Strong words from RSPB England

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  • simonali said:

    Good to see it's been left in place.

    Our herring gulls are red listed birds.  Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.

  • Unknown said:
    If anyone thought they were going to go away.
    twitter.com/.../1697624004226367676

    Well, having grabbed the attention of so many people they may as well hold on to it.

    Our herring gulls are red listed birds.  Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.

  • I just thought a modified url might work as someone said they couldn't post it. Strange that the forum bans its own twit feed?
  • simonali said:
    I just thought a modified url might work as someone said they couldn't post it. Strange that the forum bans its own twit feed?

    To say the least this is a uniquely run online forum!!

    Our herring gulls are red listed birds.  Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.

  • They've resolved the problem Simon a lot of links were blocked before

  • here you go Simonali the RSPB commented and then fixed the issue that we were having this will lead you to the actual page 

    https://community.rspb.org.uk/chat/f/hello/284195/testing-wildlife-links#pifragment-4313=2

  • He’s my MP, unfortunately.

    Considering he plans to create a coal mine right next to a national park and vulnerable coastal habitats, I’m not one bit surprised.

  • Things are a big mess today, the following list is inexhaustive, and it's getting worse at an accelerating rate.
    • Russia invades the Ukraine which impacts the western world's dependence on oil and gas.
    • Huge profits made by the oil and gas companies, some reported at around 900%, at the cost of financially hard pressed people.
    • The release of North Sea oil and gas drilling licences to counteract the dependency on oil and gas from Russia.
    • Poor implementation of renewable energy in a proactive form other than financial and moral.
    • The high costs for converting a home from gas or oil usage to heat pumps, underground or overground
    • Demand for land to build on.
    • The systematic erosion of services to ease practical, economical and environmentally supportive services.
    • No stability in key roles for future policies, environmental or not
    • Fast finance
    As we know, there's a lot more to mention and I'm sure, not that I'm encouraging it, each and every one of you who reads this can add plenty more, particularly at local levels to each of you.
    Recently I was having a very good chat with someone about the current and deteriorating situation today. After evaluating what he said, I have to agree with his view on today and the  future; "It's all about the money. View everything from a financial perspective, how big conglomerates can make money, and then you will see most of the answers to most if not all of the following:
    • Who
    • What
    • When
    • Where
    • Why
    That's the sad reality of today and tomorrow...."

    regards

    John

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