[Deleted User] wrote: » Those clothes were donated to charities. Stealing from anyone is bad enough, but stealing from charities is beneath contempt.
BBFAN wrote: » Gas the amount of people that jumped in to say "ROBBING FROM CHARITIES". Nowhere in Galway Guys post did it say it was a charity clothes bank? Also, they get about 50 cent per kg for clothes IF it is a charity. If someone needs clothes badly enough to take them from a clothes bank then they're welcome to them in my eyes. The people who left them outside the skip were obviously too lazy to come back when the skip was emptied or go directly to charity shop so feck them.
Deleted User wrote: » They can only get the Irish pension if they’d worked in Ireland. If they’d never worked here, they’d only get the Uk one. They would, however be entitled to a medical card.
BBFAN wrote: » Nowhere in Galway Guys post did it say it was a charity clothes bank?
Galwayguy35 wrote: » I was at the bottle banks in Loughrea yesterday and the clothes bank is just beside them, some people left bags of clothes there because the bank hadn't been emptied and next thing a few pavees hop out of a car and steal the lot. They didn't even care that we all saw them at it.
Deleted User wrote: » BBFAN wrote: » Now come on, do you really care about someone taking clothes that someone else was getting rid of? I don't get it? Those clothes were donated to charities. Stealing from anyone is bad enough, but stealing from charities is beneath contempt.
BBFAN wrote: » Now come on, do you really care about someone taking clothes that someone else was getting rid of? I don't get it?
Conall Cernach wrote: » You can get a non contributory pension here if you meet the age and income requirements and are entitled to live here. Top rate of non con pension is 232 per week.
Galwayguy35 wrote: » Well if you don't get it there is no point trying to explain it to you.
BBFAN wrote: » I didn't realise that, I think my aunt is getting the Irish pension but maybe she worked here at some stage. She came back under some scheme as well that allows emigrants to come back in retirement and got a lovely little flat.
Omackeral wrote: » Clothes banks are charity banks 95% of the time. Your point may have merit that if they're using the clothes themselves fair enough but you are so god damn willfully obtuse when it comes to Travellers. It's unreal.
Paddy Cow wrote: » Actually they're not. They're a business that recycles clothes and whack the name of a charity on the front because people are more inclined to donate if they think it's going to charity. I've been told that maybe half a % of profit goes to the charity being sponsored by the clothes bank.
tuxy wrote: » RTE had a prime time investigates about this years ago. Are you saying nothing has changed since then, what is your source?
Paddy Cow wrote: » Actually they're not. They're a business that recycles clothes and whack the name of a charity on the front because people are more inclined to donate if they think it's going to charity. I've been told that maybe half a % of profit goes to the charity being sponsored by the clothes bank. Most clothes that go into those banks are garbage and not fit for re-use. It's the crap that no one wants that gets left there - used underware, socks, bed linen etc basically anything that a charity shop won't take. Anyone taking from them isn't going to find much re-useable stuff.
AllForIt wrote: » Obviously a lot of knob heads use them to get rid of their garbage instead of paying for it to be dumped which is a reprehensible thing to do imo.
punisher5112 wrote: » A lot of the clothes are cut up and bundled into bags and squashed into cubes. These are then sold on as cleaning rags etc.
Birneybau wrote: » There was a gang going around my area the last week. 3 young wans knocked on a neighbour's door (getting over cancer treatment, he was asleep). He came down to the the door and they asked him if they could come in to see his decorations? 2 big fat fcukers outside his garden in a white van.
Church on Tuesday wrote: » They wanted to see his decorations?! It's like they're not even trying anymore. :pac:
goose2005 wrote: » there's little evidence for their separateness before the Famine. Most of our ancestors were itinerant or semi-itinerant at one time or another, due to migrant labour, evictions or shortage of land
maninasia wrote: » How come they have their own dialect/language and distinct culture then ?
Paddy Cow wrote: » Cant is not a distinct language. It is a variation of Irish and I have never heard it spoken by a traveller. It's probably how Irish is recognised on an international level as one of our national languages, yet only 12,000 out of a population of nearly 5 million speak it on a daily basis. Are there any books/literature written in Cant (being serious here, not sarcastic).
BattleCorp wrote: » I know plenty of travellers and I've never heard any of them use it. I'd guess they don't know it fully but they do use certain words from it. I think it's more of a slang thing nowadays rather than a spoken language.
Ash.J.Williams wrote: » BattleCorp wrote: » I know plenty of travellers and I've never heard any of them use it. I'd guess they don't know it fully but they do use certain words from it. I think it's more of a slang thing nowadays rather than a spoken language. It's used when travellers are pulling a fast one and don't wish the settlers to hear what they're saying