|
By:
![]() I am speechless. The German Government does realise what these people do, oh well??????? |
|
By:
From what I recall they had no problem locating their Nationals who fought AGAINST ISIL,prosecuted them and warned others they were next funny old world.
|
|
By:
I suggest looking in the NO GO ZONES that the mainstream media can't seem to locate.
|
|
By:
Try Luton.
|
|
By:
Inevitable given Frau Merkel's insane (I choose my wording carefully) unilateral immigration (non) policy when confronted by a flood of economic migrants a couple of years back.
A teenager on Facebook whose parents have gone on holiday, who's decided to throw a party had more control over events. |
|
By:
can i just point out to my maniacal troll, that i did not get this story from The Daily Mail or Express
thank you |
|
By:
Is your paperboy on holiday?
Also - Can you let me know who you think will be winning yesterdays tennis please? |
|
By:
as if by magic
![]() |
|
By:
i was getting lonely there for a while; well 5 minutes
|
|
By:
It was very good of you to stay up all night posting news items on here.
I think you could make a go of it as a business. Posting internet news items onto an internet based site - presumably for the benefit of people that don't have access to the internet? |
|
By:
Unrequited Love
"Its the feeling of being completely, hopelessly, desperately in love with someone, all the while knowing that your feelings will never reach them. Its contradictory in that you feel incredible because you love someone so much, but also at the same time you feel almost overwhelming despair because you will never know what it is like to hold them in your arms, or touch their face, or kiss their lips. You will never know what it is like to wake-up next to them in bed in the morning, bodies entwined. It can be masochistic in nature- it causes such heartache, but you enjoy loving the person so much, you willingly let your heart go through the agony, so you can hold onto something- I don't know, maybe hope?" |
|
By:
As your USP (to differentiate you from other people that know how to copy & paste from the Daily Express) - you could throw in a deep psychological analysis of the UK's leading sportswomen and then point to their previous results to back-fit your theories.
If you kept it to less than 10 words and a few smileys I think all the pros would subscribe. Yesterdays news and yesterdays results but all in one place - you would put all the people selling last weeks newspapers out of business imo. |
|
By:
Deborah Meaden said she was gonna make you an offer if you included a section on what the TV newsreaders are wearing (she thinks you have overlooked the very lucrative untapped market for curious blind people) - but now she has had a closer look at your patent for copying & pasting from the Daily Express, she thinks she thinks any old idiot could replicate what you are doing (despite me telling her - it's a lot harder than it looks!).
However she says if you could learn to copy & paste from the Daily Mail she will offer you all of the money for 10%. Touker will offer you all of the money for 8% but he insists on the Telegraph and he wants you to move to China. Theo Paphitis thinks this internet nonsense will never catch on, he said stick to bricks and mortar retail in the High Street - and then asked if I could lend him a tenner till Friday! |
|
By:
Is it that uncommon for a country to not know the exact whereabouts of all people that traveled to war regions? Does the UK government know exactly what happened to every citizen (or former resident) that traveled to Syria and Iraq?
|
|
By:
This is basically nothing news.
If the govt started a program to track these missing people, people would still be complaining about why taxpayers money is being spent locating people that left the country. These people probably died. But the news makes it sound like they arrived in Germany and the government doesn't know where they live. Also lost track is the wrong word to use. They weren't fitted with gps. They left the country. And their whereabouts haven't been known since then. Doesn't sound like 'lost track' to me unless i have missed something in the report. |
|
By:
phrase;to lose track of
If you lose track of someone or something, you no longer know where they are or what is happening. Source Definition of to lose track of from the Collins English Dictionary |
|
By:
The point remains: Is it really that newsworthy if a government doesn't know what exactly happened to a portion of people that traveled to a war region? I'd very much assume it's something that happens to every country on the face of the earth.
|
|
By:
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5282247/hundreds-of-british-isis-fighters-missing-after-government-loses-trace-of-jihadis-who-headed-to-syria/
like so about the UK About 160 have been killed and others have fled to Turkey. But Mr Wallace said a "significant number" were missing. He said: "They went into a very hard part of Syria to reach, into the Euphrates valley, and then were dispersed from there." The minister insisted security services had not "lost track of them". |
|
By:
It means any remaining fighters have likely fled the area and their whereabouts unknown.
But he also told the BBC: "There's a significant number that at the moment it is hard to actually tie down exactly where they are." A Government source added: "To be honest we didn't know where many of them ever were, but we will know when they come back." |
|
By:
edy of course it's newsworthy regardless if every government in the world is as clueless to the whereabouts of potential terror risks as the next,this is a major security issue.
The above definition still stands in these instances as they clearly don't know what is happening. |
|
By:
It's folks missing in Syria, not folks missing in Germany.
|
|
By:
In many cases likely killed.
|
|
By:
I know.
|
|
By:
I'm personally not too scared by people killed in Syria.
|