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The RIP Thread

Discussion in 'Queens Park Rangers' started by durbar2003, Feb 3, 2016.

  1. ELLERS

    ELLERS Well-Known Member

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    Totally agree one of the few. RIP
     
    #1601
  2. Staines R's

    Staines R's Well-Known Member

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    RIP June Whitfield.
    Gave me many laughs as a kid in ‘Terry and June’......an underrated talent.
     
    #1602
  3. GoldhawkRoad

    GoldhawkRoad Well-Known Member

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    Absolutely Fabulous. I loved all her stuff. RIP June <rose>
     
    #1603
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  4. Ninj

    Ninj Well-Known Member

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    RIP June
     
    #1604
  5. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    One of the TV greats, appeared in so many great programmes through the decades. RIP June...
     
    #1605
  6. ELLERS

    ELLERS Well-Known Member

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  7. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    ITV have been running Carry On films all over Christmas, caught a few (not very PC for these days mind!), and she was great in those too.....RIP June
     
    #1607
    kiwiqpr likes this.
  8. ELLERS

    ELLERS Well-Known Member

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  9. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    r i p george

    George, the last tree snail, slithers into history books
    Jacqui Goddard, Miami
    January 8 2019, 12:01am, The Times
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    George, a 14-year-old colourful mollusc, was hatched as part of a captive breeding programmeHAWAII DLNR
    Scientists are mourning the death of a Hawaiian snail known as George, the last known survivor of its species.
    The 14-year-old mollusc lived alone in a tank at the University of Hawaii’s “snail ark”, where it hatched as part of a captive breeding programme that began in 1997 with the collection of the last ten such snails known to exist. All but George later died of unknown causes.
    “George, the last known Achatinella apexfulva, died on New Year’s Day 2019. He is survived by none,” wrote David Sischo, head of the Snail Extinction Prevention Program, in a statement from Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources.
     
    #1609
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  10. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    #1610

  11. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    Another childhood memory gone to the comedy gods.....

    It Ain't Half Hot Mum actor Windsor Davies dies aged 88
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    Image captionPictured in 1981 with Don Estelle and Melvyn Hayes in It Ain't Half Hot Mum


    The actor Windsor Davies has died at the age of 88.

    Davies, best known as the sergeant major in TV series It Ain't Half Hot Mum, died peacefully on Thursday, his family said.

    Born in Nant-y-Moel, Bridgend county, he worked as a miner and teacher before turning to acting.

    His daughter Jane Davies said her parents left a large family "who will all remember them with love, laughter and gratitude".

    Davies had retired to France with his wife of 62 years, Eluned, who died in September. They had five children.
     
    #1611
  12. Staines R's

    Staines R's Well-Known Member

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    Another of the comedy greats of that era gone.....
     
    #1612
  13. Uber_Hoop

    Uber_Hoop Well-Known Member

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    “You is a bunch of ****s!”

    My favourite Battery Sgt Major Williams line said in that mellifluous Welsh tone of his.
     
    #1613
  14. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    The sad thing is that such marvellously written and acted comedy of that era is now effectively consigned to the scrapheap because of the sensibilities of the snowflake generation. RIP Windsor...
     
    #1614
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  15. Steelmonkey

    Steelmonkey Well-Known Member

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    #1615
  16. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    It’s Holocaust Memorial Day.

    RIP, if that is possible, for the Jewish people, gypsies, homosexuals, disabled people, political opponents etc who were victims of one of the defining acts of the twentieth century.
     
    #1616
  17. Sutfol

    Sutfol Well-Known Member

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    And in the news today 5% of UK adults do not believe the holocaust took place. Idiots.
     
    #1617
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  18. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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    I heard someone recommend this piece by Hugo Rifkind on the wireless this morning, so I looked it up....

    Don’t start talking about the Middle East just because it’s Holocaust Memorial Day. This is all I ask. Whatever you think of the Middle East, just don’t.

    Talk about something else. Talk about Auschwitz, maybe. Talk about a space which is probably bigger than any open space you have ever seen, unless you have been to Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. Imagine it being cleared - from farmland, from forest, from everything - in order to create a place to kill.

    Imagine the laying of the railway, which comes in, and then stops. This is the end of the line. Talk about the people who alighted from trains there. Talk about where they got on the trains, and who told them to. Once, they were like anybody else. Then they were here, for this, at the end of the line. Talk about all that had happened to them before, and how many people it took to make it all happen.

    Narrow it down to bricks, if you like. There are 300 buildings at Auschwitz-Birkenau, the vast new camp built after the original Auschwitz burst at the seams. 300. That’s a lot of bricks. Red ones, mainly. Human hands put one upon the other. Did they want to be doing this, or were they forced? Did they know what all of these red bricks were for? Did they suspect? What would have happened if every last one of them, forced or otherwise, had refused? Would it all have just... stopped? What would you have done, if you were them?

    Talk about farm cottages, converted into gas chambers. Hard to talk about them for long, really, but give it a crack. How would you convert a cottage into a gas chamber? Where are you going to start, with that one? Imagine yourself sitting outside, of an evening, perhaps smoking a pipe, musing about how it would best be done. Somebody did that.

    And the things that happened in the gas chambers? Even harder to talk about that. So don’t, if you don’t want to. I give you a pass. Talk about after. Talk about a room full of hair. A room. Full of hair. I know, I know, everybody talks about the bloody hair - one brief trip to a concentration camp, and it’s all hair, hair, hair - but still. Do. Talk about your sister’s hair, or your dad’s or your grandmother’s, and how it would look if it was sheared off, clumped, tangled in with the hair of others, and left to dry for three quarters of a century. Dusty and stiff. Hair that makes you not want to breathe when you are near it, in case a bit breaks off, and invades you with the air.

    Talk about shoes. Another cliche, I know, but talk about them anyway. Have you got any kids? Younger siblings? You know the size their shoes are? You’d find others that size in Auschwitz. Go there, and your eye will seek them out; all that remains of somebody who never wore shoes any bigger. Imagine killing a child, and then having to look at his or her shoes. Ten children, and their shoes. A hundred children, and their shoes, or a thousand. Wouldn’t some small part of you think that all the evil in the world could be stopped, forever, if somebody took a slow, proper look at a pair of tiny children’s shoes? Talk about that not being the case. Because it isn’t, is it?

    We categorise, when we talk about the Holocaust. On the one side we put the Jews, the gypsies, the homosexuals and dissidents. On the other, the Germans, and their various helpers; some Poles, Ukrainians, occasional French. How much sense, though, does that make? Is there anything particularly Jewish about a tiny foot in a tiny shoe? Is there anything particularly German about putting one brick upon another?

    It is not strange that the victims of the Holocaust should feel a certain ownership of it. It did, after all, happen to them. For a Jew, for a gypsy, for many, many others, the Holocaust is not intangible; theoretical; an article of faith. It’s a kid who was murdered at seven, and thus never got to be your great uncle, over and over again.

    Yet the true horror of those millions dead, it seems to me, is not the horror of what one tribe did to others. It is of what people did to people. And it is a true act of blinkered faith, I tend to think, to believe that the configuration of these tribes was somehow inevitable, or even terribly important. Anybody could have done it to anybody. This is what humans can do. Talk about that. Talk about which side you’d be on, if something like this happened again. And talk about how you’re so damn sure.

    It didn’t happen in the Middle East, where barbarity sneaks in alongside the madness and fear. Nor in Africa, where trauma has been layered upon trauma for centuries. It happened here, in Europe. In lands of cellos, and neckties, and bicycles. The dead and killers alike knew china teapots, Mozart, varieties of cheese. Family doctors, picnics, afternoon strolls. Then, one day, they cast all that aside, and began to slide towards something else. From laws, to smashed windows, to badges. From ghettos to trains, to everything else. People like you and me.

    This is the point of remembering the Holocaust. It’s not an act of honour for those who died, or an act of defiance against those who killed them. That’s too easy. Rather, it is like the coin carried by an alcoholic, to remind him not to drink. To remember is to remain aware that we, as humans, balance on the very lip of the unspeakable; always far closer to toppling than we might wish to admit. All of us, everywhere, all the time
     
    #1618
  19. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    I just heard that referred to and was about to post this too.
    Beggars belief.
     
    #1619
  20. qprbeth

    qprbeth Wicked Witch of West12
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    That's why we have to have Holocaust Memorial day I am afraid.... as the Holocaust could so easily just become history. Something that happened in the past, that obviously could not happen today.

    But we know it could so easily happen today. We see it every single day, people beaten up because they are the wrong colour, wrong religion, wrong political persuasion, wrong sexual orientation....or as you well know Stan, just because they are friends with someone who is "not one of us"

    Our society is riddled with this infection. I genuinely fear for the future and for the future of our children

    Sent from my STF-L09 using Tapatalk
     
    #1620

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