Property damage to a local business 2 people in A&E getting stitched up wasting NHS time. Morons on Twitter thinking it's funny and Edmonton is soooooo cool cause it's rough. Just an all round waste of air tbh. Humans are ****ed no going back.
Yep. Imagine if a kid had been near that window when it smashed. Pisses me off that some people think they look cool. Worst part is that they all look way too old to potentially ‘grow up’.
They seem to be communicating in the medium of making some sounds. None can master english as a language for **** sake, thick ****s. Can't stand that this bollocks is supposed to be cool or something. I'm glad that I'll not be around in another 30-40 years when everyone just grunts at each other. Blud.
Real sad man. On masse as a species we just got no respect for anything. Nature is one of the most beautiful and fascinating things we can experience as peeps. Such a shame we don't hold it more dear.
Human activities have caused the world's wildlife populations to plummet by more than two-thirds in the last 50 years, according to a new report from the World Wildlife Fund. The decline is happening at an unprecedented rate, the report warns, and it threatens human life as well. "The findings are clear," the report states. "Our relationship with nature is broken." The Living Planet Report 2020 report drew on wildlife monitoring of more than 4,300 different vertebrate species - mammals, fish, birds and amphibians - from around the world. It found that population sizes for those monitored species declined by an average of 68 percent from 1970 to 2016. In the American tropics, including the Caribbean and Latin America, population sizes decreased by a staggering 94 percent. Forest clearing for agricultural space was the predominant cause of the decline, the report says, noting that one-third of the planet's land is currently being used for food production. Human-caused climate change is another growing driver. "We can't ignore the evidence – these serious declines in wildlife species populations are an indicator that nature is unraveling and that our planet is flashing red warning signs of systems failure," wrote Marco Lambertini, Director General of World Wildlife Fund International.
Smashing mate ... what our kids are capable of can bowl us over ... have put this up before but will unashamedly do it again ... this was a pencil drawing my middle girl did for A Level ... you can see her notes down the side ... part of me wishes that she did art at Uni with her talents, but she decided to do English at Cardiff Uni and is now close to finishing her Masters ... now if our Milkman wasn't a bit of a thicko I'd have some suspicions ...
Mine are 29, 22 and 17 mate ... would put pics up but there are a few very strange types frequenting this jungle