Discussion:
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
(too old to reply)
BurfordTJustice
2017-07-14 13:09:55 UTC
Permalink
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested

A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.

London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.

Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.

The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.

The assaults follow a spate of high-profile attacks, including one in which
a man is accused of throwing acid at an aspiring model and her cousin as
they sat in their car. A 25-year-old man has been charged in that case.

London police say the number of reported attacks with corrosive liquids rose
from 261 to 454 in 2016. Some of the attacks appear to be related to gang
activity of the theft of cars and motorbikes.

The spike in attacks has prompted some lawmakers to call for restrictions on
the sale and carrying of corrosive liquids such as sulfuric acid.

London police chief Cressida Dick said officers were concerned by the
increase in the "completely barbaric" attacks.

"We will arrest people, we will enforce the law as we can, and we are
working very closely with the (government) to try to see if there is any
changes in the law required," Dick told LBC radio.
2***@gmail.com
2017-07-14 13:33:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
The assaults follow a spate of high-profile attacks, including one in which
a man is accused of throwing acid at an aspiring model and her cousin as
they sat in their car. A 25-year-old man has been charged in that case.
London police say the number of reported attacks with corrosive liquids rose
from 261 to 454 in 2016. Some of the attacks appear to be related to gang
activity of the theft of cars and motorbikes.
The spike in attacks has prompted some lawmakers to call for restrictions on
the sale and carrying of corrosive liquids such as sulfuric acid.
London police chief Cressida Dick said officers were concerned by the
increase in the "completely barbaric" attacks.
"We will arrest people, we will enforce the law as we can, and we are
working very closely with the (government) to try to see if there is any
changes in the law required," Dick told LBC radio.
xxx
The Todal
2017-07-14 14:23:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.

Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
abelard
2017-07-14 14:33:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
The Todal
2017-07-14 14:37:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
abelard
2017-07-14 14:45:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
no...i've always found i could get what i wanted/needed or go anywhere
or meet any person...however much some interest tried to block...

as a senior police person said to me...'all criminals are stupid'...
a comment that highly correlates with my experience

the purpose of locks is to inhibit...and send the crim to a
less protected target!
mostly it doesn't actually stop them thieving...

no guns...get knife...no knives....get acid...no acid....
use you imagination...

humans are very creative and slippery

i believe in franchise by examination!
Byker
2017-07-14 16:27:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by abelard
the purpose of locks is to inhibit...and send the crim to a
less protected target!
mostly it doesn't actually stop them thieving...
!
The only thing locks keep out are honest people...
BurfordTJustice
2017-07-15 09:36:31 UTC
Permalink
Indeed!
Post by Byker
Post by abelard
the purpose of locks is to inhibit...and send the crim to a
less protected target!
mostly it doesn't actually stop them thieving...
!
The only thing locks keep out are honest people...
Ed Pawlowski
2017-07-14 15:12:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
How many acid attacks are there? What is the cost of implementing a
licensing plan or other restrictions? Would it be effective?

It is not legal to bu a lot of things but they are readily available if
you really want them. Restrictions just make a black market.
Ian Jackson
2017-07-14 15:22:19 UTC
Permalink
In message <4b5aB.57793$***@fx24.iad>, Ed Pawlowski <***@snet.net>
writes
Post by Ed Pawlowski
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban
the sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require
people to obtain some sort of license?
How many acid attacks are there? What is the cost of implementing a
licensing plan or other restrictions? Would it be effective?
It is not legal to bu a lot of things but they are readily available if
you really want them. Restrictions just make a black market.
There are already calls to ban the sale of sulphuric acid and other
corrosive substances - and it's only this afternoon that some of the
phoners-in are pointing out that most vehicle batteries are full of it -
just like most kitchen drawers are full of knives. Normal life will be
impossible without ready access to the countless things that we use
every day.
--
Ian
Graham T
2017-07-15 19:17:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ian Jackson
There are already calls to ban the sale of sulphuric acid and other
corrosive substances - and it's only this afternoon that some of the
phoners-in are pointing out that most vehicle batteries are full of it -
And if you want to increase the strength of H2SO4 you just boil old
battery acid which removes the H2O. You'll know when you're there as it
starts giving off white clouds.
Mark Storkamp
2017-07-14 16:11:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
The Todal
2017-07-14 16:15:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't, they
could be.

If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive the
latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be made
unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate reason for
doing so.
Ed Pawlowski
2017-07-14 17:21:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't, they
could be.
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive the
latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be made
unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate reason for
doing so.
Batteries are sealed and it would take 15 seconds to open all the cells
with a drill.

You can make it unlawful to carry in public. It works well for guns and
knives that is why they are never used to commit a crime.
Wade Garrett
2017-07-14 17:36:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Pawlowski
Post by The Todal
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't,
they could be.
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Batteries are sealed and it would take 15 seconds to open all the cells
with a drill.
You can make it unlawful to carry in public. It works well for guns and
knives that is why they are never used to commit a crime.
--
Don't cling to a mistake just because you spent a lot of time or money
making it.
Wade Garrett
2017-07-14 17:38:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Pawlowski
Post by The Todal
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't,
they could be.
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Batteries are sealed and it would take 15 seconds to open all the cells
with a drill.
You can make it unlawful to carry in public. It works well for guns and
knives that is why they are never used to commit a crime.
Yeah, I feel especially safe going into those stores that plaster their
entrance with GUN FREE ZONE signs showing a drawing of a handgun in a
red circle with a line through it ;-)
--
Ever notice the shortage of "armed law-abiding citizen” victim tragedy
stories in the news?
- @CarmineZozzora
BurfordTJustice
2017-07-15 10:28:53 UTC
Permalink
Not true!
Post by Ed Pawlowski
You can make it unlawful to carry in public. It works well for guns and
knives that is why they are never used to commit a crime.
Ian Jackson
2017-07-15 12:00:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by BurfordTJustice
Post by Ed Pawlowski
You can make it unlawful to carry in public. It works well for guns and
knives that is why they are never used to commit a crime.
Not true!
Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear!
--
Ian
Graham T
2017-07-15 19:23:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Pawlowski
Post by The Todal
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't,
they could be.
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Batteries are sealed and it would take 15 seconds to open all the cells
with a drill.
You can make it unlawful to carry in public.
I can't think of any container that I would be happy carrying H2SO4
about in my pocket or putting myself at risk by throwing it at someone
else and copping the stray acid.
Norman Wells
2017-07-14 18:55:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive the
latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be made
unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate reason for
doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?

Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.

And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how you
might do that?
JNugent
2017-07-14 20:16:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how you
might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.

Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place without
a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could reasonably
add cans of spray paint to that list.

A bottle of bleach in a shopping bag with a load of other items bought
at the same time might indicate a lawful excuse, but exact context and
demeanour would be crucial.
Norman Wells
2017-07-14 20:35:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how
you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place without
a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could reasonably
add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
The Todal
2017-07-14 23:01:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea
how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
Easy.

There are laws about being in possession of a knife in a public place.
See eg https://www.police.uk/crime-prevention-advice/possession-of-weapons/

It would be very easy to apply similar laws to "a corrosive substance"
and have a schedule defining these substances.

The police stop and search anyone who looks as if they are planning to
cause trouble and commit an offence.
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 07:56:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no
legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
Easy.
There are laws about being in possession of a knife in a public place.
See eg https://www.police.uk/crime-prevention-advice/possession-of-weapons/
It would be very easy to apply similar laws to "a corrosive substance"
and have a schedule defining these substances.
The difficulty comes, as I said, in defining such 'corrosive
substances'. Got any idea how you might do that?
Post by The Todal
The police stop and search anyone who looks as if they are planning to
cause trouble and commit an offence.
I suggest they might carry knives as a matter of habit, but 'corrosive
substances' only when they're going out to do something specific, in
which case stop and search is most unlikely to pick them up before they
actually do so.
BurfordTJustice
2017-07-15 09:38:50 UTC
Permalink
and then some wonder why the Empire is dead and freedom
is a distant memory.

You are the perfect example.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how
you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place without
a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could reasonably
add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
Easy.
There are laws about being in possession of a knife in a public place. See
eg https://www.police.uk/crime-prevention-advice/possession-of-weapons/
It would be very easy to apply similar laws to "a corrosive substance" and
have a schedule defining these substances.
The police stop and search anyone who looks as if they are planning to
cause trouble and commit an offence.
JNugent
2017-07-15 01:33:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea
how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.

The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.

An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking it
home? And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and
so could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.

Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong alkali
is easily understood, along with even more stringent requirements for
proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.

An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was introduced,
the wording was very straightforward. I had expected complexity, but
none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of the word "smoking"
in context.There has never been a reported case of any dispute over what
it means.
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 08:07:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no
legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking it
home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and
so could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong alkali
is easily understood, along with even more stringent requirements for
proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?

If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.

If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.

Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was introduced,
the wording was very straightforward. I had expected complexity, but
none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of the word "smoking"
in context.There has never been a reported case of any dispute over what
it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
Bod
2017-07-15 08:12:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 08:45:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
Bod
2017-07-15 09:08:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
I don't think that would work and it smacks of a nanny state.
I would think that at least 50% of ordinary shoppers carry home some
sort of acidic product on at least a monthly basis.
Possessing is one thing, intentionally disfiguring or blindly someone
with acid should carry a very harsh sentence without question, by
introducing a specific law for that offence.
Ian Jackson
2017-07-15 09:52:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
If the last attack is anything to go by, would making possession of a
motor scooter an offence have made any difference?
--
Ian
tim...
2017-07-15 09:52:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was introduced,
the wording was very straightforward. I had expected complexity, but
none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of the word
"smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of any
dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic life
sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate laws
against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new law on
possession in a public place, if so of what,
ISTM that the prohibition of "carrying of acid in an "unsealed " container",
would be sufficient means to distinguish between people, carrying it for
nefarious means and people with a valid reason for needing it just
transporting it from point to point.

Obviously there needs to be some sort of strength qualification to avoid the
need to sell vinegar in sealed containers.
and whether it stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
well apparently acid has become the weapon of choice because of the laws on
possessing knives, so they have worked (sort of)

tim
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:39:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by tim...
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was introduced,
the wording was very straightforward. I had expected complexity, but
none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of the word
"smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of any
dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic life
sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate laws
against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new law on
possession in a public place, if so of what,
ISTM that the prohibition of "carrying of acid in an "unsealed " container",
would be sufficient means to distinguish between people, carrying it for
nefarious means and people with a valid reason for needing it just
transporting it from point to point.
Another silly idea. The perp could carry it sealed, then unseal it a
minute before using it for the attack. Also, how about a person taking
a can of something caustic that they've opened and partially used, to
another location? I can't take a jug of muriatic acid from one of my
homes to another? To a friends house? To my business? What would painters
do, only carry sealed, full containers?
Post by tim...
Obviously there needs to be some sort of strength qualification to avoid the
need to sell vinegar in sealed containers.
IDK what goes on in the UK, but vinegar here in the states is already sold
in a sealed container. You just twist of the seal. Are you proposing a
special seal that requires a special tool, a license to open? Do you
folks even think about things before you post?
Post by tim...
and whether it stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
well apparently acid has become the weapon of choice because of the laws on
possessing knives, so they have worked (sort of)
tim
I doubt it has much to do with the laws on possessing knives. We really
don't know why it's happening, could be some cult movie thugs like and
picked it up from. Throwing acid on someone seems like a really bad idea
for the thugs too, when there are all kinds of better ways. Is there a
law against carrying a baseball bat? A cane?
Ian Jackson
2017-07-15 12:49:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by trader_4
Is there a
law against carrying a baseball bat? A cane?
Not specifically - but there are laws against carry 'offensive weapons'.
Take a baseball bat with you when you're on a night out with the boys,
and you might have some serious explaining to do.
--
Ian
trader_4
2017-07-15 15:06:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ian Jackson
Post by trader_4
Is there a
law against carrying a baseball bat? A cane?
Not specifically - but there are laws against carry 'offensive weapons'.
Take a baseball bat with you when you're on a night out with the boys,
and you might have some serious explaining to do.
--
Ian
Exactly. So you do have laws similar to the states. So why all the
fuss about acid? If you're carrying acid as a part of a group going
to rob or to a gang fight, or to use it to threaten someone, why isn't
that already covered, without the need to make new laws that just
impact lawful people?
rbowman
2017-07-15 17:14:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ian Jackson
Post by trader_4
Is there a
law against carrying a baseball bat? A cane?
Not specifically - but there are laws against carry 'offensive weapons'.
Take a baseball bat with you when you're on a night out with the boys,
and you might have some serious explaining to do.
We were just going for a couple of beers after our slow pitch game.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 13:22:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
--
"TWA 2341, for noise abatement turn right 45 Degrees."
"Centre, we are at 35,000 feet. How much noise can we make up here?"
"Sir, have you ever heard the noise a 747 makes when it hits a 727?"
Bod
2017-07-15 14:24:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 14:34:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws. Killing three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
--
"I was walking down fifth avenue today and I found a wallet, and I was gonna keep it, rather than return it, but I thought: well, if I lost a hundred and fifty dollars, how would I feel? And I realized I would want to be taught a lesson."
-- Emo Philips
Bod
2017-07-15 14:46:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws. Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 14:53:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws. Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal. Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of the same value.

Ok, so there's 4 laws:

Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
--
Black holes are where god divided by zero.
Bod
2017-07-15 15:01:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws. Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 15:06:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws. Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape, punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according to how much harm was done.
--
If you are having sex with TWO women and ONE more woman walks in, what do you have?
Divorce proceedings, most likely.
Bod
2017-07-15 15:27:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws.
Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape,
punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just
make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according
to how much harm was done.
Rape is in a category of its own.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 15:39:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws.
Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape,
punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just
make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according
to how much harm was done.
Rape is in a category of its own.
No it isn't. It's the same kinda thing as being beaten up. It's assault.
--
I can kind of understand why Muslims get so frustrated.
I mean, how many more people are they going to have
to murder before everyone understands that Islam
is the religion of peace?
The Peeler
2017-07-15 16:00:51 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 16:39:51 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Rape is in a category of its own.
No it isn't. It's the same kinda thing as being beaten up. It's assault.
...says the mentally and emotionally crippled resident sociopath, Birdbrain
himself! <BG>
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic world.
"Why not just shoot on sight? Bears are dangerous and should be treated
the same as a Muslim with a bomb. Destroy it"
MID: <***@red.lan>
Meanie
2017-07-15 18:07:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 09:45:17 +0100, Norman Wells
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too?
Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about
is a
new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws.
Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the
ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape,
punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just
make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according
to how much harm was done.
Rape is in a category of its own.
No it isn't. It's the same kinda thing as being beaten up. It's assault.
Damnmit! I have to agree with you. Rape is technically a separate
category because the system wants to emphasize it's effect. The reality
is still an assault.

You categories would contain sub-categories such as

1) Assault
A) Aggravated assault
B) Simple assault
C) Sexual assault
D) Etc.

2) Theft
A) Petty theft (under a specified amount)
B) Robbery (over a specified amount)
C) Embezzlement
D) Etc.

Each crime category would then be subject to the same punishment.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 19:38:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Meanie
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 09:45:17 +0100, Norman Wells
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too?
Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having
anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real
effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts'
understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about
is a
new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
Of course there can be different degrees of those simple laws.
Killing
three people gets a longer sentence than killing two. Emptying a bank
vault gets more time than stealing a kit kat.
You see, it's not as simple as just having a few laws. What about
perjury/rape/libel/harrasment/damaging property etc etc.
Rape falls under assault. Libel and harassment shouldn't be illegal.
Damaging property is a type of theft - you're removing the ownership of
something from somebody. You smash my car up, I no longer have a car of
the same value.
Killing, injuring, stealing, lying.
Rape?
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape,
punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just
make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according
to how much harm was done.
Rape is in a category of its own.
No it isn't. It's the same kinda thing as being beaten up. It's assault.
Damnmit! I have to agree with you. Rape is technically a separate
category because the system wants to emphasize it's effect. The reality
is still an assault.
You categories would contain sub-categories such as
1) Assault
A) Aggravated assault
B) Simple assault
C) Sexual assault
D) Etc.
2) Theft
A) Petty theft (under a specified amount)
B) Robbery (over a specified amount)
C) Embezzlement
D) Etc.
Each crime category would then be subject to the same punishment.
Agreed. A handful of crimes with a scale to advise the judge on the sentence.
--
In 1999 the creators of KY Jelly created a new product. It was called "Y2K Jelly." It allowed you to get four digits in your date instead of two.
The Peeler
2017-07-15 22:34:31 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 20:38:33 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Agreed. A handful of crimes with a scale to advise the judge on the sentence.
The scale made by who? YOU, Birdbrain? <VBG>
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic world:
"I was once told off for killing a mouse too slowly."
MID: <***@red.lan>
One message later:
"I left mine to starve."
MID: <***@red.lan>
The Peeler
2017-07-15 15:47:33 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 16:06:12 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
First thing I said, it's a kind of assault. Why have a law for rape,
punching, kicking, baseball batting, kneecapping, blah blah, blah. Just
make assault illegal. Then give the number of years in jail according to
how much harm was done.
I agree, people should MUCH more listen to the advice of an idiot like you!
But they usually don't ...that's why you need to give your advice on Usenet
where people can't as easily get rid of you as in real life! LOL
--
Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic "mind" at work:
"Even better, kill people in jail for more than 10 years."
MID: <***@red.lan>
The Peeler
2017-07-15 15:39:40 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 15:53:07 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
the pathological attention whore of all the uk ngs, blathered again:

<FLUSH the inevitable psychotic BULLSHIT>
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) deep "thinking":
"Anybody who does anything to do with safety is a pussy."
MID: <***@red.lan>
The Peeler
2017-07-15 15:38:23 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 15:34:47 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
the pathological attention whore of all the uk ngs, blathered again:

<FLUSH the sick idiot's endless sick BLATHER>
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic
"mathematics":
"If I say 1, then "or so", the "or so" means another 1.
If I say 5, then "or so", the "or so" means up to another 5.
Is English not your first language?"
MID: <***@red.lan>
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 19:10:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid
is the same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
It's only a matter of degree, but the principle is still the same.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 19:34:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single
digit number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal.
Simple wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid
is the same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
Not if it leaves you blind.
It's only a matter of degree, but the principle is still the same.
Degree is not something understood in today's fucked up society. If I shove you, you don't even fall over, you receive no bruise, etc, they still call it assault. Assault should require you to experience pain or damage.
--
What's the best part of sex with a transvestite? Reaching around and pretending it went all the way through.
The Peeler
2017-07-15 20:13:48 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 20:34:49 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Degree is not something understood in today's fucked up society. If I
shove you, you don't even fall over, you receive no bruise, etc, they
still call it assault. Assault should require you to experience pain or
damage.
Right, if you shoot at someone and miss him, you should go free, right,
Birdbrain? IDIOT!
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's from (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) strange
sociopathic world:
"Anybody striking should be fired immediately. If you don't like your
job, work somewhere else. If you can't find anywhere better, your job
isn't as bad as you thought."
MID: <***@red.lan>
The Peeler
2017-07-15 15:12:36 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 14:22:58 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Norman Wells
You've got to catch them first. And when you do, we've got adequate
laws against GBH to deal with them. What we're talking about is a new
law on possession in a public place, if so of what, and whether it
stands any chance of being effective in terms of prevention.
We don't need more laws that mean the same thing. We need a single digit
number of laws. Don't kill. Don't injure. Don't steal. Simple
wording, covers everything. Squirting you in the eye with acid is the
same offence as punching you on the nose. Assault.
"We" still need laws against clearly mentally handicapped idiots and
sociopaths like you running around freely, Birdbrain!
--
Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic "mind" in action:
"Pedestrians and cyclists get run over because they're stupid. They need to
stop wasting taxpayer's money rebuilding roads every 5 minutes just to save
a few fuckwits."
MID: <***@red.lan>
Jimbo
2017-07-15 12:34:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate
lie detector and the death penalty.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 13:21:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jimbo
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate
lie detector and the death penalty.
Agreed. Putting someone in jail long term just costs money.
--
What's a Scotsman's cure for seasickness?
He hangs his head over the side of the boat with a pound coin between his teeth!
The Peeler
2017-07-15 15:14:27 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 14:21:15 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Jimbo
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate
lie detector and the death penalty.
Agreed. Putting someone in jail long term just costs money.
So does supporting an unemployable mentally handicapped idiot like you,
Birdbrain! Your idols, the nazis, would have euthanized you!
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) pathological
"thinking":
"Why do you believe it's worth avoiding a crash with a cyclist if he's in
the wrong?"
MID: <***@red.lan>
Meanie
2017-07-15 18:08:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jimbo
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate
lie detector and the death penalty.
Until they find the 100% lie detector, I opt for 100% death penalty.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 20:42:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Meanie
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything o=
n
Post by Meanie
Post by Norman Wells
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have=
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding=
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic=
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate=
lie detector and the death penalty.
Until they find the 100% lie detector, I opt for 100% death penalty.
What, every single person on the planet?

-- =

=E2=80=9CLosing one glove is certainly painful, but nothing compared to =
the pain of losing one, throwing away the other, and finding the first o=
ne again.=E2=80=9D -- Piet Hein, Danish Mathematician.
The Peeler
2017-07-15 20:55:43 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 21:42:46 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Meanie
Until they find the 100% lie detector, I opt for 100% death penalty.
What, every single person on the planet?
You are certainly a unique idiot, Birdbrain!
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) sociopathic
"mathematics":
"If I say 1, then "or so", the "or so" means another 1.
If I say 5, then "or so", the "or so" means up to another 5.
Is English not your first language?"
MID: <***@red.lan>
Meanie
2017-07-15 22:52:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Meanie
Post by Jimbo
Post by Bod
Post by Norman Wells
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that,
unlike knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a
particular job was intended. Any such law would not therefore have
any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding
of the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported
case of any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
Life sentence is a joke. The world needs two things; a 100% accurate
lie detector and the death penalty.
Until they find the 100% lie detector, I opt for 100% death penalty.
What, every single person on the planet?
Come on..... murders, attempted murders and attempt great bodily harm
which means the acid perp would be executed, IMO.

rbowman
2017-07-15 17:12:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
From what I can glean from the fake news, the acid attacks are often
tied to 'moped gangs'. The press is strangely silent on what the makeup
of the gangs is. Is any of the British press more forthcoming or a they
faceless, generic, youths? (in the US, 'youth' has the implied adjective
'black').

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/vigilante-motorcycle-groups-forming-in-london-to-combat-moped-crime-wave_uk_5919ba16e4b0fe039b36329a

I like this approach. Maybe it's time for the Hells Angels to change
their summer vacation plans.
Bod
2017-07-15 17:32:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by rbowman
Post by Bod
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
From what I can glean from the fake news, the acid attacks are often
tied to 'moped gangs'. The press is strangely silent on what the makeup
of the gangs is. Is any of the British press more forthcoming or a they
faceless, generic, youths? (in the US, 'youth' has the implied adjective
'black').
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/vigilante-motorcycle-groups-forming-in-london-to-combat-moped-crime-wave_uk_5919ba16e4b0fe039b36329a
I like this approach. Maybe it's time for the Hells Angels to change
their summer vacation plans.
I hadn't seen that article, but thanks for the info. I can understand
their frustration, but vigilantes aren't the answer. Revenge breeds
revenge and the problem can easily escalate into a small war.
James Wilkinson Sword
2017-07-15 20:43:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bod
Post by rbowman
Post by Bod
The only way to greatly reduce acid attacks is to give an auotomatic
life sentence to the perpetrators, IMO.
From what I can glean from the fake news, the acid attacks are often
tied to 'moped gangs'. The press is strangely silent on what the makeup
of the gangs is. Is any of the British press more forthcoming or a they
faceless, generic, youths? (in the US, 'youth' has the implied adjective
'black').
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/vigilante-motorcycle-groups-forming-in-london-to-combat-moped-crime-wave_uk_5919ba16e4b0fe039b36329a
I like this approach. Maybe it's time for the Hells Angels to change
their summer vacation plans.
I hadn't seen that article, but thanks for the info. I can understand
their frustration, but vigilantes aren't the answer. Revenge breeds
revenge and the problem can easily escalate into a small war.
Fun though.
--
Billy bashed bandy Brian's bollocks because bandy Brian broke Billy's big brown blowup boy before breakfast began.
Bigtits Beryl bit Barry's boner because Barry banged black Barbara's bare bruised bottom beside Brighton beach's battered blue bandstand.
The Peeler
2017-07-15 20:56:46 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 21:43:32 +0100, Birdbrain Macaw (now "James Wilkinson"),
Post by James Wilkinson Sword
Post by Bod
I hadn't seen that article, but thanks for the info. I can understand
their frustration, but vigilantes aren't the answer. Revenge breeds
revenge and the problem can easily escalate into a small war.
Fun though.
Watching an idiot like you certainly is, Birdbrain!
--
More of Birdbrain Macaw's (now "James Wilkinson" LOL) deep "thinking":
"I don't wear underwear, but boxers are more comfortable than briefs. Why
would you want it clamped in?"
MID: <***@red.lan>
The Todal
2017-07-15 11:39:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest,
or sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to
survive the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public
place could be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was
no legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by
the police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid,
so how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how
you might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking
it home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and so
could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
Oh, come off it. A butcher or chef carrying a knife is likely to give a
satisfactory explanation to the police and not be prosecuted or
alternatively his explanation is likely to be accepted by a jury.
Likewise with spray paint or with corrosive chemicals. If you're roaming
the streets of Hackney at 1am you may find your explanation is less
convincing.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong
alkali is easily understood, along with even more stringent
requirements for proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
You haven't really looked this up, have you?

http://www.cps.gov.uk/legal/d_to_g/firearms/#a14

"...any weapon of whatever description designed or adapted for the
discharge of any noxious liquid gas or other thing. Generally stun guns
or electric shock devices, CS gas not usually cattle prods but depends
on type..."
Post by Norman Wells
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Better to have flexibility than rigidity. We don't want all those boy
scouts being arrested for possession of a swiss army knife.
Post by Norman Wells
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
You're too defeatist.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
Try spilling Toilet Duck or Domestos on your fingers and marvel at how
your fingers don't smoke and bleed.
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 19:07:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest,
or sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to
survive the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public
place could be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there
was no legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by
the police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of
acid, so how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how
you might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase.
What possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of
spray paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were
taking it home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and so
could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
Oh, come off it. A butcher or chef carrying a knife is likely to give a
satisfactory explanation to the police and not be prosecuted or
alternatively his explanation is likely to be accepted by a jury.
Likewise with spray paint or with corrosive chemicals. If you're roaming
the streets of Hackney at 1am you may find your explanation is less
convincing.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong
alkali is easily understood, along with even more stringent
requirements for proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
You haven't really looked this up, have you?
http://www.cps.gov.uk/legal/d_to_g/firearms/#a14
"...any weapon of whatever description designed or adapted for the
discharge of any noxious liquid gas or other thing. Generally stun guns
or electric shock devices, CS gas not usually cattle prods but depends
on type..."
Then whatever you regard as a strong acid or a strong alkali is already
covered by the existing law. Why do we need a new one?

If you say because we don't have a law that makes possession of such
things in a public place without good reason illegal, why don't you
include *all* the things you list above, not just strong acids or alkalis?
Post by The Todal
Post by Norman Wells
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Better to have flexibility than rigidity. We don't want all those boy
scouts being arrested for possession of a swiss army knife.
So, you want loopholes. Since you do, you have to define what those
loopholes should be, otherwise any law you propose will be simply
arbitrary.
Post by The Todal
Post by Norman Wells
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
You're too defeatist.
If any law won't have any desired effect, perhaps you'd tell us what the
point would be in passing it.
Post by The Todal
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
Try spilling Toilet Duck or Domestos on your fingers and marvel at how
your fingers don't smoke and bleed.
There are lots of dangerous things that could be sprayed on people that
will harm them in all sorts of ways. Do you want specific legislation
to outlaw just some of them or all of them? If just some of them,
define where the line is to be drawn.
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:31:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no
legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking it
home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and
so could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong alkali
is easily understood, along with even more stringent requirements for
proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
+1

Like you say, I doubt these criminals are going around carrying a bottle
of acid much of the time, like they do with guns or knives. It's bulky,
inconvenient and they will only take it when they are already going to
commit the crime. The chance you're going to find them, compared to all
the others inconvenienced, makes this a dumb idea.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was introduced,
the wording was very straightforward. I had expected complexity, but
none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of the word "smoking"
in context.There has never been a reported case of any dispute over what
it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
JNugent
2017-07-15 14:58:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest,
or sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to
survive the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public
place could be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was
no legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by
the police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid,
so how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how
you might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking
it home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
If that is so in a particulkar case, the person found in possession of a
can of paint will be able to crfedibly explain where he is going and for
which vehicle the paint is intended (making a DVLA search easy and
definitive). This will be much easier if the tin is still sealed, of course.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and so
could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
The suspect could always make a fist of explaining what other legitimate
use he had been planning to make of it.

You sound as though you are not in favour of preventing criminal damage
and graffiti. Freedom from the risk of that is at least as important as
the freedom to walk aboiut with a tin of spray paint in a pocket and
with a "You can't touch me for it - Norman Wells said so" - smirk on the
face.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong
alkali is easily understood, along with even more stringent
requirements for proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
"proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place". The courts
are not unreasonable in these matters.
Post by Norman Wells
Besides, stop and search is unlikely to reveal such items that, unlike
knives, would not be routinely carried but only when a particular job
was intended. Any such law would not therefore have any real effect.
Post by JNugent
An analogy: when the ban on smoking in public buildings was
introduced, the wording was very straightforward. I had expected
complexity, but none arrived. Much hinged on courts' understanding of
the word "smoking" in context.There has never been a reported case of
any dispute over what it means.
When you're talking about carrying normal household items, though,
perhaps like Toilet Duck, I think you're entering a quagmire.
There's nothing more "normal" than a cigarette.
trader_4
2017-07-15 15:12:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest,
or sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to
survive the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public
place could be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was
no legitimate reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by
the police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid,
so how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any
idea how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how
you might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking
it home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
If that is so in a particulkar case, the person found in possession of a
can of paint will be able to crfedibly explain where he is going and for
which vehicle the paint is intended (making a DVLA search easy and
definitive). This will be much easier if the tin is still sealed, of course.
That's why we split off from you, we don't need the King searching in
our shorts, forcing us to explain ourselves. We prefer to be free.
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and so
could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
The suspect could always make a fist of explaining what other legitimate
use he had been planning to make of it.
You sound as though you are not in favour of preventing criminal damage
and graffiti. Freedom from the risk of that is at least as important as
the freedom to walk aboiut with a tin of spray paint in a pocket and
with a "You can't touch me for it - Norman Wells said so" - smirk on the
face.
What you libs can never understand is that the only people who obey these
laws are the legal people. You;ll have a million legal people harassed,
inconvenienced, subject to your silly rules, prevented from buying what
they need for their home or their hobby, while the crooks just do as they
please any way.
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong
alkali is easily understood, along with even more stringent
requirements for proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on you
in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
"proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place". The courts
are not unreasonable in these matters.
Sure, drag everybody before a judge, let the judge decide what you have
a right to have in your pocket and what's in your mind that you were
going to do with that bottle of some substance, no inconvenience
there. Show us your papers!
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 19:23:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase.
What possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of
spray paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were
taking it home?
Because legitimate uses of them are not always at home.
If that is so in a particulkar case, the person found in possession of a
can of paint will be able to crfedibly explain where he is going and for
which vehicle the paint is intended (making a DVLA search easy and
definitive). This will be much easier if the tin is still sealed, of course.
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and so
could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
You mean a total ban on possession of them then for any other purpose
than spraying a car? legitimate uses of them are not always on cars.
The suspect could always make a fist of explaining what other legitimate
use he had been planning to make of it.
It's the law that has to define what 'legitimate use' is. It's not for
the police on the streets to decide, since that could be quite arbitrary.

If you want a law criminalising the carrying of cans of spray paint,
it's for you to say what is a legitimate use and what isn't. And since
they're not only used on cars, your definition has to be rather wider
than you've proposed, otherwise you'll be criminalising possession when
some in possession have no criminal intent whatsoever.
Post by JNugent
You sound as though you are not in favour of preventing criminal damage
and graffiti. Freedom from the risk of that is at least as important as
the freedom to walk aboiut with a tin of spray paint in a pocket and
with a "You can't touch me for it - Norman Wells said so" - smirk on the
face.
It's your proposal. It's for you to defend. You do not seem to care
about criminalising the innocent.
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong
alkali is easily understood, along with even more stringent
requirements for proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Pepper spray is OK then? Other irritants? Glues too? Poisons?
If so, it seems what you want is a general ban on having anything on
you in public that the police take a dislike to.
If not, it seems to leave quite a lot of loopholes.
"proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place". The courts
are not unreasonable in these matters.
Possessing *what* exactly? Define what you mean.
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:28:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could
be made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so
how many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any
law, like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea
how you might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place
without a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could
reasonably add cans of spray paint to that list.
The difficulty comes in defining 'such an item'. Got any idea how you
might do that?
I don't think that would be difficult.
The only reason I put it that way was because I was trying to cover
several different areas of concern with one sentence.
An aerosol can of spray paint could be simply described. Courts know
what they are. There is no difficulty in interpreting the phrase. What
possible good reason could anyone have for possessing a can of spray
paint in a public place unles they had just bought it and were taking it
home?
They could be taking it to an art class, to a friends house to use on a
project, to work as part of their job, from their home to a business,
the list is endless.




And if they didn't even have a car on which it would be used (and
Post by JNugent
so could not identify such a vehicle), that would be a QED.
Car? You can only use spray paint on a car? I've used hundreds of cans
of spray paint, never once on a car.
Post by JNugent
Similarly, a container whose contents are a strong acid or strong alkali
is easily understood, along with even more stringent requirements for
proof of the reason for possessing it in a public place.
Yes, show me your papers! Meanwhile, the UK is already overrun by muslim
radicals who are blowing up the place, killing people in mass. They were
let in by similar do good libs that knew how things should be. Why don't
you come up with ideas on how to fix that problem, instead of focusing on nits?
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:22:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by JNugent
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how you
might do that?
Relatively easily, I'd suggest.
Make it an offence to possess [such an item] in any public place without
a credible and lawful reason for having it there. You could reasonably
add cans of spray paint to that list.
A bottle of bleach in a shopping bag with a load of other items bought
at the same time might indicate a lawful excuse, but exact context and
demeanour would be crucial.
An over reaction to a few thugs. Even if there were a penalty for carrying
acid without a lawful purpose, do you really think it's going to affect
any of the criminals? It will only be a nuisance for the rest of us to
have to prove to some cop. And what would the penalty be anyway? A fine?
A judge isn't going to give even a hoodlum some hefty sentence for that.
It's amazing that so many people think that any time anything bad happens,
the solution is one more law.
Graham T
2017-07-15 19:25:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Norman Wells
Post by The Todal
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive
the latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be
made unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate
reason for doing so.
Perhaps you can tell us how many people who have been stopped by the
police have been found to be in possession of a bottle of acid, so how
many would have been prosecuted?
Unlike knives, it's not something ordinary hooligans carry.
And then you'd have to include bottles of other things too in any law,
like bleach, or sodium hydroxide, or pepper spray. Got any idea how you
might do that?
I keep an old washing up bottle full of Ammonia behind my front door
'just in case'.
JNugent
2017-07-14 20:12:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by Mark Storkamp
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old
boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then
jumped
on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars? And then it will need to be kept in a locked box
that only a government approved agent has the keys to. Those government
jobs, just like the TSA, will be filled with people you wouldn't trust
to leave alone in a room in your house for 5 seconds.
I thought modern car batteries are sealed - or if any still aren't, they
could be.
If thugs want to rob you, which is better? A knife in the chest, or
sulphuric acid in the face? I suppose you're more likely to survive the
latter. But carrying a bottle of acid in a public place could be made
unlawful if in the opinion of a jury there was no legitimate reason for
doing so.
I've sometimes wondered why the carrying of a can of spray paint
(intended for small repairs on motor vehicles) is not an offence if the
carrier does not have a credibly plausible excuse for having it about him.
Byker
2017-07-14 17:02:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London.
Sleazy riders: http://tinyurl.com/y88j8jp8
Graham T
2017-07-15 19:20:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mark Storkamp
Now we'll need a license and a waiting period to buy a replacement
battery for our cars?
My latest motorbike battery came with the acid in little capsules
which you fit to the battery to empty into it.
7
2017-07-14 21:52:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery
and grievous bodily harm. Police have appealed to the public for more
information on the suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped
tossed noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver,
then jumped on his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one
victim, a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police
said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
What is important is to ban carrying of acids as an offensive weapon
and any other corrosive chemicals - plenty around including bleach
to vinegar.

That way people that need to use it in every day formats are not
targets of police action.

If you threaten people with it like brandishing it or using
it or merely mention to use it (and it is in your possession),
then it is deemed to be offensive weapon.
Norman Wells
2017-07-15 08:09:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by 7
Post by The Todal
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
What is important is to ban carrying of acids as an offensive weapon
and any other corrosive chemicals - plenty around including bleach
to vinegar.
That way people that need to use it in every day formats are not
targets of police action.
You're very trusting.
Post by 7
If you threaten people with it like brandishing it or using
it or merely mention to use it (and it is in your possession),
then it is deemed to be offensive weapon.
Then you don't actually need it to be harmful, do you? Nor do you need
to define what it is.
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:17:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
i'm not publicising what, but i have used stronger acid for
drains than anything being mentioned
there are other legitimate uses which also i won't specify...
Would you be greatly inconvenienced if the government were to ban the
sale of sulphuric acid on the open market and were to require people to
obtain some sort of license?
It's not just sulfuric acid, there are many acids. Muriatic acid is
used for concrete cleaning for example. Lye is used for making soap,
which some people do as a hobby. They could throw gasoline in your face
and light it, should that need a license too?
The Todal
2017-07-14 14:34:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
abelard
2017-07-14 14:37:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
it breaks down rapidly...

'there is no such thing as a poison...only a poisonous dose'
Incubus
2017-07-14 14:39:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by abelard
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
it breaks down rapidly...
...breaking down everything it comes into contact with.
Post by abelard
'there is no such thing as a poison...only a poisonous dose'
Caustic soda is pretty much as corrosive and is similarly easy to get
hold of.
Basil Jet
2017-07-14 14:40:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Hahahaha. No, none at all. Hahahaha.
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
It won't stay concentrated for long.
abelard
2017-07-14 14:47:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Basil Jet
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Hahahaha. No, none at all. Hahahaha.
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
It won't stay concentrated for long.
just so...the more 'active' a substance, the quicker it breaks down

part of what confuses people about radiation
The Todal
2017-07-14 16:17:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by abelard
Post by Basil Jet
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Hahahaha. No, none at all. Hahahaha.
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
It won't stay concentrated for long.
just so...the more 'active' a substance, the quicker it breaks down
part of what confuses people about radiation
If you wanted to carry with you a suitable chemical to neutralise a
sulphuric acid splash on your skin, what would that chemical be?
Something like baking powder mixed with water?
abelard
2017-07-14 16:35:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by Basil Jet
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Hahahaha. No, none at all. Hahahaha.
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
It won't stay concentrated for long.
just so...the more 'active' a substance, the quicker it breaks down
part of what confuses people about radiation
If you wanted to carry with you a suitable chemical to neutralise a
sulphuric acid splash on your skin, what would that chemical be?
Something like baking powder mixed with water?
just water...

but i'm prepared to suffer the uncertainties of life...

if i were neurotic enough to carry (even) water...and some
loon attacked me, i'd start with being confused...and by the
time i realised i had a problem i'd have been distracted...

maybe i'd have drunk the water in a fit of thirst last week!
or i'd have gotten fed up with the nuisance of extra weight...

of course a tin foil beanie would be a useful precaution...i would
hide in under my hat so's you wouldn't laugh...and that would
fool the thrower into believing i was unprotected...

if only i could buy a force field shield

of course you'd better hope the loon wasn't throwing alkali
or you may even add to the nuisance

no, a beanie is obviously prime
Incubus
2017-07-14 16:44:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by abelard
Post by Basil Jet
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Hahahaha. No, none at all. Hahahaha.
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
It won't stay concentrated for long.
just so...the more 'active' a substance, the quicker it breaks down
part of what confuses people about radiation
If you wanted to carry with you a suitable chemical to neutralise a
sulphuric acid splash on your skin, what would that chemical be?
Something like baking powder mixed with water?
Sodium hydroxide would neutralise it very quickly. You'd better make
sure you only apply it to the sulphuric acid, though...

In terms of moles, you'd require twice as much sodium bicarbonate but
given the concentration of H2SO4, you'd need a lot of bicarb.
JNugent
2017-07-14 20:17:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
This is Britain. It will soon get diluted.
7
2017-07-14 21:44:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous
bodily harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on
the suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid. The reviews seem favourable and people seem to buy it to clear
drains. But it surely can't be good for the environment to pour
concentrated acid down the drain.
Lots of acids in the environment - including rain water which
is mild carbolic acid.

Its used to dissolve dead rats stuck in drains.
Graham T
2017-07-15 19:36:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Ok, maybe I was wrong. Amazon offers something called 98% sulphuric
acid.
I doubt that it is 98% as H2SO4 is hygroscopic.
jew pedophile Ron Jacobson (jew pedophile Baruch 'Barry' Shein's jew aliash)
2017-07-14 16:52:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Of COURSE he was fucking Asian...see below.
Post by The Todal
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid?
Well, yes...sulphuric acid is the electrolyte in conventional lead
acid car batteries and is used to revive failing batteries...it is
also used by Muslimes for 'honour splashings'.
- -
"We CAN hide forever."
- Klaun Shittinb'ricks (1940 - ), acknowledging that he will
NEVER prove where he infests or give his real jew name

"Die Juden sind unser UnglĂĽck!"
- Heinrich von Treitschke (1834 - 1896)

"First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out
because I was not a Socialist. Then they came for the Trade
Unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a Trade
Unionist. Then they came for the jews, and I did not speak out
because I did not give a shit. Then they came for me and there
wasn't a single commie bastard left to speak for me."
- Martin Niemöller (1892 - 1984)
The Peeler
2017-07-14 17:39:05 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 14 Jul 2017 09:52:58 -0700, serbian bitch Razovic, the resident
psychopath of sci and scj and Usenet's famous sexual cripple, making an ass
of herself as "jew pedophile Ron Jacobson (jew pedophile Baruch 'Barry'
Shein's jew aliash)", farted again:

<FLUSH the poor psychotic idiot's inevitable idiotic & psychotic BULLSHIT>

...and nothing's left ...as usual! LOL
--
tomcov about poor psychotic asshole Razovic:
"Assholes come
Assholes go
But the revd asshole goes on forever.
(and he speaks through it)"
MID: <83356bf8-8666-4f4f-ac9a-***@n35g2000yqf.googlegroups.com>
Sick old pedo Andrew "Andrzej" Baron (aka "Ron Jacobson"/etc)
2017-07-14 18:06:56 UTC
Permalink
In article <***@4ax.com>,
A shiteating cowardly nazoid sub-louse PEDO named Andrew "Andrzej"
Post by jew pedophile Ron Jacobson (jew pedophile Baruch 'Barry' Shein's jew aliash)
Well, yes...sulphuric acid is the electrolyte in conventional lead
acid car batteries and is used to revive failing batteries...it is
also used by Muslimes for 'honour splashings'.
And by yourself, for fumigating your mother's snatch before
the customers arrive.
INRI
2017-07-14 18:15:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery
and grievous bodily harm. Police have appealed to the public for more
information on the suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped
tossed noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver,
then jumped on his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one
victim, a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police
said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Car batteries.....loads of them
Ted
2017-07-15 21:40:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by INRI
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the
16-year-old boy's name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery
and grievous bodily harm. Police have appealed to the public for more
information on the suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped
tossed noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver,
then jumped on his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one
victim, a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police
said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Car batteries.....loads of them
What happened to the poison register, does it still exist?
BurfordTJustice
2017-07-15 09:35:39 UTC
Permalink
The Islamic Caliphate took over the Middle East and Central Asia during the
Muslim conquests of the 7th century. The Mongol Empire conquered a large
part of Asia in the 13th century, an area extending from China to Europe.
Before the Mongol invasion, Song dynasty reportedly had approximately 120
million citizens; the 1300 census which followed the invasion reported
roughly 60 million people.[


"The Todal" <***@icloud.com> wrote in message news:***@mid.individual.net...

Asian perpetrators.
trader_4
2017-07-15 12:14:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by The Todal
Post by BurfordTJustice
British teen linked to spate of acid attacks in London arrested
A British teen was arrested Friday in connection to five acid attacks
conducted over a span of 90 minutes by men on mopeds in London. Several
people were injured in the incidents.
London's Metropolitan police did not immediately release the 16-year-old boy's
name but said he was arrested on suspicion of robbery and grievous bodily
harm. Police have appealed to the public for more information on the
suspect.
Police said the spree began late Thursday when two men on a moped tossed
noxious substance into the face of a 32-year-old moped diver, then jumped on
his vehicle and drove away.
The pattern was repeated across a swath of east London. At least one victim,
a man in his 20s, was left with life-changing injuries, police said.
You normally look for crime reports that involve Asian perpetrators. I
don't think we have any reason to believe that this 16 year old was Asian.
Apparently it's far too easy to acquire bottles of acid. Does anyone
know what the legitimate domestic uses are for acid? I doubt if
drain-cleaning preparations are strong enough to cause the sort of
damage that is described.
Cleaning concrete, prepping concrete for painting are very common.
And drain cleaning preparations, at least those sold here in the states
are definitely caustic enough to cause the damage described. Lye is
used for making soap by hobbyists, that's another example. Restricting
the sale of this stuff isn't going to solve crime, it's just going to
inconvenience legitimate people. Those bastards should go to jail for
25 years, that might help.
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