Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Anne-Marie Waters - Pegida Uk
69 Answers
She is on record as making this statement:
"We live in a country which ordinary people are frightened to speak their minds, frightened that they might say the "wrong thing". This is a dangerous situation for any society. A frightened population which cannot say what it thinks is a population under tyrannical control.
Furthermore, this widespread fear has resulted in a fearful and politicised police force that is more concerned by what is "correct" than with prosecuting crimes"
Is she correct? Is the UK public less inclined to speak out and now more apathetic with our politicians leaving a hopeless vacuum and therefore as a nation we are more vulnerable?
"We live in a country which ordinary people are frightened to speak their minds, frightened that they might say the "wrong thing". This is a dangerous situation for any society. A frightened population which cannot say what it thinks is a population under tyrannical control.
Furthermore, this widespread fear has resulted in a fearful and politicised police force that is more concerned by what is "correct" than with prosecuting crimes"
Is she correct? Is the UK public less inclined to speak out and now more apathetic with our politicians leaving a hopeless vacuum and therefore as a nation we are more vulnerable?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by agchristie. 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.Naomi - //Isn't it ridiculous. The N word, the P word, and Togo with his goose noise that he's reluctant to type because it might not be PC - and everyone knows what everyone else is talking about anyway. Just words. Yes, Anne-Marie Waters is absolutely right. Sheesh! //
I think there is a world of difference between people self-censoring out of simple politeness, and people being 'afraid of saying the 'wrong thing' - the two concepts are very different in my eyes.
Would I use the 'n' word? No, because it is a nasty mean-spirited word, and it's not part of my vocabulary.
Would I not join in a discussion about immigration because I am afraid someone may think me a bigot? No again, because I can express my opinion and leave no-one in doubt that I am not a bigot.
If people are 'afraid of saying the wrong thing', then they simply need to apply a little thought before they run off at the mouth.
It's that simple.
I think there is a world of difference between people self-censoring out of simple politeness, and people being 'afraid of saying the 'wrong thing' - the two concepts are very different in my eyes.
Would I use the 'n' word? No, because it is a nasty mean-spirited word, and it's not part of my vocabulary.
Would I not join in a discussion about immigration because I am afraid someone may think me a bigot? No again, because I can express my opinion and leave no-one in doubt that I am not a bigot.
If people are 'afraid of saying the wrong thing', then they simply need to apply a little thought before they run off at the mouth.
It's that simple.
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