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Out of context: Reply #75009
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- Ianbolton10
I'm originally from a small town called Scunthorpe here in the UK. I was at some bar one night, while popping home to see the family, and nodded to some guy asking how his night was going.
He was like "ME?!"."yeah, you, how's it going?"
"People in this country don't like Polish people. But thanks for asking. No English has ever asked me that before."
We're all from somewhere. Whether it's down the road or from half way round the world, but it hurt to hear this guy feel so unwelcome. I could see he just wanted to find acceptance and to be connected in someway to where he lived. Don't we all what that in some way?
- ah from the famous " So does Sporty Spice go out with someone from Scunthorpe United" Ali G quip_niko
- +1fadein11
- :( but :.)Nairn
- Imagine if his skin was darkmonospaced
- Yes, we want to feel welcome wherever we go and whoever we seecanoe
- Also grew up in Scunthorpe, parents still ive thereABLESSINGDESIGN
- He puts the "cunt" in Scunthorpe.garbage
- Lol ^scarabin
- the pole will assimilate in 1 generation.hotroddy
- That cunt in Scunthorpe fucked our email filtering system up for ages when i worked at the Scunthorpe Telegraph. Blocking our own emails!Ianbolton
- As if there's another QBN'er from Scunthorpe. That's mad. How long you been here Dan?Ianbolton
- people that stay in small towns are generally speaking cunts. Once went to a small town pub in germany where they told me to speak german instead of english..milfhunter
- Of course, part of the reason that they live in a small town is that they’re xenophobic_niko
- Since the Newstoday days don't really post muchABLESSINGDESIGN
- For some reason UK don't like eastern europe. Remember that episode of abfab where Edwina adopted the Romanian babies? There u go.cherub