very ghastly for me.....yes.....long live the remote control and skyOh how ghastly for you...
When anything about the McCanns comes on TV I just switch the channel and I dont read news papers. Just seems pointless to still look when its 90+% chance she is dead or will never ever ever be found.
She is in Austria.
She is in Austria.
Pointless? It's been a year, there are plenty cases of missing children being found after much greater lengths of time. If as you believe it's a 90% chance she is dead then there is still a 1/10 chance she is alive. What sort of parent would give up on those odds?
In the last few months there has been very little on the TV about the case, obviously with it coming up to the year mark it is going to be highlighted again....so what.
Daily Mail readers.How has this thread got a five star rating? How amusing.
How has this thread got a five star rating? How amusing.
how has this thread even got to 67 page's surprise's meHow has this thread got a five star rating? How amusing.
Its got a 4 star rating.
Why are children "obviously far more likely to be killed/seriously injured" whilst in a car, as opposed to if they are left alone in an appartment? Do many cars have knives, bottles of bleach, medicines that look like smarties, etc... within easy reach of the children? When a child is in the back seat of a car, do they suddenly become invisible to the parents? Can an evil child molestor sneak in through an unlocked door and kidnap the child when they're driving through a town at 30 mph?Another parallel that makes the whole backlash seem odd to me is that children are obviously far more likely to be killed/seriously injured when being driven somewhere then they are being left alone in a room. Yet you don't see a backlash against parents whos child is unfortunately killed in a car accident. But why not? I'm reasonable sure that cars must be one of the largest killers of children so why would any responsible parent take such a risk with their childs life?
Accidental injuries are a major health problem throughout the United Kingdom. They are the commonest cause of death in children over one year of age. Every year they leave many thousands permanently disabled or disfigured.
Over 1 million children under the age of 15 experience accidents in and around the home every year