Anniebach, I remember Aberfan, I was a young girl at that time but witnessing the black and white news footage of the village, of Cliff Michelmore's tears, and those of the adults around me when they spoke of it has never left me. There is nothing worse than to lose a child, as you know only too well, and if it might have helped in some way for those families to speak out at the time then it is a tragedy that they were not able to. If that is the majority view of the Grenfell residents then so be it - we all have coping mechanisms for what life throws at us and it seems some need to express grief publicly and feel that they speak for the lost. To clarify, I didn't mean that they should not have a voice, or that it was about 'saving' money - quite the reverse. I simply asked if a public enquiry that is there to establish cold facts was an appropriate place.