nige
Regular.
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2019
- Messages
- 415
- Reaction score
- 78
Thats just Murder Clint.Unless its
when you've just got in and your tea's not on the table...then it's unavoidable.
Thats just Murder Clint.Unless its
when you've just got in and your tea's not on the table...then it's unavoidable.
Yes they shouldn't sell alcohol at all and we all should be fined heavily or maybe landlords should throw people out after a four pint limit, in fact all pubs should be closed and made into playgroups .
Sorry, suppose I was just trolling the whole thread However I thought UK law as it stands is 9pm time limit for children in UK pubs and that's only if food is sold, I think 7pm if food isn't.Could you do us all a favour and quote when replying to a post as its difficult to see who you are trolling when you throw random posts into a thread.
On a serious not i can see why "Parents shouldn't take young kids into pubs" is winning the poll but i wonder what would have happened had i added another option "Should there be a cut off time (i.e 9 p.m) after which no kids are allowed in pubs"
However I thought UK law was 9pm time limit for children in UK pubs and that's only if food is sold, I think 7pm if food isn't.
again depends on the type of pub. A proper boozer pub , which alas , there are fewer & fewer should not admit children. I certainly wouldn’t take my young daughter to a proper boozer. A fave pub of mine is no under 21’s serves amazing ale & gives 10% off card carrying Camra members. However the pub round the corner & I use the term loosely’gastro pub’ welcomes children. Parents need to be responsible & lead by example , however the UK is inundated with Oik scumbags who do not know how to nurture children & show their offspring how to be a valuable member of society.When I were a lad.....................women weren't allowed in the public bar. If there was a lounge bar it was ok. I think pubs improved when women were accepted. But no pub is improved by having children under 21 in it.
Lets really pull the pin out should everybody have a ID card?
No thanksAbsolutely! Every UK subject should have an ID Card from the age of fourteen.
Not many people know that in the UK you can have as many Passports as you need for your work or for your leisure.
When I was working I had two Passports. As an example of the need, I worked in Indonesia on Passport 1 using a one month Visitors Visa. Every month, just before the Visa expired, I flew over to Singapore to change Passports and returned with a valid Visa in Passport 2. The lass in the office went ahead and got a new Visitors Visa in Passport 1 and a month later I changed over again. This went on until the job was finished.
When I retired, we lived in France on a boat and wished to visit Russia. To get a Russian Visa it is imperative that you present your Passport to the Russian Embassy and it takes up to a month for the Visitors Visa to be issued. In France there is a law that says that everyone MUST carry their ID Card or Passport with them. Again, obtaining a second Passport meant that we didn't have to disrupt our lives by coming back to the UK in order to obtain a Russian Visa.
On the other hand, our French friends, using just their French ID Card, were able to visit us in the UK, travel all over the EU and fly as far away as Guadeloupe without a Passport!
I can't see why we don't have ID Cards in the UK. There is no valid reason whatsoever and it would make life a lot easier for most of us in the UK and a lot of UK Government Agencies.
In the days when we were members of the EU it would also have meant that we could travel all over the EU without a Passport. Maybe it was the thought of losing control of the British people that stopped the politicians from carrying on with the plan to issue ID's to everyone.
No thanks