Yes. And I dont give two f**ks about the families of scum either , Im more annoyed about the cars that have been damaged tbh , car theives and other associated vermin like druggies are lower than dogsh*t to me.
All I can say is that I'm glad there are people is this world that show compassion and understanding, and who value human life above pieces of metal.
I was listening to my Grandad, who is in his late 80s, talk about letting some young offenders into his house last week (as part of some Government rehabilitation scheme where they help the elderly). His neighbours had seemed shocked that he had let them into his house, to which he replied by saying that if no one gives them a chance, then what hope do they have of changing, of turning their life around.
Earlier in this thread Robin disagreed with me when I said that some people are born without a chance of becoming a good person. I firmly believe that the children that are born into families where crime and poverty have been ingrained for generations start life with little hope of success, or a normal life. Their teachers won't tell them otherwise, their families won't tell them otherwise, and their peers won't tell them otherwise.
It all too easy for people to generalise, to call people scum, to say they are worthless without even the merest consideration of how they arrived in that predicament.
And by the way, the person my Grandad let in his house was a 16-year-old girl who had made some mistakes, fallen in with the wrong crowd and became involved with drugs, but who was desperately trying to make her life different. With some of the attitudes displayed round here tell me that person has a choice, a choice when she is cast into the gutter classified as scum.