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#1 Feb 09 2006 at 3:16 PM Rating: Good
Ministry of Silly Cnuts
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Okay - couldn't find the old thread from last month, but it looks like that Brit did waste his old lady and the ickle kiddy-blinkie.

Linky


Quote:
Briton held in US shootings case

Neil Entwistle, 27, was remanded in custody by Bow Street magistrates on Thursday in an extradition hearing following his arrest in London.

He faces charges of murder and illegal possession of a firearm in the US.

The bodies of Rachel Entwistle, 27, and Lillian, nine months, were found in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, last month.

The Entwistles had moved to the US after their daughter was born
A British man held over the deaths of his American wife and baby daughter at their US home may have been planning to also kill himself, US authorities say.


I predict he'll claim provocation, and that as he unloaded the lead into them he was screaming "It's spelled c-o-l-o-U-r dammit!"
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#2 Feb 09 2006 at 3:19 PM Rating: Excellent
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You beat me by seconds!

Nexa
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#3 Feb 09 2006 at 3:22 PM Rating: Excellent
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Neil Entwistle
Heh, talk about your stereotypical ghey English names.
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Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#4 Feb 09 2006 at 3:24 PM Rating: Good
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Neil is a pretty fa[b][/b]ggy name



Smiley: wink2
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#5 Feb 09 2006 at 3:28 PM Rating: Excellent
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No arguement from me.

He was probably lured into murder by America's easy access to firearms.
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Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#6 Feb 09 2006 at 3:49 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:

He was probably lured into murder by America's easy access to firearms.



It could have been all the rap and violent TV he became exposed to.
#7 Feb 09 2006 at 4:18 PM Rating: Decent
Heaven help us if he played any of those murder simulators (video games) to train how to shoot and kill his wife and child.
#8 Feb 09 2006 at 4:36 PM Rating: Good
It's most likely because of this.

Quote:
Kids are Depressing, Study of Parents Finds
By Robert Roy Britt
LiveScience Managing Editor

Any parent will tell you kids can be depressing at times. A new study shows that raising them is a lifelong challenge to your mental health.

Not only do parents have significantly higher levels of depression than adults who do not have children, the problem gets worse when the kids move out.

"Parents have more to worry about than other people do—that's the bottom line," said Florida State University professor Robin Simon. "And that worry does not diminish over time. Parents worry about their kids' emotional, social, physical and economic well-being. We worry about how they're getting along in the world."

Simon knows from experience.

"I adore my kids," she said in a telephone interview. "I would do it over again. There are enormous emotional benefits. But I think [those benefits] get clouded by the emotional cost. We worry about our kids even when they're doing well."

The depressing results seem to be across the board in a study of 13,000 people. No type of parent reported less depression than non-parents, Simon said.

Some parents are more depressed than others, however. Parents of adult children, whether they live at home or not, and parents who do not have custody of their minor children have more symptoms of depression than those with young children all in the nest, regardless of whether they are biological children, step children or adopted.

Other research has shown there's a bright side to raising kids, too. One study of people with younger children found the parents have greater social networks and higher levels of self-confidence than non-parents.

"Young children in some ways are emotionally easier," Simon said. "Little kids, little problems. Big kids, big problems."

The research, announced today, was published in the American Sociological Association's Journal of Health and Social Behavior.

Simon also found that married parents are less depressed than the unmarried. But, surprisingly, the effects of parenthood on depression were the same for men and women.

Part of the problem, Simon figures, is that Americans don't get as much help at parenting as they once did, or as is the case in other countries.

"We do it in relative isolation. The onus is on us," she said. "It's emotionally draining."

The primary data was pulled from a study done in the late 1980s. But Simon checked the results against a repeated version of the study from the mid-90s and reached the same conclusions, and she said there is little reason to expect a new survey would yield much different results.

"People should really think about whether they want to do this or not," Simon said of parenting.
#9 Feb 09 2006 at 4:45 PM Rating: Excellent
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The primary data was pulled from a study done in the late 1980s.
Well, duh. The kids were all wearing black and listening to the Cure and sh[i][/i]it. I'd be depressed, too.
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#10 Feb 09 2006 at 4:47 PM Rating: Good
Jophiel wrote:
Quote:
The primary data was pulled from a study done in the late 1980s.
Well, duh. The kids were all wearing black and listening to the Cure and sh[i][/i]it. I'd be depressed, too.
Which is worse, that or today's Emo? Smiley: dubious
#11 Feb 09 2006 at 4:48 PM Rating: Excellent
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Elderon the Wise wrote:
]Which is worse, that or today's Emo? Smiley: dubious
I'd be depressed to find out my kid enjoys either.
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#12 Feb 09 2006 at 4:51 PM Rating: Decent
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Emo.


I like the Cure. Smiley: frown
#13 Feb 09 2006 at 5:07 PM Rating: Excellent
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You would.
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#14 Feb 09 2006 at 5:11 PM Rating: Excellent
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Maybe I'm reading too much into it, but I find it creepily Freudian that he shot them with her father's pistol.
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#15 Feb 09 2006 at 6:24 PM Rating: Good
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"We are under the belief that he had no money and really had no assets, and because his business was failing may not have had any possibility or at least any apparent ability to provide income for himself and his family."
The money's gone. Sorry baby, but you gots to go.
#16 Feb 09 2006 at 7:01 PM Rating: Good
Ministry of Silly Cnuts
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My name is Neil.

I hate myself
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#17 Feb 09 2006 at 7:14 PM Rating: Good
Tracer Bullet
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Neil Entwistle's pretty ***** yeah, but Neil Mortimer sounds like a Revenge of the Nerds character.


#18 Feb 10 2006 at 12:00 AM Rating: Good
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trickybeck wrote:
Neil Entwistle's pretty ***** yeah, but Neil Mortimer sounds like a Revenge of the Nerds character.



/nod
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#19 Feb 10 2006 at 8:13 AM Rating: Decent
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Trickybeck wrote:
Neil Entwistle's pretty ***** yeah, but Neil Mortimer sounds like a Revenge of the Nerds character.
Nah man, isn't he the guy who killed Dumbledore?
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