Gransnet forums

News & politics

Cyril Smith

(81 Posts)
jinglbellsfrocks Wed 30-Apr-14 12:00:06

Why are they milking it? He's dead.

Let it go.

Ana Wed 30-Apr-14 20:30:38

Yes. I found Iam's post of 13.13 chilling.

Nonu Wed 30-Apr-14 20:40:19

CS was a dirty fat old man who preyed on youngsters, it must have been so very awful for them, and will not be forgotten by them !
Sexual abuse never is !

Quite sad for them really

Soutra Wed 30-Apr-14 22:26:02

1) nobody is bringing your dgc into it jingl, you were asked to put yourself into the position of how you would feel IF. That's empathy not personal.
2) that there has been a cover up is becoming more and more apparent. Even David Steel for whom I have had a lot of time in the past, was trying to wriggle and squirm on Radio 4 yesterday. * No one* can be outside the law and it is shameful how often ranks have closed around the abusers.

jinglbellsfrocks Wed 30-Apr-14 23:01:05

Not sure how you can empathise without looking at a situation from a personal point of view. confused

Never mind.

jinglbellsfrocks Wed 30-Apr-14 23:02:18

To anyone who might have managed to post in a reasonably pleasant way, I would say yes, I think a cover up should be investigated. But quietly. Without bringing more victims to our television screens.

durhamjen Wed 30-Apr-14 23:49:31

Offends your sensibilities, does it, Jingle?
Anyone who has been a victim does not go on television or in the papers lightly.

Joan Thu 01-May-14 03:29:40

I think they should unearth the lot, and they certainly should bring people to account who covered it all up. Only a thorough and in depth investigation, out in the open and reported in the media, will be enough to help the victims come to terms with both what CS did, and how they were treated after reporting it.

It might even frighten off current paedophiles, and stop further cover-ups.

GrannyTwice Thu 01-May-14 06:49:35

Investigate a cover up quietly? confused

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 01-May-14 09:49:43

No jendurham. It doesn't "offend my sensibilities". Maybe I just have less sympathy than you for grown men who are now deciding they have been permanently harmed by something that happened to them many years ago.

You are obviously very tender hearted, and I, obviously, am not.

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 01-May-14 09:55:22

Here is exactly my thoughts, and then I will (try to) say no more.

Cyril Smith was obviously a sleazy, nasty, cruel man.

I have utmost sympathy for children who are abused in this way.

I think a cover-up should be investigated, although I would imagine that the people who covered it up in the sixties and seventies might be dead by now.

'Bye.

annodomini Thu 01-May-14 10:47:07

No, they are not all dead, jingl.

whenim64 Thu 01-May-14 11:08:04

Not only are they not dead, but some are still in office. I first heard about CS's behaviour when I visited Rochdale with colleagues and was told about the allegations made by offenders who had been in care. All complaints reported, and in the 90s frustrations were being aired that CS appeared to be immune to attempts to prosecute him. That was less than 20 years ago. Those offenders will only be in their forties now and the officials concerned could still be in office for a few more years.

Iam64 Thu 01-May-14 13:56:50

They aren't all dead. Allegations against Cyril Smith weren't confined to Lancashire and Greater Manchester police forces. He was found with child pornography in his car many years later, that investigation was also closed down, not by the investigating officers.

The young men who are now grown are not "suddenly deciding they have been permanently harmed by something that happened years ago". The reality is, they have been permanently harmed by their experiences at the hands of CS. To speak of these men in this derogatory way, and go on to say you have utmost sympathy for children abused in this way is confusing Jing. You seem to be implying that you sympathise with the children who were abused, but not with the adult men those children have become.

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 01-May-14 14:08:21

It's quite simple Iam64. I lose sympathy with grown men bleating about dreadful things that happened to them in their childhood. I want to say, get over it.

Soutra Thu 01-May-14 14:15:07

I didn't realise that "posting in a reasonable and pleasant way " was the sine qua non. I'll bear it in mind when posting on/ reading other threads, including those with expletives not deleted or where a lack of sensitivity characterises responses.

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 01-May-14 14:17:10

Not relevant to the thread Soutra.

jinglbellsfrocks Thu 01-May-14 14:18:11

And I havern't a fucking clue what "sine qua non" means. You are obviously much more intelligent than I am. Congratulations.

TriciaF Thu 01-May-14 14:19:20

The abuse (physical or sexual) of children in "Care" or in boarding schools has been going on for some time, and many cases already dealt with.
I recently found out that several children in a Home near where I lived as a child had been abused, the case came up about 10 years ago. But some victims are still coming forward.
So it's a massive problem. the courts could be overwhelmed, but as someone else said hopefully a deterrent for other predators.
No excuse for Cyril Smith, but it's the well known names that make the headlines whereas many others are just as corrupt.

annodomini Thu 01-May-14 14:44:35

Nobody is 'bleating', jingl. And it is as important to the victim to resolve historic abuse allegations as it is to resolve something that happened yesterday.

HMHNanna Thu 01-May-14 15:30:25

jinglbellsfrocks swearing is totally unnecessary. You don't seem to have either empathy or sympathy for any of the victims of Cyril Smith. Well I hope that sometime you might have a rethink, and imagine what they went through.

Natsnan Thu 01-May-14 16:34:48

I can assure you, jinglebellsfrocks, that is is not just a case of "getting over" childhood abuse. It can affect your whole life and colour any relationships you may have. I find your remarks offensive to say the least. I very rarely post on here now bust just had to in this case.

Natsnan Thu 01-May-14 16:35:28

"Just"

Elegran Thu 01-May-14 16:43:31

Many people DO "get over" and overcome the effects of childhood abuse, as demonstrated by a lot of people on here, but they do not talk down the importance of those effects on them, or the difficulties they have had in their emotional/mental health because of them.

I will qualify that. They should not be making little of the effects on other people!

whenim64 Thu 01-May-14 16:55:18

It saddens me to see anyone lashing out at the people who have experienced child sexual abuse. Their own families and friends might think they are repeating their story too many times for comfort, but if they need to they don't need belittling or dismissing. I hope Cyril Smith's victims find some peace after all this time. I can't begin to imagine what their nightmares must be like. I do know that quite a few had alcohol and drug problems resulting from his cruelty to them, along with chronic anxiety and depression.

JessM Thu 01-May-14 17:10:01

shock jingle...