
Sue
Member-
Posts
21,327 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Forums
Events
Blogs
FAQ
Tradespeople Directory
Jobs Board
Store
Everything posted by Sue
-
Maybe address the issue in question for once? It was you who raised the issue of cruelty in the first place on this thread. A thread which I started. A thread about noise from foxes locally. A "necessity to eat" as you call it need not entail eating dead cruelly treated animals if you are concerned about animal welfare, which from your post earlier on (accusing me of cruelty) it appears you are. Would you like to comment on that, instead of attempting to divert attention from it by calling everybody else hypocrites?
-
Recommendation for printer (company not device)
Sue replied to Robert Poste's Child's topic in The Lounge
Depending on what you want printed and how, I can highly recommend a company called Vital Concept. We get our double sided flyers printed there very cheaply, and they deliver free and very quickly. They are also very helpful. https://www.vitalconceptprint.co.uk/ They have good reviews too. https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=vital+concept+printing&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-b&gfe_rd=cr&dcr=0&ei=QOTxWYGBJs-g4gSQ-5zQBg#gfe_rd=cr&lrd=0x4876118fa03b99c9:0xb95661c39e0cc092,1,, However I recommended them to someone local once and I'm not sure what happened but the printing she got done was extremely expensive, I think it must have been a different printing method or something, so you would need to double check what exactly you were ordering. There is also a printer in the Old Kent Road I recently found but haven't used yet (for posters), I will try and find the name. -
Loz Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Sue Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > KidKruger Wrote: > > > -------------------------------------------------- > > > ----- > > > You can make yourself exempt by behaving in a > way > > > that would automatically want the courts to > not > > > have you on their premises as part of a jury. > > > > > Please tell us more :)) > > I suspect a BNP/EDL t-shirt would go a long way. > But the downside would be that you'd be wearing a > BNP/EDL t-shirt in public. Oh God, that reminds me of when I wore my Hope Not Hate t-shirt out locally (acquired after I had been leafleting in Dagenham in 2010). I thought I was getting strange looks, and it wasn't till I got home that I realised that although the t-shirt said on the front "Barking & Dagenham Council Elections 2010 Final Score Hope 51 BNP 0" my jacket had obscured most of the words apart from BNP :)) I've been wary of wearing it since then :))
-
singalto Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I was once at my son's house when the postie left > a card through his letter box. I rushed out and > caught him asking why he hadn't rung the bell. He > said he didn't actually have the parcel with him, > just a card to say it was at the Highshore road > office! :)) or possibly :(
-
Yes it is illegal to ask your age. I stopped putting anything which could indicate my age on my CV (although of course a long work record is significant if somebody wants to make guesses). Many moons ago I used to train managers of various organisations in non discriminatory recruitment methods, and you would expect large companies to adhere to those (if for no other reason than potential bad publicity), however I suppose you can't expect a small shop to know (or possibly care) that they are breaking the law. Though there may be exemptions for small businesses, I can't remember now. Even apart from legal aspects, they should be looking at relevant skills and experience and matching those to the person spec. Many young people would be crap at the job. Many older people would be excellent. The same applies to other non job related characteristics such as race and gender (except for a very few specific jobs where there may be reasons for wanting people from a particular group, which is legal). What particularly used to bug me was companies specifiying that they wanted graduates (not sour grapes, I am one myself). In the vast majority of cases, having a degree per se bore no possible relevance to the job. Rather, the recruiter made particular assumptions about what qualities all graduates must have (eg quick to learn, maybe) without considering that many people without degrees might also have those qualities. Anyway, I could go on. Oh, I did. Gaynor I would like to know which this shop is. I suppose one consolation might be, would you want to work somewhere where you felt that they thought you were too old for them? I wouldn't. ETA: Very sorry for your loss, btw.
-
Nigello Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Here is the response, which although not what I > wanted (doesn't she and others at the GLA have the > wherewithal to have asked this question already?) > was at least fast. > > I don?t have an answer to that off the top of my > head ? I know that some borough officers do > enforce. > > We will table a question to the Mayor to try to > find out more > > Caroline > > I will give it a fortnight and pursue. That's promising, and as you say a fast response at least. Let's hope it produces results!
-
alice Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Reverse detection theory would require you to > leave your home and eat a banana. When you have > only the peel in your hand you will be standing > outside the door of the one you seek. Knock it. Brilliant :) Though you would need to go in both directions and then you'd have a fifty:fifty chance of getting the right house. Or parked car. But if there were side streets, you'd have rather more possibilities :)) ETA: And it would depend on the relative eating speeds, of course. What time does this happen? Could it be a kid on the way to school eating part of their lunch several hours early?!
-
Dulwich Fox said .... No I am not a Vegan. I was totally veggie for 2-3 years back in the 70's. I am fully aware of cruelty in factory farming.. I written about it here more time than Sue seems to remember. It is not possible to source out where every meal I eat out comes from. We would all starve if we all did that. I can only assume that Sue NEVER eats out in local Indian restaurants. BUT No. She eats at Ganapati. I did not realise that Ganapati sourced all its Chicken and Lamb from Ethical suppliers. Perhaps Sue could enlighten us all on the matter.. a) You have not answered the point b) If you were a vegetarian why did you stop being one if you are concerned about animal welfare? c) It is possible to eat out and not eat meat if you are concerned about cruelty. Vegetarians and vegans do not starve and have plenty of choice these days eating out, particularly in Indian restaurants. How ridiculous. d) Your having written about factory farming on here is completely irrelevant, as it does not seem to extend to actually not eating factory farmed animals. e) I occasionally eat in Indian restaurants, as you know because you have spoken to me in there more than once. I will not eat chicken in them, specifically because of cruelty issues. f) I do not "eat at Ganapati". I have not eaten at Ganapati for years. However they use free range chicken and I would be extremely surprised if any of their meat was factory farmed, given their ethos. Is that sufficiently enlightening? I would have preferred it if you could have responded at similar length to my answer to your post above accusing me of cruelty, however.
-
Yes, complain to Royal Mail, no point complaining on here! It's not just Royal Mail, it's all of them. Mostly they don't bother to ring the bell, they flap the letterbox a bit in a half-hearted sort of way. In one case the bell did ring, I went to answer it and got there to see the van driving off and a parcel dumped on my wall (not even on the mat) by somebody who couldn't even have known I was in.
-
KidKruger Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > You can make yourself exempt by behaving in a way > that would automatically want the courts to not > have you on their premises as part of a jury. Please tell us more :))
-
I really sympathise, I've had similar for years, not just at half term, from a family in a nearby road (not mine). Including at crack of dawn on Sunday mornings, and on some occasions joined by an adult also. My heart used to sink every day when they came home from school. I feel really sorry for people whose houses are closer than mine and who work at home or are otherwise at home. It's improved of late, maybe one or some of the immediate neighbours complained, or else the children are past the shouting and screaming stage (please God). Of course young children scream and shout, it's part of being a young child. It's also kind of their parents and carers to teach them not to do it at length outside on a regular basis in a built up area where there are other residents. The odd occasion, fine. Unless it's 7.30 am, in which case not fine.
-
> DulwichFox Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- >> > > > I'm lost for words as to the level of cruelty > > some people will stoop to. > > rendelharris Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > You a vegan then Foxy? Good point. Maybe cruelty only applies to wildlife and pets in Dulwich Fox's eyes, and not to factory farmed/intensively reared animals destined their whole sad lives to be slaughtered for cheap meals such as those in Indian restaurants (or to produce cheap eggs and milk).
-
That was a kind thing to do, Calsug.
-
Nigello Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Sue, > > Done - even before your peppish, good-natured > encouragement. > > I'll report back. Yeh sorry, I just reread it and I did sound a bit sharp. Look forward to hearing the outcome, it's a good idea (though I suspect that given that the police aren't even investigating some crimes these days it's likely to be the traffic wardens who do it)
-
Some years back, I can't remember the exact details but a journalist wrote an article basically dissing East Dulwich, and had clearly not even made it as far from the station as Lordship Lane :)) I'm sure someone on here will remember better than me!
-
I wouldn't knowingly harm anything (except clothes moths and slugs). I rescue woodlice I find in the house. Chilli powder is a deterrent, not a poison. To the best of my knowledge, animals avoid it because of the smell. Happy to be proved wrong, and if so I will not use it again despite the advice of somebody who as a wildlife adviser you would expect to be an expert. I do not use it at home, however I have used it at their entrance tunnels at a plot of land where foxes were burrowing and disturbing seeds and plants.
-
The article and quote above are about deterring squirrels, who are in fact mammals. It is by a wildlife adviser who happens to work for the RSPB. And the article clearly says that birds are not affected by the chilli. ETA: I am not sure what your point is.
-
DulwichFox Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > > We will have to wait and see how you feel about > The charges after 2018/19 when > > a further clean air act comes into force. > > When the congestion charge is expected to rise.. > > The T charge is expected to rise > > Sidiq Khan wants to expand the Congestion Zone to > cover everything within the North / South > circular. > > On top of that there is talk about charging per > mile for motorways. > > We already effectively pay per mile when we buy > petrol. > > Thousands of people die from tobacco related > diseases each year but despite having banned it > from public places > refuses to ban it totally. Why. because it raise > ?millions in Tax. > > Recreational Drugs are totally banned. Why.. > Because there No Revenue.. (Tax) > > And where drugs are concerned money is raised by > imposing Fines. > > OK if its not a Scam.. Its a Sham > Sorry, I don't understand. Are you saying that additional measures shouldn't be taken to cut pollution from motor vehicles (by deterring people from using them) because cigarettes aren't completely banned? (BTW smoking is not "banned from public places", it is banned from public places which are inside.) What would your solution be to improve the appalling air quality in London? And why are Sadiq Khan's measures a "sham"?
-
Nigello Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > His Lordship the Mayor could easily cut pollution > by requiring traffic wardens/police to instruct > car engine idlers to switch off or be fined. (Why > they don't do this anyway I will never know.) The > fact that simple, easily understood and fair > methods like this are not used is baffling and > depressing - it could be made to happen very > quickly, with no fanfare or fuss, so perhaps that > is why it isn't! Maybe you could suggest it to the appropriate person via the appropriate channels? No use posting about it on here!!
-
It is recommended by organic gardening experts and the RSPB. Here's just one link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/wildlife/3440454/Use-chilli-powder-to-repel-squirrels-householders-told.html "Lloyd Scott, RSPB wildlife adviser, said: "Using chilli powder to deter squirrels is a cheap, easy and effective solution." I'm sure you can google other sources of information for yourself, if only to prove the RSPB wildlife adviser wrong .....
-
"The kind of place where you could still leave your back door open"??!!
-
Red chilli powder can also work. You can get big bags cheaply from places like Khans.
-
Man arrested in connection with Dulwich Park stabbing
Sue replied to gerry's topic in General ED Issues / Gossip
Possibly if they do get a psychiatric report then that may shed some light. There doesn't seem to have been any suggestion that he was on drugs.
East Dulwich Forum
Established in 2006, we are an online community discussion forum for people who live, work in and visit SE22.