Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
fouljuice wrote:To me the bigger issue is the fact that the parents living in 'a makeshift shack on a riverbank' and STILL chose to make 4 children. Things were not hard as it is with just the 2 adults? Or even after the first child? I highly doubt they are quadruplets.
Or were they an upper class family and somewhere along the road a relative come with legal documents or a will and take away all their possessions and leave them out on the street to fend for themselves?
rspann wrote:When I heard the story on TV the first night, and she was asking for a mattress, I told my wife to take her number to buy the mattress and some other things for them. While the interview continued, I saw the attitude and changed my mind.
MonstersInc wrote:
rspann wrote:When I heard the story on TV the first night, and she was asking for a mattress, I told my wife to take her number to buy the mattress and some other things for them. While the interview continued, I saw the attitude and changed my mind.
This is what perplexed me. 4 kids by the age of 26 in those conditions.fouljuice wrote:To me the bigger issue is the fact that the parents living in 'a makeshift shack on a riverbank' and STILL chose to make 4 children.
Slartibartfast wrote:This is what perplexed me. 4 kids by the age of 26 in those conditions.fouljuice wrote:To me the bigger issue is the fact that the parents living in 'a makeshift shack on a riverbank' and STILL chose to make 4 children.
Slartibartfast wrote:This is what perplexed me. 4 kids by the age of 26 in those conditions.fouljuice wrote:To me the bigger issue is the fact that the parents living in 'a makeshift shack on a riverbank' and STILL chose to make 4 children.
treeneeboi wrote:While at the same time I have to either save and build slowly over years or take a mortgage that ensures i will be paying for at least 20. In the mean time though this nemakaram ass goin to be askin for accomodations that better suit her after getting a house for free. You would swear she livin Toco and they put her Cedros. Smfh
acesinghit wrote:If the Government offers financial incentives now to handout dependent individuals like those in the video above, to perform medical procedures such as vasectomies and tubal ligations, we as a people will benefit in the long run by:
1. Less wasted tax money spent on these sort of uneducated animals sadly referred to as human beings
2. Less crime in the future which would lessen the financial impact on the state to mitigate crime which seems more and more difficult
Etc etc
I propose $3,000. Per person who does any of the procedures as mentioned above and can prove this via a medical report to be submitted to the assigned Ministry. With this measure and the removal of the baby grant, our children can have a brighter future.
rollingstock wrote:I think most missing the point and only focusing on the article. It's clear that's she's a simple minded person, and found it difficult to explain herself properly.
It would be very difficult to get her children to school from that area as it is now in development and there is no reliable mode of public transport. Her threat to move back to the Shack seems to me to be a hollow threat to highlight how much this obstacle affects her.
I'm heartened by the fact that she is so concerned with her children receiving an education.
Most of you all seem to think that the best course of action to deal with the poor and downtrodden is eradication, it may work but then they might target weak-assed beta ph@ggots; then you'll be in trouble.
Slartibartfast wrote:This is what perplexed me. 4 kids by the age of 26 in those conditions.fouljuice wrote:To me the bigger issue is the fact that the parents living in 'a makeshift shack on a riverbank' and STILL chose to make 4 children.
A tearful Wattley, 24, and her husband, Kris Rambhal, 25 (they have three other children, ages seven, three and two) recounted the traumatic incident to minister in the Ministry of People and Social Development, Vernella Alleyne-Toppin, who visited the couple’s Perseverance Village, Chaguanas, home yesterday to offer condolences. Alleyne-Toppin promised help with government housing or a lot of land through the Land for the Landless programme, and help with starting their own business.
For almost two years, the couple, both market vendors, have been living in a small, windowless shack, with no water or electricity, in a busy area off the main road near the river bank. They left their previous home after a family dispute. Wattley recalled, “The night the incident happen (June 14), I was sleeping, my son woke up around 9 (pm), he started to cry, I turn to my side, I lift him up and I rest him on my arm here, next to the breast here and I knock back out. I didn’t have a clue of what happen or when it happen.
“My husband, he then wake and he said Neisha, Neisha, I don’t think he alive you know, he belly not moving. And with that, I just dive off the bed, run outside, I turn his head over and I blow into his mouth to see if I could bring him back, but I just saw is like milk flowing through his nose and I just wipe it, run back inside, get a blanket and I run straight to the station. “I started to bawl and scream.” She said the police officers on duty that night were nice to her, but the ambulance took too long to get to the station.
With the support of her husband, she said, she was trying to move on.
Return to “Ole talk and more Ole talk”
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 79 guests