https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10153836350321016&id=593096015 It's a t25. Scum are getting nearer.
Jesus, that link is a litany of useless non value adding tosh isn't it? I get the sympathy comments, but a lot of it is just durge....
I beleive the owner found the van herself, parked behind some gates and phoned the police. Its being repaired now then going into storage at my mates place.
The owner's full story, complete with happy ending, can be found at http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04w60h6/player
Anything with the headline "Stolen in Liverpool" doesn't really seem remarkable. Glad it was found though.
Seriously? still that old stereotype? Its funny because we were only talking about this today. I'm born and bred in Liverpool, lived there for 35 years and ironically the only car ive ever had broken into was a Polo and that was in York! Liverpool is one of the greatest cities, with SOME (theres a lot of cocks but also sadly everywhere has them too!) of the greatest people you could ever meet. It goes on all over and everywhere has it good and bad neighbourhoods, comments like this used to anger me but with my old wisdom now I just find them narrow minded, attention seeking and funny.
Stereotyping is quite funny really I was talking to someone about Essex girls. We googled image Essex girls and Newcastle girls. Essex... it's so not true going by those pics
Whoah! Sorry mate! I make jokes about all sorts and you can rarely tell a joke these days without offending someone. Your turn this time, I'm afraid. Btw, when I drive through Liverpool, I use a hovercraft. That way no one can nick the wheels! (Runs for cover)
I don't even bother driving across Liverpool these days, I just nick different cars all the way over, saves on the merseyrail fares, now that's real theft!
fact - lime street station has the highest proportion of 1 way tickets purchased. train out drive back. calm down calm down
Me too. Get a bit sick of it but the more you react to it, the more it just encourages comments so I just bask in the knowledge that it's a great city with great people. A while back I was on a train coming back from Brum. There were two Scouse squaddies returning home to Liverpool and a group of four Norwegian blokes who were revelling and indulging in, the 'cheap' on board beer! They bought the soldiers a couple of beers and got chatting - in perfect English (the Norwegians not the squaddies ). One of the questions the Norwegians asked was how did the squaddies feel about their home town, Liverpool having the reputation of being the crime capital of England, when as they so eloquently said, statistics provided by the Home Office showed other cities such as Newcastle, had equal or worse levels of crime. They made for an interesting journey home.