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Days Won
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Everything posted by FoxesDeb
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BBC News - He went to get aid and didn't come back - stories of people killed in Gaza https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgn2rwk2ly Heartbreaking, and all while we watch and in some cases, support it.
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That's rough, and I'm sorry to hear you're going through it. Yes children definitely complicate things, but my ex and I managed to also agree on access amicably so that side of things didn't need to go through the courts. Obviously everyone's situation is different but I really hope you can work things out, the courts really don't want to get involved with child arrangements unless they really have to, so hopefully you can agree it between you, for the sake of all of you
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Just watched tonight's episode of Love Island and couldn't believe it, Harrison walked out! Didn't see that coming
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I watch it and agree he is a massive bellend. I'm also guessing it's safe to assume he doesn't make it to the final, as it's still on TV and at the moment he's still in the villa... So thanks for the massive spoiler
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I have experienced both sides of this and can concur with what the other posters have said, the best thing you can do is try to agree on things between you as much as possible. When my ex husband and I got divorced we agreed how to split things between us, he got something drawn up with a solicitor and this was submitted at the hearing, agreed by the judge, and it was all done for a couple of hundred pounds. When my now husband was divorced by his ex wife she insisted on both going through solicitors to speak to each other and they spent a small fortune between them, they both ended up with pretty much what they both wanted anyway, it was such a waste of money for them, the only people who gained from it were the solicitors themselves.
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It's the counter argument to people claiming 16 and 17 year olds aren't competent to vote, I thought I'd made that clear in my initial post but maybe I needed to spell it out even more obviously...
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I know of men of middle age who spend their time similarly but we let them vote... Also my mother has dementia, bought her house in the 50's for about £3.5k and has absolutely no idea what it's like these days to try to raise a family while paying for childcare and working full time. I know whose vote would represent my peers more closely, and it's not hers
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If my 78 year old, never worked in her life and reads the Daily Mail like it's the Bible and has an opinion on absolutely everything, especially if it concerns immigrants, 'boat people' and anyone else who doesn't look just like us, mother can vote for policies which quite frankly she may not live to see out, I'm damn sure any 16 year old should be afforded the same privilege. I say this as someone who believes the tables have completely turned, too, and that the young of today are possibly more likely to vote harder right than I've seen in my lifetime. I guess we will see.
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If it tips the balance back towards being in favour of those who still have their lives ahead of them rather than those who are, respectfully, seeing out their last years, then I'm in favour.
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