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Stephen Lawrence

(87 Posts)
jangly Fri 01-Jul-11 17:49:05

Let us hope and pray that the killers of this lovely young lad get their come-uppance at last. I know it won't bring him back but it would surely provide some comfort to his parents. www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/8520560/Stephen-Lawrence-two-charged-over-murder.html

jingl Tue 22-Nov-11 14:58:58

Thank you Super.

Sorry Greatnan. Shouldn't distract.

Greatnan Tue 22-Nov-11 14:56:22

I am afraid we are being distracted from the Stephen Lawrence case. I am sure nobody gives a toss about children being born out of wedlock - four of my grandchidren and all my four great-grandchildren were.
I called the murderers racist scum- there can surely be no argument that they are racist. I make no class distinctions in my use of the word scum - I am just as happy to apply it to bankers who knowingly sell unrepayable mortgages and members of both Houses of Parliament who steal from the taxpayer.

supernana Tue 22-Nov-11 14:53:16

Oh jingle GOOD for you...and WELCOME back from wherever you've been...smile

jingl Tue 22-Nov-11 14:49:36

I am a bastard. smile

jingl Tue 22-Nov-11 14:48:47

When I put b-----s I meant buggers. Not bastards. I should have typed it in full.

Was considering sensbilities.

supernana Tue 22-Nov-11 14:46:09

And...

My late Mother was a bastard in the strictest, old-fashioned sense of the word. My Nana had her out of wedlock and suffered mightily for the error of her ways...raising her child without support from family or State. My Nana was POOR, uneducated and she worked hard all her life. She was also the kindest, most generous-hearted lady that I've had the good fortune to know.

My words aren't necessarily adding anything fresh to this thread. I simply wish to print them.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 14:05:17

And....

I think the word bastard has lost its original meaning. My grandson is a bastard in the old technical sense. So what? It doesn't mean a thing. He has loving and good parents. It is irrelevant whether they are married.

So, in my view, both bastard and scumbag mean the same as despicable person. Despicable person may be 'polite', but I wouldn't like to be called a despicable person any more than I'd like to be called a scumbag or a bastard in the modern sense of the word!

supernana Tue 22-Nov-11 14:00:38

Bagitha Well said...

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 13:55:19

PS I don't think of poor people or people in the so-called underclass (there but for fortune....) as the scum of the earth. It's people who should know better but who keep their stupid prejudices who are scumbags in my view. So, no, not classist.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 13:46:11

Hadn't thought of it like that, petallus. There's something in what you say. However, I would call an overtly racist policeman or teacher or doctor a scumbag because to me racism is just scummy. It's the pits, and well-educated intelligent people, which one would hope proessional people are, cannot get any lower if they are racist. Definitely scum. But I do understand what you're saying and why you don't like the expression.

petallus Tue 22-Nov-11 12:55:22

I've been thinking about why I hate the words b------s and scum or scumbag. For b------s I think of it as a very unfair word probably because years ago when it was still a stigma a family member had a child out of wedlock and he was called that in a horrid way by other children. As for the word scum, I think, as has already been suggested, that we only apply it to certain people. You probably wouldn't call racist police, or racist elderly people, or racist middle class people scum. People who are called scum are usually from the underclass of our society. Again, I think that's unfair. In fact I think it's a form of prejudice, it's 'classist'.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 12:34:05

Quite. It was some of the media publicity about Jo Yeates's landlord that was disgusting, not the fact that the police questioned him.

FlicketyB Tue 22-Nov-11 11:48:30

It is quite possible to have correct information that could be evidence that an innocent person was involved in a crime. For example, as we know, there was no sign of forced entry into Joanna Yeates flat. The landlord would have had key to the flat and therefore COULD have let himself in. He didnt but that does not invalidate the information. Thats why police investigating crimes bring people in for questioning - and then release them.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 11:07:19

I did an online BBC survey this morning about anger, disgust, punishment, etc. the "only significant thing" about my results was that I generally have "a low level of anger". I do not have a low level of anger against racist scumbags. And racism in the Met Police is absolutely appalling and makes me ashamed.

Greatnan Tue 22-Nov-11 10:54:57

I was referring to the murderers of Stephen Lawrence only, not everybody who makes racist remarks. Most of them need re-educating. I feel just the same about people who are bigoted against homosexuals or make sexist remarks (other than in jest, which we all recognise).
The irony is that on other forums I have been accused of being 'a Guardianista, a Trot, a tree-hugger, a wishy-washy liberal and a do-gooder (not sure why that is an insult!.
I am opposed to the death penalty, corporal punishment or draconian prison regimes, believing that deprivation of liberty is enough, but in this case it would please me to hear that the perpetrators of this heinous crime against a perfectly respectable young man are going to suffer for their actions.

The original investigation was totally incompetent and the Met was judged to be institutionally racist. I hope it has changed, although the involvement of so many top policemen in the NOW scandal suggests that corruption is still not unknown ( I choose my words carefully, as I expect to hear the 'one rotten apple in the barrel defence).

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 10:45:37

Because there aren't any excuses to be racist.

Worried about culture clashes, maybe, but not racist.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 10:44:46

I agree wholeheartedly, jess, about the little old lady types. At least, I have some sympathy for their plight. But the thugs this thread is about are despicable people by their own showing. Racist scum is just another way of saying despicable people a bit more forcefully. It's not really immoderate when you consider what is being described. It would be immoderate about the little old lady, though even she has no real excuse to be racist.

JessM Tue 22-Nov-11 10:37:00

I come down with the voice of moderation in language here. Not all people who make racist remarks, or who have racist attitudes are "scum". Some of them are ignorant, frightened or have low intelligence.
What about an elderly woman with little education or experience of the world, who, over the years, has more and more neighbours who belong to a different ethnic group. They are reticent about mixing with white people and stick to their own community, so she doesn't get to know them. She goes to the doctor and can't understand a word of what he/she says. She gets in a taxi and the driver doesn't understand her and vice versa and drives her off in the wrong direction. (These scenarios are played out across many cities in UK)
I can understand if that such a person might express racist attitudes. But she is not scum.
Even the most violent BNP thug - if we cannot recognise their humanity and their rights, we diminish our own.

bagitha Tue 22-Nov-11 10:20:00

If people make racist remarks, they are racist scum. That's not falling to their level. That's just describing them for what they are.

jingl Tue 22-Nov-11 10:10:55

I agree Greatnan

Greatnan Tue 22-Nov-11 10:08:00

No, they are not innocent until proven guilty - they are presumed innocent until proven guilty, which is a legal point.
And anyone who believes the police never arrest somone without evidence has obviously never followed the many miscarriage of justice cases.
The Rowan Atkinson sketch about the racist policeman (remember - 'You arrested him for being in possession of thick lips'?) was uncomfortably close to the truth for the thousands of young black and Asian men who have been repeatedly stopped and searched.
The father of one of the original five suspects was a well-known gangster and I believed he shared his 'lodge' with a senior policeman.

I don't stand outside courts shouting but I reserve the right to my opinion that these are racist scum and I very much resent being told that I have brought myself down to their level.

jingl Tue 22-Nov-11 10:04:31

"some of the evidence was false".

Are you saying that some of it was true Flicketyb?! shock

GoldenGran Tue 22-Nov-11 10:00:30

jingl have read this post again, and I'm with you on your use of the word b---s You used it on Gransnet , and that's like talking to friends, your not shouting it in the street. Anyway whatever you call them, I think finally they are going to get their just desserts.

Carol Tue 22-Nov-11 09:07:33

Hopefully, the different sources of evidence that have been offered to the police over the course of many years will prove to differ from that offered publicly in the heat of those few days after the focus on the Joanna Yeats murder. We have to trust in the criminal justice system. The landlord did not posture in front of others, nor did he seek to ridicule the police about their inadequacy - he kept his integrity and allowed the law to deal with the matter. The tabloids haven't set out to assassinate the character of these defendents - they have done that for themselves. They are lucky to have been free for so many years. It is such a shame that the law has not been able to pin them down when they have played cat and mouse with the authorities all this time. It is they who have made the claims about their guilt, which others have relayed to the police. My thoughts are for the Lawrence family, who are so near to getting justice for their son. Yes, innocent until proven guilty, but no-one will celebrate the acquittal of these particular men, who have bragged about this murder and continued to make racist statements that are captured on video.

FlicketyB Tue 22-Nov-11 08:32:38

Phrases like 'b------s and racist scum' are expressing exactly the same emotions as the men now accused of Stephen Lawrence's murder and while it was later shown that there was no evidence against Chris Jeffries, the police would not have arrested him if they had not thought the evidence was there. Some of the evidence was false, provided by the person now convicted of the murder, but this is information after the event. When Chris Jeffries was arrested, the press and many ordinary people like us immediately assumed he was guilty and his character was destroyed in the media, in homes and in pubs.

Everything that has been published in the papers over the years has pointed to the men in the dock as the murderers of Stephen Lawrence, just as with Chris Jeffries, but until they are convicted the basis of our legal system is that they are innocent until proved guilty.