June 30 Glasgow Airport Bomber Dead

It's an Indian newspaper source, mate. And he was, you know, an Indian.

Do you think he'll be cremated?
 
What does that mean: "He allegedly mounted an Al-Qaeda attack on Glasgow airport"?
You don't argue on behalf teh troof, do you? :confused:
I'm sorry? What exactly are you trying to say? Did I misrepresent something?
 
I'm sorry? What exactly are you trying to say? Did I misrepresent something?


Well, let me pick one of your most used phrases:

"What evidence do you have to make the claim" that he's the Glasgow Bomber while the article says that he's the alleged Glasgow Bomber.

And to pick your second favored phrase:

"I'm sure you know that there are still ongoing investigations."

You wouldn't kick innocent people until their guilt is proven, would you? :confused:
 
You wouldn't kick innocent people until their guilt is proven, would you? :confused:
So his guilt wasn't proven when he drove his car bomb into the Glasgow Airport terminal and tried to fight off people as he attempted to open the back of the car when all the bombs didn't explode?

There is a difference between someone who has been caught red-handed (literally) committing a horrible crime, and not knowing everything about that person's affiliations. Be sure to make that distinction.
 
Oliver, you are a truther in every sense of the world.

I saw the baggage handler who gave the famous 'This is Glasgow' line at Downing Street on the news. What a charming, modest, and good man.
 
There were some funny lines about him - the local paper published a selection from a web site.

Many men wear Superman pyjamas. Superman wears John Smeaton pyjamas.


And my favourite:

Only in Glasgow do the police have to rescue the terrorists from the locals.


There were several people nearby who pitched in to help when they realised what was going on, including a taxi driver waiting for a fare, and a man who'd just got off his flight home from holiday. It happened to be John Smeaton who was interviewed, and I think he was actually in a bit of shock at the time because he seemed to be very wired, and his brand of the Scots language tickled a few funny-bones. (I didn't realise it was unintelligible to anyone beyond a 30-mile radius, but then when I listened again, I sort of saw what the furriners meant.) He looked to me as if a couple of valium would have been a good idea right then. But when he'd come down off the ceiling, he turned into a nice, modest man who really didn't want any more publicity and was quick to point out that he was only one of several.

I'm not shedding too many tears for the dead man, but I wish he'd lived so the police could have interviewed him.

Rolfe.
 
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I'm not sure if anything tops the headline I saw in one British paper.

"HERO CABBIE: 'I KICKED BURNING TERRORIST SO HARD IN THE BALLS THAT I TORE A TENDON!'"
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Yeah well, these things take a while to reach us up here in the cold north.
 
You wouldn't kick innocent people until their guilt is proven, would you? :confused:

There aren't many post-mortem criminal trials in the common law countries. Maybe you do things differently in Germany.
 

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