Justin Welby (Archbishop of Canterbury) resigns

What a sick post, how twisted is your head - read the room. Seriously that is the first thought that comes into your head and you rush to post it. You really are a RRL. Its about time the mods permanently banned you, your post's offer nothing but you constantly trying to stir up hatred between everyone and everything.
Oh look Ive triggered a nasty racist

Im surprised youve got time to post on here, I wouldve thought you would be out spying on council houses
 
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Certainly not many contributing to it, about the subject.
I will contribute :cool:
Any one involved in the caper of covering it up Pakistani or not should be banged up and that includes welby

Fortunately the race card cannot be played in this particular case

So that can’t be used as an excuse for a cover up ;)

Dare say plod we’re to busy investigating and hounding the victims of that fruit cake beech

Not aware there were any Pakistanis involved in those allegations made by beech ???
 
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Any one involved in the caper of covering it up Pakistani or not should be banged up and that includes welby

Fortunately the race card cannot be played in this particular case

So that can’t be used as an excuse for a cover up ;)
Exactly

Well done for emphasising the point and highlighting why so many people are not contributing to this thread
 
Exactly

Well done for emphasising the point and highlighting why so many people are not contributing to this thread

Dunno what you are on about tbh

But we’ll done for effort :giggle:

Good job welby is not Pakistani or the usual suspects ( you may be ? ) would play the race card irrespective if he was guilty or not
 
Seems the religion card carries a greater weight, when it comes to cover-ups.
Indeed it does...

As well as in state institutions in many western countries, not just the UK...

But the religious sickos do seem to be the worst!

One of the latest this week...

"New Zealand's Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has formally apologised to victims of abuse in care homes, following an inquiry into one of the country's biggest abuse scandals.

The historic apology, delivered in parliament, comes after a report found that 200,000 children and vulnerable adults had suffered abuse while in state and faith-based care between 1950 and 2019.

Many of them included people from the Māori and Pacific communities and those with mental or physical disabilities"

"It found that faith-based institutions often had higher rates of sexual abuse than state care; and civil and faith leaders fought to cover up abuse by moving abusers to other locations and denying culpability, with many victims dying before seeing justice"
 
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