Top cop says rugby fans should not sing Delilah
THAT senior police officer should look for a new job, if he’d really believes a controlling, violent abuser will stop if Delilah isn’t sung. It’s not a song that makes them what they are.
Susan Owen
MAYBE the police need to worry what’s happening in the police force at the moment
Annette Walker
HOPE every single rugby fan home and away sing it loud and proud for every single game! WRU you’re a laughing stock and this is a smoke screen for the poor decisions you are making!
Mandy Thomas
PERHAPS WRU should concentrate on trying to win the match. Instead of worrying about ancient songs of yesteryear.
Martin Kemp
WORLD’S gone mad...
Sian Powell
I WILL sing it loud and strong, and be proud to be Welsh.
Linda Jenkins
HE’S going to have a fit when he hears there’s a song called “I shot the Sheriff”
Dewi Eirig Jones
December 16, 2022.
Its findings reflect a significant change from the referendum in 2016 that resulted in Brexit. At that time, the people of Wales voted by 52.5% to 47.5% to leave the EU, with a majority favouring Brexit in 17 of the 22 Welsh local authority areas. Andrew Nutt
Bargoed the people in the Soviet Bloc confirmed that this beneficial human phenomenon is quite fragile – if those who control your mind (like their state) control your thinking, this negates your desire to suggest or even think of improvements!
The one thing today’s strikers have in common is that they are all employed directly or indirectly by the state, which none of them have any influence over. None of them know who they work for or who makes the decisions! So they are wasting their time attempting to improve on what they did yesterday, or to do it more efficiently or cost-effectively, as someone they didn’t even know existed is bound to countermand it.
What is just as farcical is that the state-controlled BBC insist we refer to the nationalised state sector as the public sector, as though we were more than just observers!
Brian Christley Abergele, Conw