Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...

Otta


In the news today, 7 people have been killed since the begining of July (four of which were this w/e) during the annual bull running festivals in Spain. Not strictly the same I suppose as a bull getting its own back on a matador or a picador, but nevertheless if people will torment animals for sport.......

If any matador is killed in a bull fight, then tough. He knows the risks, the odds are stacked in his favour and he's making money out of it.


Spectators perhaps shouldn't be there spectating, but I wouldn't wish them any physical harm.


Bull runs are a bit different, but they are bloody dangerous and if you want to get in the thick of it in an act of bravado, then you are taking a stupid risk IMO.

Agree, Otta.


I also wonder at times if many people have seen a full-blooded (no pun intended) bull-fight. I would assume they are, or have been, available on you-tube, I have not looked. I was given a couple many years ago by a friend who had moved to Spain and was visiting (these were old VHS tapes!!), and I found it absolutely disgusting. The reality was nothing like the images that we used to be fed back in the day. The way those animals are tortured and a lot of the time even at the "climax" (such as I'm sure it would be descibed), the end is not clean and swift. Truly is utterly appalling.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • The fact everyone has had a CCTV camera in their pockets for the last 15+ years has done a huge amount to prevent and mitigate random drunken violence.  Thugs can't get away with what they used to anymore.
    • Do you mean that there are only very few trades people and that all of their thousands of happy customers post glowing reviews but most of them have only ever posted once to recommend said trade person on the trade person's own thread?   If so, I agree it's mysterious.  
    • Oh now you're coming over all defensive. What happened to the nice Sue, because since the early part of the year your approach seems to have changed and you've become much more challenging. No you have not broken any rules and even if you had why would I involve Admin, that's a ludicrous thing to say.  Take care Sue. 
    • I was the opposite of you. I never felt particularly happy around Brixton late at night - I didn't know it that well. Do you remember the name of the late- night Irish pub opposite the railway arches near the BR station? Was it Mulligan's? Brannigan's? To be fair, until the East London Line extension, Rye Lane walking south wasn't a favourite of mine after dark either. The only pub left on there was The Hope, which was in the other direction. It felt very bleak. I think that makes a huge difference. When The Gowlett was boarded up, Amott Road felt very different. It's like a beacon now. Pub violence does seem to have had its day in inner London. Maybe it's a result of the disappearance of pool tables, flat-roofed pubs and cheap Stella offers. I bet you could still find a Saturday night kick-up in New Addington or the  Becontree estate in Dagenham. Definitely. Pubs next to stations, kebab shops and ironically named nightclubs are all to be avoided in smaller places. The weirdest place I've ever had random trouble was in a club in St. Ives in Cambridgeshire.  I think it was called 'Options'. It was the only club there.  See also 'Jekylls' nightclub in Hyde, Manchester - a truly dreadful place where getting thrown out for fighting was infinitely preferable to spending the evening in there and coming out stinking of stale chip fat. I took a kicking in 'Kingsway Kebabs' in Swansea after a night in 'The Aviary' (so named because it was 'full of birds') nightclub. But that wasn't so random. It was a local girl, who gave me a leathering because I'd run off for a large chicken doner, rather than dance with her to 'Criticize' by Alexander O'Neal. Sorry, Sue, I've digressed a little.  To answer your question, I think London feels relatively safe overall.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...