BBFAN wrote: » The poster I was answering said Ms Cash was AS bad. Who was she AS bad as if not the child referred to?
Deleted User wrote: » She’s a child under 10 years of age. Dressing up and posing like that is ok behind closed doors. In my eyes it’s a serious case of child abuse. She dresses and acts way beyond her years. Who is she copying? Or is there a more serious element at play here.
BBFAN wrote: » I'll admit, I was tempted enough to have a look. Jaysus, plenty of girls dress a lot worse. Talk about exaggeration. :rolleyes:
normanoffside wrote: » Who said the child is in the wrong? Jesus, get your head out of your arse.
BBFAN wrote: » Just as bad as what exactly? Please explain how a child is in the wrong here?
Potential-Monke wrote: » Wow, didn't realise that moutpiece Brown was so pro-Travellers, going by his comments that it's ingrained into our DNA. It's not Vincent, their actions change the way we think. Prior to becoming a Garda around 2006, I didn't really have an opinion of them. Never had any real encounters with them aside from 1 time around 2006 just before becoming a Garda, driving through Limerick up Thomas St. A red hi-ace pulled out right in front of me, nearly hit me, I had to brake hard and steer left to avoid hitting him. He was coming out of a car park. I stood on the horn, and this big thick fat Traveller got out, pulled a wheel brace out of the drivers side pocket and started coming towards me. Needless to say I ****ing took off. Could have hit him, no idea if I did. Suppose that was me being racist, now that I think back.... But, that was 1 occurrence which didn't paint a picture for me. Then I became a Garda, and you might argue that I only saw the negative side of them. I'll argue, 13 years on, that there is no positive side, but I'm jumping ahead. My first encounter happened to be due to a fued, 2 families living in separate halting sites on the outskirts of the city decided they didn't like each other very much and started hacking at each other with slash hooks, baseball bats, hurleys, sickles, the usual stuff you'd just have lying around. A few of them nearly died, one lost most fingers on one hand, another has a beautiful battle scar running from just over his right eye back over the hear to the centre of his neck. Lucky it was a sickle, if it was a straight blade it would have gone through his skull. So we spent the following 4 months manning permanent checkpoints at the entrance to the 2 halting sites. 4 Gardaí for 16 hours a day, and 2 for 8 hours at night. Include the Gardaí required to cover breaks, and you get an idea of how many it took to ensure these 'people' didn't murder each other. After that, we had the usual run ins, begging for money (begging = threatening old people), pulling their caravans and cars up on whatever bit of land they can find, robbing Pennys blind, the younger members of the community hung out around the pubs at closing and literally started hitting random people as they walked by. One laid a young fella out right in front of me, looked at me, started laughing and ran. I laughed as I knew who he was and arrested him about 10 minutes after he went to sleep at his house. Then I had the 'head' of the main crime family in the traveller community literally tell me that they do all this because they don't get pulled for it, the courts leave them off. He laughed at us every time we had to speak to him. Oh, and the 'tradition' of calling everyone after their father, so they're all John, and it's a game of Where's Johnny when trying to find the John that's involved - 'Oh that must be me cousin Johnny, he left a few months back, don't know where he went'. So experience of nothing but criminality has skewed my view. I quit the Gardaí after nearly 10 years (couldn't recommend to stay away from a job more than this one), and I can hand on heart say that Travellers have painted themselves in a negative light for me. Any prejudice or 'racism' ( :rolleyes: ) is well warranted due to my interactions with this minority. Actually, I have red hair and blue eyes, the rarest combination on earth. Pretty sure I'm a smaller minority than travellers. So you can't say anything negative about me, or it's racism.
normanoffside wrote: » And do their mums post up the pictures on facebook on a public profile? If so they are just as bad.
Paddy Cow wrote: » Didn't she make her communion last year?
Odelay wrote: » For those of us not on Facebook, can you post a screen shot? What are we talking about?
normanoffside wrote: » The oldest is 12, I think the girl can't be more than 10 :eek:
It wasnt me123 wrote: » I'm no fan of the Cash clan but I'd say its a school disco, my daughters own national school had them. I do agree that the young girl is posing very provocatively, inappropriate for social media but alot of the time these young wans copy Kardashians etc and try the duck pout - looks ridiculous but young wans are easily fooled to follow so called celebrity culture. Just as an aside, I never put any pictures up, ever, of my daughter on social media and she's now 17. Its her image not mine to shove all over the internet.
bada_bing wrote: » that's what i was thinking too, very sad to see a young girl brought up that way.
Potential-Monke wrote: » She's uploaded about 20 photos of her angles ready for the disco. 4 young fellas with jeans/shirts and her daughter who looks about 12? and is dressed up like a little tart.Clarification, I'm not calling the child a tart, I'm saying she has been dressed up like one.
tuxy wrote: » Like many other traveller girls she probably is being groomed to marry her older cousin.
BBFAN wrote: » Ah lads, for those of us who don't obsessively follow Ms Cash the last few posts have meant nothing?
Deleted User wrote: » Aye, but how old is that girl and wtf is that posing about? I’m no prude, far from it, but she’s a little girl. Not a tart. Why (a) dress like that and (b) pose like that.
sexmag wrote: » The kids heading to the disco?