dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Well, your list consists of one case which is hysterically shouted about to whip up a bit of the ould outrage about a certain group. My concern is more that the Gardai are attacked at all, but you don't seem to care about those assualts, because they are carried out by Irish people, nothing wrong with that, ey? The Gardai need to be given teeth. As it stands they are a joke. This assault would have ended very diffenently in Europe, police here have more than a stick and a radio to defend themselves with.
suicide_circus wrote: » Yep that was me taking a guess, it ticked all the boxes but I got it wrong
thebull85 wrote: » thats all you have? what about the evidence that im funding African gangs?
jimgoose wrote: » Did the ASU fire any rounds? I don't believe so - that in itself is quite remarkable. Talk about restraint.
Gravelly wrote: » It's only a matter of time before the Gardaí will have to be tooled up like a SWAT team any time they are called out to any of the "diversified" housing estates. Another triumph of the multicultural experiment.
thebull85 wrote: » Just to make you aware, we cannot deport people born here.
Stovepipe wrote: » It's already the case, really. Cops doing a raid in any "rough" estate or street with a likelihood of a kick-off will routinely have the armed Gardai tipped off. Firemen will routinely call the Gardai if they are tasked with quenching a burning car, as the chances of getting attacked are very high and the usually teenaged perps know that they will remain untouched. Nothing to do with skin colour or racial origin.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Police in Ireland always seem to act as if they're afraid to take action. It sets a bad signal for the criminals who are better equipped and trained it would appear. If they one day decided to walk into governemnt offices and say "listen here sunshine, from now on we're calling the shots" what will they do? Get the Gards to wave wooden batons at them?
Auguste Comte wrote: » Dont tell me, you only buy yokes with a pointy white hat on them.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Well, your list consists of one case which is hysterically shouted about to whip up a bit of the ould outrage about a certain group. My concern is more that the Gardai are attacked at all, but you don't seem to care about those assualts, because they are carried out by Irish people, nothing wrong with that, ey? Your issue seems to be more with the color of the attackers than anything else? It seems to suit some kind of agenda you have. The Gardai need to be given teeth. As it stands they are a joke. This assault would have ended very diffenently in Europe, police here have more than a stick and a radio to defend themselves with.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Well, a lot of people are more concerned with the color of the attackers than the assault themselves...
RasTa wrote: » I knew this would happen if we let them in! I knew it! Things used to be so peaceful but now look at it, chaos on the streets and sure it's only going to get worse.
weisses wrote: » Going after a drug dealing gang ............ unarmed .... Only in Ireland :rolleyes:
Greyling wrote: » I'm not happy with any gangs here dealing drugs. I also don't use drugs. Anyone that does has no right to complain about them
[Deleted User] wrote: » Absolute rubbish.
Pelvis wrote: » Because only Africans have baseball bats and big dogs.
Deleted User wrote: » Absolute rubbish.
mynamejeff wrote: » why ? if you buy drugs from drug dealers where do you think the money goes ? im speaking in general not specific to this case ?
thebull85 wrote: » Brown Thomas
sweetie wrote: » Fixed your post.
topper75 wrote: » Would be great to use the Freedom of Information Act to see what this guy's argument for asylum here in Ireland was. Would also be interesting to see who granted it and the basis they used. I'd say it would be a right scéal greannmhar altogether.
Trasna1 wrote: » In fairness, there is an arc of deprivation along the west of the M50 stretching from Clonee to Jobstown and beyond. There is also a racial integration issue in these areas which is not the cause but an added dimension.