ChatterBank2 mins ago
‘not allowed to serve squaddies’
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Why should our brave service personnel, who on their returning parade from Afghanistan, (especially after receiving the Freedom of the Borough), be barred from a public house?
Why should our brave service personnel, who on their returning parade from Afghanistan, (especially after receiving the Freedom of the Borough), be barred from a public house?
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No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It is a huge generalisation but we're not the ones making it - it's the pubs
Given that selling beer is how they make most of their money I'd imagine they don't make such decisions lightly.
They clearly feel that the military in pubs are more trouble than they're worth
Unless you have another explanation for their motives?
Given that selling beer is how they make most of their money I'd imagine they don't make such decisions lightly.
They clearly feel that the military in pubs are more trouble than they're worth
Unless you have another explanation for their motives?
-- answer removed --
Pubs have rules and bar staff aren't usually capable of using discretion. A few months ago I was at the bar of a Wetherspoons and an elderly chap was asked to remove his hat as it was pub policy that headwear was not permitted. Even when the old chap explained that he was jewish he was asked to remove his hat or leave the pub.
Wow Trig!
Drunken soldiers hurled chairs, bottles and glasses across the hotel bar during the 20-minute skirmish – and it was reported that one squaddie was thrown through a window
Trouble is it must be difficult to take the moral highground on such behaviour when you and your chancellor were in the Bullingdon club at Oxford
Drunken soldiers hurled chairs, bottles and glasses across the hotel bar during the 20-minute skirmish – and it was reported that one squaddie was thrown through a window
Trouble is it must be difficult to take the moral highground on such behaviour when you and your chancellor were in the Bullingdon club at Oxford
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