mustang1
Legendary Member
- Location
- London, UK
I guess that guy wasn't immediately identifiable as a cop.
Shooting fish in a barrel springs to mind!Used to live in Greenock for a bit myself and can picture exactly the type you'd target.![]()
Calm down...no-one called you a liar, and I don't see anyone trolling. Just questioning your blanket assertion that, to use your own words, 'to suggest the Police go out and target people based on their skin colour is, IMHO, stereotypical nonsense'.I'm at work using fone, so can't open the file you linked to, but I'm sure it will be a source of entertainment later.
Not the case "now", so has Greenock suddenly become a great big melting pot? And as for searches in Scotland being non statutory, again that must be post 2001 (when I finished), as we only carried out searches under MDA 1971, Civic Govt Scotland act 1982, and Prevention of Crime act (1953 IIRC)...
Any changes to legislation are not relevant to you calling me a liar anyway, oh and previously, a bent copper. You're just a troll, and not a very good one.
Say we take one stop and search a day (as he said he did it each and every working day)... that's 230 working days over 19 years - or 4,370 stops and searches. And not one non-white person?
Nah...
Perfectly calm here thanks. Is there a difference between lying and "talking bollocks" then? It wasn't your accusation, it was not surprisingly, @User .Calm down...no-one called you a liar, and I don't see anyone trolling. Just questioning your blanket assertion that, to use your own words, 'to suggest the Police go out and target people based on their skin colour is, IMHO, stereotypical nonsense'.
Did you look at the chart I posted earlier? This one.
View attachment 148263
Now, whatever your personal experiences in Greenock, that chart - unless it's been put together by trolls and liars - shows that if you're black, your chances of getting stopped and searched are three times higher in the West Midlands, twice as high in South Yorkshire, and almost six times higher if you're in Kent. In fact in that whole chart there's not one region where you're equally likely to be stopped and searched regardless of your colour. Which in turn suggests that to suggest the Police target people based on their skin colour is not stereotypical nonsense but, based on the evidence, indisputable.
Just as well it wasn't pigs'![]()
You'll find that @Brandane is from Aryshire, in Scotland, which is not covered by your map.
Certainly when I grew up in and around that area it was extremely rare to see a non-white face.
Did you hear about the old people's home that was built on St Peter's Close?It's an oft claimed story... but sadly not true.
The new police station in St Ives was built on Norris Road - not Broad Leas. Pig Lane never extended down as far as what is now Broad Leas. What is now Broad Leas was previously Cemetery Road (the maps from the 1950s and 1970s clearly have it marked) and it was renamed when new housing was built as people (particularly the elderly people in the various care homes on Broad Leas) didn't like the idea of living on Cemetery Road.
One end of Broad Leas joins on to Pig Lane - the other end doesn't. It goes into Globe Place and the joins West Street / East Street.
Perfectly calm here thanks. Is there a difference between lying and "talking bollocks" then? It wasn't your accusation, it was not surprisingly, @User .
Re that chart, statistics can be misleading. For instance, what is the ethnic make up of the population in those force areas? It's reasonable to expect the figures to be higher in areas like the Met, where the percentage of non whites might be higher than other force areas.
According to those figures, there are quite a few force areas where white people are more likely to be searched, e.g. Humberside, where you are less than half as likely to be searched if you are black. See what I mean about stats...
It's an oft claimed story... but sadly not true.
The new police station in St Ives was built on Norris Road - not Broad Leas. Pig Lane never extended down the length of what is now Broad Leas. What is now Broad Leas was previously Cemetery Road (the maps from the 1950s and 1970s clearly have it marked) and it was renamed when new housing was built as people (particularly the elderly people in the various care homes on Broad Leas) didn't like the idea of living on Cemetery Road.
One end of Broad Leas joins on to Pig Lane - the other end doesn't. It goes into Globe Place and the joins West Street / East Street.