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JamesT
History Debunked
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Comments by "JamesT" (@Parawingdelta2) on "History Debunked" channel.
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Total misuse of a passport which is suppose to be used for international travel.
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It's a sick and deplorable thing for this guy to do and he's probably psychopathic but the action itself doesn't warrant a prison sentence surely. Retribution for actions like this are often carried out by bystanders.
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I use to live in the married quarters at RAF Coltishall in the 60's. My bedroom window use to look out over the end of the runway and I watched the Lightnings leave the ground and go vertical. I live in Australia now but have visited there on a few visits.
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I live in Australia and as I flicked through the channels searching for that elusive channel of worth, I stumbled upon the opening credits of Coronation Street. I don't actually watch the program and in fact didn't realise it was being televised here. I haven't seen it since I visited my mother in the UK in 2004. I paused for a moment in a moment of nostalgia and remembered the very first episode when I was ten years old. The first three characters who appeared on the screen were all black!
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Another five years and we won't even remember his name.
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If the people who want no police could just leave their name, address and the approximate times they're not at home that would be good.
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In Australia we have an untalented television identity named Lisa Wilkinson who's on one of these 'holier than thou' panels. She holds the New Zealand Prime Minister up as a saint and talks as though men in general have just walked out of a pervert and rapists club meeting and planning their weekend activity.
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Ok, now they've gone too far! Time for an uprising when they target 'The Beano'. I started reading it when the 'Bash Street Kids' segment was called 'When the bell rings'. I went to primary school in the fifties and there were two black kids (both brothers and my friends). In my secondary school there were two black kids. The same ones.
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Putting aside that it may seem out of character coming from a scientist such as Richard Dawkins, it's probably not unreasonable to consider a purpose or 'usefulness' of devoting resources to a particular line of research. The question of "What will we do with the information" maybe a question to be open to some thought. You could of course start with the Welsh who invented a round boat with one oar.
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I'm shocked! When I was young, just having one other person was a challenge. Usually it was just me by myself!
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I've come across a number of Indian people who are immensely loyal to Britain and the monarch. I live in Australia and use to run a carpet cleaning business. On at least two occasions I've been in the house of Indian families who have had a picture of Queen Elizabeth on the wall. Not once seen it in Australian's homes. On one of my visits to London, the Indian taxi driver had a photo of the Queen in his cab.
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@johnwood2448 The good thing is that in the film, they keep the dog's name (in context) as it was. I sometimes wonder if any black people would really be offended, or if it's just these white 'social justice warriors'
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@Robbie939 They seemed to have improved things a bit in places like Hong Kong and Singapore; particularly in public place like airports. On a trip from Australia to the UK back in 2007 (as I remember), HK airport still had 'hole in the floor' toilets.
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I'd love to see a statue of Queen Elizabeth, but I would imagine there's some sort of protocol which would prohibit her statue being in the company of one in a more elevated position.
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It surprises me that unionists object to Tommy Robinson's cause. Apart from the radical Marxist anarchist who wishes to bring down our society, I think of union members as working-class men and women who simply want the best possible standard of living for their efforts. These were the bulk of the people who went to war in defence of their country eighty years ago. Surely, they can see how the foreign and Islamic invasion has effected the country they supposedly love!
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@davejohnson3474 I don't recall (maybe I've forgotten) any suggestions being offered. As a means to be as recalcitrant as possible, I had a few politically incorrect ideas which I may have used except I'm sure would have caused offence to those having to use them.
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People often claim they don't have a problem with legal immigration or legitimate refugees and that's fair enough in one sense but probably said without appreciating the extent or impact.
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@grannyannie6744 I live in Australia and according to the Australian Government Department of Health Immunisation Handbook it states that "Vaccines must be given voluntarily in the absence of undue pressure, coercion or manipulation". They're not even adhering to their own code of practice.
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I think it should be remembered that a lot of the original feminism (as I recall) was about women having equal value and not treated as 'second citizens'. When I first came to Australia in the seventies, women weren't allowed in public bars and were expected work at home from dawn to dusk without the entitlement of some daily reprieve from the drudgery of household chores and looking after kids, while the husbands considered their work more deserving of several hours in the pub each day after work. The problem now is you've got men hating activists who want revenge for past indiscretions. Bit like some of the racial issues.
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It's vital to have the latest mobile phone and lots of 'bling' along with one of those cars up and down on it's own suspension.
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@daveglynn748 This was one of a few I've seen. I believe it may have been Sheffield (not Manchester). Looking at it a second time and it's probably is more a case of reinforcing an overall impression I've developed in recent times. https://youtu.be/flaWEKWUM64
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I've got two daughters (now grown up) and I can't relate Greta to them; or find her cute in any way. More disturbing though, are the the moronic people who have elevated her to 'Joan of Arc' status and using her as a focal point through some poorly prescribed lenses.
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@L1am21 'The Flinstones' had a gay old time. We'll all feel gay "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" too.
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A disgusting ideology is still rooted in medieval practices. Christianity would probably be the same if it hadn't been for the period of 'enlightenment' in the 19th century.
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But see, she was white, and even worse than that, she was British, so her name can't possibly be allowed to contaminate the progressive thinking of our current generation.
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@Dont_Believe_them Actually to be fair, he was a 'nationalised' Australian and I was the foreigner. When I first arrived in Australia in 1970, Australians and British nationals had the same status in being 'British Subjects'. That changed in 1984 which made British citizens residing in Australia, foreigners.
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@Peter-uy3ti Just part of life. When I was quite young, people thought I was Chinese!
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@Peter-uy3ti My wife and I were in Sicily in 2014 and I got quite good at saying "Uno Baffo D'oro Per Favore".
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To be honest, you may be overestimating the depth of interest that kids have for this sort of thing. Although I must admit it was only last week where I realised that it was unlikely that the Lone Ranger had silver bullets. Personally I think children are more interested in how many Nazi Zombies they can kill on their Playstations.
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I think there's probably a silent majority of black people who aren't recruited into this way of thinking and would disassociate themselves from the 'gangland' circles with whom Johnson chooses to keep company.
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It's paramount to treachery is what it is! These countries shouldn't get a penny from the United Kingdom or anywhere else for that matter.
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I sometimes think there's a degree of virtue signalling hypocrisy about remembrance ceremonies, one minute silence and other gestures in honour of those who have fought and died defending not just their own country but others as well, whilst allowing their memory to be treated like a lump of dog shit on the bottom of one's shoe.
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It's almost as though their treating black people like the dog that can ride a surfboard. They don't do it particularly well, but it's amazing that they can do it at all.
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@ltravail I can understand how the term is derogatory when it's directed at people. What I find strange, is when people are just discussing the word, they skirt around it by saying "the 'n' word". I heard a news presenter the other day use the term 'Paddy Wagon' which of course describes those police vehicles that collect drunks and other offenders to cart them off to gaol. Interestingly, the reason they call them that is because Irishmen were considered the usual customers. 'Paddy' being a colloquial term for an Irishman. Quite a derogatory slur when you think about it.
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@fredericksaxton3991 I think the problem with removing all the superfluous stuff, is it then presents itself a bit like a documentary.
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@mirvids5036 If you don't consider Irishmen being labelled as drunks, then I guess not.
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@65tosspowertrapl36 I seen several films where it's used by black people in reference to other black people.
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I grew up in Britain in the fifties and sixties when my father was in the RAF. We lived for a long time on RAF married quarters and I went to schools either administered by the RAF or Royal Navy; or civilian schools with other kids from military families. Not a lot, but some of the kids were from mixed marriages of servicemen who had met their wives serving overseas. Chinese (Hong Kong), Singaporean, Jamaican, were some of the kids noticeably different in appearance from the rest of us. Others were children of those left over from the war like Poles, Czech, German etc. As far as I could see, they all lived in exactly the same way as everyone else. There was no friction or animosity on behalf of those from other ethnic backgrounds. If anything it was probably the English kids picking on the Polish kids because their parents had unfortunately sent them to school in 'Lederhosen'!
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I doubt if any half decent black person would agree with this stupid woman even if they felt there were legitimate racial issues still unresolved. The 'holocaust' was everything about race. The Nazi's were all about race. They even considered themselves a superior race. The only redeeming aspect about Goldberg's crap is that no one with an ounce of intelligence would watch her show.
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I have a distrust of just about all religions; particularly those who are very focused on doctrines which inhibit personal freedoms and afflict severe punishments for non compliance. Islam seems to be quite prominent in this area. These doctrines appear to be a mindless effort to somehow placate or appease a God, who for some reason get's upset if (for example) a woman shows her face or drives a car. Even the more benign representations of religion like the mild mannered vicar peddling his bicycle through the streets of an old English village with it's rows of thatched roofed houses has a dormant yet despicable past with the potential to re-emerge in a way that's not so endearing.
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May as well recriut them from prisons.
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Nothing will change until those who denounce English / British identity, piss on our history and demand reparations or march down the streets waving foreign flags are made to feel uncomfortable.
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I live in Australia. We now live in an ever increasing environment of being made to feel directly responsible for whatever circumstances the indigenous people (activists) think appropriate to bring up. There is a disenfranchise of indigenous people living in remote areas who, for a number of reasons can't assimilate to modern societal norms. instead of any real effort to change this, many Aboriginal representatives seem to want to prioritise a primitive 'culture' as a constant topic of conversation.
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The day before I retired from driving buses a fifteen year old boy told me that next time he saw me he was going to get his knife and cut off my dick. This was after I told him to get off the bus when he attempted to evade a fare (repeat offender). I can't imagine any boy of that age saying that to a grown man back in the fifties or sixties.
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@ashjitsu There seems a common thread with these confectionary companies.
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I hate those people who hate swans.
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@Helen-xy9qj Back in the day, I wasn't sure I could always tell the difference between Greeks and Italians. The common tell tale was if you went to a milk bar called the 'Parthenon', the chances were it was Greek. Either way, they were always good, hard working 'earthy' people. I did however run into some of the younger 'second generation' who didn't always share their parents enthusiasm for the type of work that gave them a private school education and high standard of living.
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@stephfoxwell4620 Yes, I was aware of that and I've been to Melbourne for business and pleasure on several occasions. Interestingly, in recent years (may have changed since I last looked) but the language most prominent in Melbourne after English is Indonesian.
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Strange that isn't it. What could it be; what could it be?
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I knew it! I knew there would be a dastardly Englishman to be found in there somewhere. Antisemitism was well documented in Britain (and other places) long before Hitler came along, but it's a long bow to stretch to divert the responsibility of the 'Holocaust' from anyone other than him and his Nazi criminals. On the other hand there was this guy in my village in Wales who use to dress up as Father Christmas and give presents to small kids. I think he may have had something to do with it.
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