Because a good proportion of people in this country are selfish pricks who only think about themselves.
Small town people with nothing better to focus on. Former spy rocks up with historic links to Al-Qaeda. What else are they going to talk about?
That said, it’s incredibly short-sighted on the spy’s part. What did they expect? He doesn’t have to live in the countryside. Move to someplace bigger and everything is less conspicuous.
Seems a strange, nothing-ish article. And weirdly narcissistic to have it posted in The Guardian.
“MI5 had continually given the school assurances about safety…” (paraphrasing). So then he goes and pitches his life story to The Guardian? In the hopes people feel better about his presence in the community?
Entitled parents attempt to change schools from within and weak management gives in to them.
It really shouldn’t be this way. A family chooses a school based on that school’s educational project and values, if they don’t like it they are at total liberty to find another school that fits their needs better.
Parental attempts to pressure school management takes time, energy and resources away from the fundamental work of education.
The problem here is the management because they’re weak and unclear as to what their own values are. It’s a recipe for disaster.
He made bombs and killed people. I wouldn’t want him anywhere near me either.
He should host a party at his house to try and get the community on his side, it would be a blast.
5 comments
Because a good proportion of people in this country are selfish pricks who only think about themselves.
Small town people with nothing better to focus on. Former spy rocks up with historic links to Al-Qaeda. What else are they going to talk about?
That said, it’s incredibly short-sighted on the spy’s part. What did they expect? He doesn’t have to live in the countryside. Move to someplace bigger and everything is less conspicuous.
Seems a strange, nothing-ish article. And weirdly narcissistic to have it posted in The Guardian.
“MI5 had continually given the school assurances about safety…” (paraphrasing). So then he goes and pitches his life story to The Guardian? In the hopes people feel better about his presence in the community?
Entitled parents attempt to change schools from within and weak management gives in to them.
It really shouldn’t be this way. A family chooses a school based on that school’s educational project and values, if they don’t like it they are at total liberty to find another school that fits their needs better.
Parental attempts to pressure school management takes time, energy and resources away from the fundamental work of education.
The problem here is the management because they’re weak and unclear as to what their own values are. It’s a recipe for disaster.
He made bombs and killed people. I wouldn’t want him anywhere near me either.
He should host a party at his house to try and get the community on his side, it would be a blast.