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A couple of things I have noticed today on the BBC website that do not appear weird at first sight but make you doubt the sanity of some of the great British public the more you think about them:
'Sir Edward Leigh, Conservative MP for Gainsborough, said he was "very fearful of our ability today to erase or re-write history".' He is talking about the name of a Black Labrador who died seventy seven years ago, I doubt that the dog realised his name was racist or that he would go down in history as a small part of the Dambusters story. But he was a loyal and faithful servant to the Allied cause, as long as he was fed, and for that we should remember him.
'Animated film The Queen's Corgi, meanwhile, received five complaints about sexual references and animal cruelty.' Is it possible to be cruel to a cartoon animal?
Do dogs worry about what they are called? Can cartoon dogs be harmed? on 14:44 - Jul 17 by footers
I've added this latest fictional dog to my list of fictional dogs.
Not having seen 'The Queen's Corgis' I do not know whether it is an animated version of the real life story of an actual corgi or corgis; or a completely fictional account of imagined events concerning fictional corgis. Just be careful you are not jumping the gun in adding to that list prematurely.
Regarding your top link, the dog is clearly remembered as he has a headstone explaining his role in the story.
What's upsetting to Sir Gammon of Gammonshire is that it now no longer says that his name was N**ger.
Being upset about that really makes me wonder about a person.
[Post edited 17 Jul 2020 15:09]
Pronouns: He/Him/His.
"Imagine being a heterosexual white male in Britain at this moment. How bad is that. Everything you say is racist, everything you say is homophobic. The Woke community have really f****d this country."
Do dogs worry about what they are called? Can cartoon dogs be harmed? on 14:49 - Jul 17 by WeWereZombies
Not having seen 'The Queen's Corgis' I do not know whether it is an animated version of the real life story of an actual corgi or corgis; or a completely fictional account of imagined events concerning fictional corgis. Just be careful you are not jumping the gun in adding to that list prematurely.
you have it wrong
Its about the secret obsession Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor and the other one had with small metallic model cars