PannickAtTheDisco
Well-Known Member
Wish I hadn't gone on Twitter this evening. I was better off not knowing about this. I am raging.
if the rules say don't play ball games, don't play ball games. Not sure how it's relevant to the thread.
Wish I hadn't gone on Twitter this evening. I was better off not knowing about this. I am raging.
The residents not involved in the fire are stoking something up for whatever reason
Because there no fucking need for kids to be playing football..........Delivered to them today. Why on earth would they feel the need to drop that on them today.
The residents not involved in the fire are stoking something up for whatever reason
They are shit stirring nonsense for some reason,it's no excuseThere clearly traumatised by what has happened and are struggling to come to terms with it all.
I don't understand why this has become an issue about rich versus poor. Jeremy Corbyn has called it a tale of two cities with Kensington divided into rich and poor
Isn't it a good thing that one of the wealthiest areas in the world also has accommodation for poorer people. Isn't that exactly the sort of thing he wants
I'm really confused because the alternative is poor areas for poor people (you can call them ghettos if you want) and rich areas for rich people which is against everything Corbyn and the like are vehemently against (all property is theft isn't it)
I don't really understand the cause of justice that everyone is being asked to rally around
People tragically died in a fire but somehow the way to solve it is to get people marching on the streets demanding an enquiry (which they've already got yesterday) emergency support (which they've got today) and apparently no letters to be sent to people in other unrelated flats about breaking the rules they agreed to follow however petty they might think they are
Are you winding us up?Can somebody explain to me why we have people protesting on the street demanding justice
What has happened?
I don't understand why this has become an issue about rich versus poor. Jeremy Corbyn has called it a tale of two cities with Kensington divided into rich and poor
Isn't it a good thing that one of the wealthiest areas in the world also has accommodation for poorer people. Isn't that exactly the sort of thing he wants
I'm really confused because the alternative is poor areas for poor people (you can call them ghettos if you want) and rich areas for rich people which is against everything Corbyn and the like are vehemently against (all property is theft isn't it)
I don't really understand the cause of justice that everyone is being asked to rally around
People tragically died in a fire but somehow the way to solve it is to get people marching on the streets demanding an enquiry (which they've already got yesterday) emergency support (which they've got today) and apparently no letters to be sent to people in other unrelated flats about breaking the rules they agreed to follow however petty they might think they are
I don't understand why this has become an issue about rich versus poor. Jeremy Corbyn has called it a tale of two cities with Kensington divided into rich and poor
Isn't it a good thing that one of the wealthiest areas in the world also has accommodation for poorer people. Isn't that exactly the sort of thing he wants
I'm really confused because the alternative is poor areas for poor people (you can call them ghettos if you want) and rich areas for rich people which is against everything Corbyn and the like are vehemently against (all property is theft isn't it)
I don't really understand the cause of justice that everyone is being asked to rally around
People tragically died in a fire but somehow the way to solve it is to get people marching on the streets demanding an enquiry (which they've already got yesterday) emergency support (which they've got today) and apparently no letters to be sent to people in other unrelated flats about breaking the rules they agreed to follow however petty they might think they are
I don't understand why this has become an issue about rich versus poor. Jeremy Corbyn has called it a tale of two cities with Kensington divided into rich and poor
Isn't it a good thing that one of the wealthiest areas in the world also has accommodation for poorer people. Isn't that exactly the sort of thing he wants
I'm really confused because the alternative is poor areas for poor people (you can call them ghettos if you want) and rich areas for rich people which is against everything Corbyn and the like are vehemently against (all property is theft isn't it)
I don't really understand the cause of justice that everyone is being asked to rally around
People tragically died in a fire but somehow the way to solve it is to get people marching on the streets demanding an enquiry (which they've already got yesterday) emergency support (which they've got today) and apparently no letters to be sent to people in other unrelated flats about breaking the rules they agreed to follow however petty they might think they are
We have no clue whether there was any cost cutting... the likely reason is weak fire and building regs.. a specialist lawyer on TV tonight said the fire regs were a "minimum standard" and that councils "could choose to do more"... that's BS because the contractors and bill payers will comply, nothing more, nothing lessWhat would you do if you were stood at the bottom looking up and watching your parents burn to death stuck in a flat that they had no chance of escaping? How would you then feel if it was totally preventable and only happened because of cost cutting and making money?
I don't understand the attitude towards protesting in the UK. Whether it achieves anything is questionable but people are rightly absolutely raging.
I see pain and suffering and pain and suffering which looks like it could have been prevented. And I also see political opportunists muddying the water using the situation to garner support at a time when the main objective should be to help the victims and their families.
Thanks for the information.Regarding Fire Safety Assessments they may well be Self Assessments but the buildings I manage they are done by an expert external company and their reports are acted on by the company I work for.
I think that retrofit of sprinklers should now be mandatory. They should not necessarily be heat activated ones because some people, with a grudge for instance, will set them off maliciously. Perhaps it should be looked at to see if they could be activated by the fire panel which are usually in the lobby area. The fire brigade were there within 6 minutes, compartmentalisation should in theory contain fires for 30-45 minutes.
This should never have happened. It's utterly tragic.
Talk about 'out of touch'!!
Not only is it about cost cutting, it's about a rich voice being heard over a poor one. This is a society where well-to-do people get to have a say on what their neighbourhood looks like and if you ain't got the sheckles? Tough!
That's the question though, isn't it? Why exactly were the fire and building regulations weak, or more to the point why had they been made weaker over the past few years. Ostensibly to cut red tape. For that read to make it easier for the landlords to get away with spending as little as possible while maximising their profits, at the cost of putting peoples, poor peoples, lives at risk. That is what the anger and protest is about and it doesn't stop at buiding regulations. The interests of the less well off have been neglected to breaking point. That's something else that we can chalk down to "austerity". After 40 years of right wing governments what more could be expected.We have no clue whether there was any cost cutting... the likely reason is weak fire and building regs.. a specialist lawyer on TV tonight said the fire regs were a "minimum standard" and that councils "could choose to do more"... that's BS because the contractors and bill payers will comply, nothing more, nothing less
The answer therefore is stricter more stringent rules but once again it's after a tragedy and not proactive amendment for the safety rules.
My later point indicates that the coroner of the Camberwell fire in 2009 wanted building and fire regs looked at because new external cladding had allowed the fire to spread between floors. Neither the government or the local authority had progressed this judgement through the Gocernment/Local Authority Association joint BRAC (Building Regulations Advisory Committee) in 4 years!It's risk assessment that came under new regulations for self-assessment. It doesn't affect building regulations and the legal standards of fire protection and escape routes.