Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Lower ... lower ... lower ...

Is there no pit-bottom to Southwark's scumbaggery? How far down can they go?


Breaking news: All - ALL - working staff in Peckham Rye and Park have been laid off. Not the managers - COURSE NOT! lol.


Not the so-called wardens, those lycra stormtroopers, rushing in to hassle dog owners before rushing off again. They are on seriously-seriously high money.


No, it's the actual workers, the friendly helpful guys you see around. And they only found out themselves because an email was sent to them by mistake!


I see the events of the weekend are still very much under discussion on this forum. Everyone I meet says the Sunday event was "horrible" and "frightening". Anything to say now, wallyloudmouth and all the other trolls who said I was being - what was it? - 'narrowminded' and 'emotional' in my apprehension. The grass will take months to recover. The amplified bomp-bomp-bomp disturbed residents miles away. The bushes of our park remain full of human excrement. And they're taking their sweet time to get pack up and shove off, have you noticed?


Don't wait for our spineless local councillors to say anything. The silence remains total. If people in this area want to prevent this becoming a regular nightmare they're going to have to get off their chuffs and TAKE BACK CONTROL of this rogue local authority.


Lee Scoresby

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • My wife has been complaining about this actually; we are on Crawthew Grove, it started a few years back, then seemed to stop, starting up again circa last September. I'm normally at work around the time she hears it most - between 11pm and 2AM, but even when I'm home I just can't hear it, which she just can't believe, so I guess it depends how sensetive your hearing is... Would love to get to the bottom of it too!
    • Perhaps like Malumbu they compost their food waste?
    • Obviously, but they may be wrong. Not only are we coming up to another population renewal drop after the continuing effects of the baby bulge generation enter a trough,  - secondary schools are closing across many boroughs - but birth rates in the UK continue to fall (not just absolute births which are also falling as a function of the bulge unwind, but births per head). And foreign student numbers are also falling. Additionally the costs of being a student are rising, which encourages more students to go to universities close enough that they don't need accommodation but can live at home. Bubbles burst, and this may be one of them.
    • Exactly. There's also a much easier way to find out how demand and supply are interacting for student housing: look at how goddamn expensive it is! It's a huge barrier to entry for students who want to study away from home. If the price of student housing cratered, this would be great news for everyone except property developers because it would cut housing costs for students and reduce some demand on "mainstream" housing in the wider market (because students won't be looking for houseshares). These property developers (and their financiers) aren't shovelling millions of pounds into student housing because they think the market is going to crash and they're going to lose money! And if they do, it's not really my problem...
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...