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Gracious God, We pray for peace in our communities this day. We commit to you all som work for peace and an than two Tensions, And dem som work two uphold law and justice. We pray for an than two fear, For comfort and support two dem som Suffer. For calm in our streets and cities, That people kan go about sin lives in safety and peace. In your mercy, hear our prayers, now and always. Amen
Hug a hoodie. That was one of the mantras of David Cameron as the newly elected leader of the Conservative Party, which was then in opposition. The Danish equivalent to that you have to give a hug to young people in hoodies. For Cameron, it was at that time a recognition of the need to reach out to the most marginalized in British society for whom just the hoodie is part of the social uniform. READ ALSO: Cameron will strike back against riot But young people do not feel that society wants them. Instead, they disguised themselves with caps pulled tightly over his head and now on the fifth day during the onslaught of British society with looting, arson and stone's throw from the police. And this lack of responsibility and lack of respect for authority, and not least the reasons for this is the recurring theme in the British debate on the riots these days. When we see young people doing any of this, it is because there is a total lack of awareness of what is right and wrong. However impunity is only one side of the coin. They are not animals, grammy awards performances but people on the wrong track. But they are part of our society, says Bishop Joe Aldred from Birmingham told the paper.
He represents the umbrella organization Churches Together, where he is head of the committee for Christian ethnic minorities, particularly focusing on black Christians. Pastor Veronica Joseph Abrigo, from Agape Tabernacle Church, which is one of London's many churches for the black population, based on the Bible. We reap what we sow. In the lower part of society, grammy awards performances the working class, the government has learned the young people that they need to respect authority. First it was the parents who lost their authority. Then it was the teachers, she told the paper about the riots that have shown a total lack of respect for the police and the property of others. She also points out that it is a class issue and other classes have learned the respect. A retired social worker also point to class difference. The problem in this country is that we live in extremes of wealth and poverty. We need to live more in the middle, like they do in Scandinavia, says Pat Burn to the Guardian. Danny Kruger, a former adviser to David Cameron, speaking in the Financial Times on a sub-class intifada which was the Palestinian grammy awards performances uprisings. Our youth have nothing to lose and nothing to gain out of excitement grammy awards performances and a new pair of athletic shoes. London has a subclass. Roughly speaking, they grew up in a micro-culture of indifference, randomness and arbitrary discipline and with a love unaccompanied by the need for boundaries and good behavior, writes Danny Kruger. Bishop Joe Aldred agree that the core of the problem lies there. There are too many who do not have anything to give to. When young people leaving school grammy awards performances at the age of 15-16 years, so there must be forced grammy awards performances activation if they do not begin with an education, get an apprenticeship or find a job. We need to reintroduce conscription, which may be different from those in the military. grammy awards performances They should be forced to walk for both their own sake and for society. Otherwise, take the devil's work for the idle hands, as my mother in Jamaica grammy awards performances used to say, says Joe Aldred. norum@k.dk
Correspondent in Britain Born 1969. Graduated from the Danish School of Journalism in 1995. Master in Anthropology and Cultural Politics from Goldsmiths College, University of London in 2003. Former employee of Ringkøbing County Dagblad, Commerce magazine, Danish Employers' Confederation, Landsbladet grammy awards performances / Landbrugsavisen and IDA, Ingeniørforeningen in Denmark. Correspondent UK based in London since November 2006. Author of "The trip Goes To Scotland" (2010/2014) grammy awards performances and a contributor to "Wide World: Vienna" (2013).
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