew up in West Bromwich, used to use the Old English word 'gledes' for embers in a fire (quite a few of those old words were still in common use in certain areas well into the C20).
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But why wouldn't they want to read it? Because of course they - and some of their class - have hidden and not-so-hidden prejudices against gay people. Why else do they giggle and jeer? I'm sure you don't feel that way Aeolium, but you see the problem? It should be perfectly possible to use "gay" for other things. As Charlton Heston nearly said, it's not words that kill people, it's people that kill people, and the recent use of "gay" in the playground or in the mouths of Chris Moyles etc. etc. is a terrible develoment - effectively letting prejudice speak out, disguised by a pretence of humour or being streetwise.
Homophobic bullying - more an emotional mockery and exclusion than actual beating, but it was close - led directly to me being friendless and jobless for years after school, I just wanted to keep away from people. So this newer useage of "gay" is not trivial.
Must say I enjoyed reclaiming "queer" though! That one was often hurled at me like a stone.
Originally posted by aeolium View PostAnd of course the change in meaning of 'gay'. Does any teacher now dare to stand up in front of a class of teenagers and read Yeats' poem Lapis Lazuli, with its lines, "All things fall and are built again,/And those that build them again are gay."?
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But why wouldn't they want to read it? Because of course they - and some of their class - have hidden and not-so-hidden prejudices against gay people.
Clearly I have unintentionally touched some raw nerves by bringing this up, for which I apologise, and I shall now withdraw from this thread.
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amateur51
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBut why wouldn't they want to read it? Because of course they - and some of their class - have hidden and not-so-hidden prejudices against gay people. Why else do they giggle and jeer? I'm sure you don't feel that way Aeolium, but you see the problem? It should be perfectly possible to use "gay" for other things. As Charlton Heston nearly said, it's not words that kill people, it's people that kill people, and the recent use of "gay" in the playground or in the mouths of Chris Moyles etc. etc. is a terrible develoment - effectively letting prejudice speak out, disguised by a pretence of humour or being streetwise.
Homophobic bullying - more an emotional mockery and exclusion than actual beating, but it was close - led directly to me being friendless and jobless for years after school, I just wanted to keep away from people. So this newer useage of "gay" is not trivial.
Must say I enjoyed reclaiming "queer" though! That one was often hurled at me like a stone.
Sadly homophobic attitudes do sometimes lead to physical expression which can lead to injury and death. I attach this account from wiki of the death of Michael Causer from Liverpool but I warn readers that the account clearly links the use of homophobic language with his murder and may well upset them.
Clearly, the link betweeen such attitudes, language and murderous actions means that the attitudes and the language are not trivial and need to be challenged by us all.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostThat may well be true in some cases - I was only thinking of a much simpler explanation that the current principal meaning of the word has largely obscured its earlier meanings for a new generation.
Clearly I have unintentionally touched some raw nerves by bringing this up, for which I apologise, and I shall now withdraw from this thread.
You spoke fairly, and certainly did not touch a raw nerve in me. Incidentally, Terry-Thomas once said that when her first visited America, his hosts were nonplussed when he said how much he enjoyed a fag!
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Talking head: Today, Pabmusic complained that links to many news items and introductions to TV programmes often contain too much substantive information, making the principal item merely repetitious. Our reporter Jeremy Splod is live at Pabmusic’s address.
Jeremy Splod: Yes, today Pabmusic complained that links to many news items and introductions to TV programmes often contain too much substantive information, making the principal item merely repetitious. Pabmusic, what is your view?
Pabmusic: I think the links to many news items and introductions to TV programmes often contain too much substantive information.
Splod: Would you say that makes the principal item merely repetitious?
Pabmusic: Yes.
Splod: Well, that’s Pabmusic complaining that the links to many news items and introductions to TV programmes often contain too much substantive information, making the principal item merely repetitious. So it's back to the studio…
[Rolling bar saying “Pabmusic says links to many news items and introductions to TV programmes contain too much substantive information, making the principal item merely repetitious".]
In case you missed it, this interview will be repeated every hour until you can quote it verbatim.Last edited by Pabmusic; 28-02-12, 09:00.
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