We need more UK entrepreneurs so good luck to
Them
pyahnitsa on
and here I thought Chris Morris had gone into retirement
Helen83FromVillage on
It seems like today newspapers have a crusade against social media…
Awkward-Pen-8428 on
So my business idea of only selling forks has legs is what you’re saying?
AllThatIHaveDone on
This article is shit. It has a sad mother and daughter picture to tug the heartstrings, but their loved one that was killed died in 2022 to a sword bought from an online retailer, not from a child of 12. It also gives no concrete examples of these supposedly child-run ‘knife tuck shops’ being found or broken up.
More “won’t someone think of the children” bullshit.
Obscure-Oracle on
Things have moved on somewhat from selling fags, sweets, chocolate and maybe a little bit of pot at school then?
Originzzzzzzz on
I love how the elder generations consistently hate the youth as though they had no hand in this
huzzah-1 on
Reddit is pushing “Age Verification” of social media HARD.
InformationNew66 on
Meanwhile I can’t buy a f’kin paper scissors on eBay because of “knife laws”.
TheEnglishNorwegian on
Good for them I guess.
I had a business when I was 12-15 selling import “goods” that made quite a lot of money.
Shame this is knives though, fake Pokémon cards are easier to ship in volume and have much better margins. This kids need to up their game.
fortyfivepointseven on
I don’t think kids should be selling knives online, but why is ‘business’ in scare quotes here. These are businesses! They are illegal businesses, but there’s absolutely no need to put it in scare quotes.
bars_and_plates on
Does anyone else just look at this sort of thing and think “what the fuck are the inner city youth doing”?
My mum didn’t hide the kitchen knives growing up. Okay, maybe when I was really young so that I didn’t just cut myself by accident.
I don’t even remember knives being a thing, as in, no-one really had them on their mind at all.
Suddenly it seems as if there’s an epidemic of children who have actually fully lost the plot and are acting… feral.
GhostRiders on
Let me guess, nowhere do they give an example of “kids selling knives on the Internet”
Her son was killed by a 16 year old that purchased a sword from an online retailer, not some teenager from a WhatsApp group.
Article is utter bollocks and is just yet another story pushing for everyone should have an Online ID because think of the children..
UKAOKyay on
Only hundreds? They should aim higher! Typical defeatist British attitude.
Organic-Apricot-6330 on
This is bad. How are they submitting their tax declarations if they haven’t received the NI card yet? Won’t someone think of the Treasury
hilly2cool on
I see the online safety act is doing a fantastic job keeping kids safe.
prismstein on
which in the photo is 12? must have smoked a pack a day since birth
AlecTheBunny on
Thought this was gonna be positive news then saw the last part ☹️
DCorsoLCF on
>Nikita said: “I think an outright ban would just be great. I mean, I would love to not have to see any sort of sharp instruments for sale online but I think licensing can help control that.
>“And whoever is buying that, if it’s for a legitimate purpose – like martial arts or gardening – I think they should be licensed as well.
That would make the UK even more of a laughing stock.
Oi! Got yer loicense for that hedge trimmer, mate?
19 commenti
We need more UK entrepreneurs so good luck to
Them
and here I thought Chris Morris had gone into retirement
It seems like today newspapers have a crusade against social media…
So my business idea of only selling forks has legs is what you’re saying?
This article is shit. It has a sad mother and daughter picture to tug the heartstrings, but their loved one that was killed died in 2022 to a sword bought from an online retailer, not from a child of 12. It also gives no concrete examples of these supposedly child-run ‘knife tuck shops’ being found or broken up.
More “won’t someone think of the children” bullshit.
Things have moved on somewhat from selling fags, sweets, chocolate and maybe a little bit of pot at school then?
I love how the elder generations consistently hate the youth as though they had no hand in this
Reddit is pushing “Age Verification” of social media HARD.
Meanwhile I can’t buy a f’kin paper scissors on eBay because of “knife laws”.
Good for them I guess.
I had a business when I was 12-15 selling import “goods” that made quite a lot of money.
Shame this is knives though, fake Pokémon cards are easier to ship in volume and have much better margins. This kids need to up their game.
I don’t think kids should be selling knives online, but why is ‘business’ in scare quotes here. These are businesses! They are illegal businesses, but there’s absolutely no need to put it in scare quotes.
Does anyone else just look at this sort of thing and think “what the fuck are the inner city youth doing”?
My mum didn’t hide the kitchen knives growing up. Okay, maybe when I was really young so that I didn’t just cut myself by accident.
I don’t even remember knives being a thing, as in, no-one really had them on their mind at all.
Suddenly it seems as if there’s an epidemic of children who have actually fully lost the plot and are acting… feral.
Let me guess, nowhere do they give an example of “kids selling knives on the Internet”
Her son was killed by a 16 year old that purchased a sword from an online retailer, not some teenager from a WhatsApp group.
Article is utter bollocks and is just yet another story pushing for everyone should have an Online ID because think of the children..
Only hundreds? They should aim higher! Typical defeatist British attitude.
This is bad. How are they submitting their tax declarations if they haven’t received the NI card yet? Won’t someone think of the Treasury
I see the online safety act is doing a fantastic job keeping kids safe.
which in the photo is 12? must have smoked a pack a day since birth
Thought this was gonna be positive news then saw the last part ☹️
>Nikita said: “I think an outright ban would just be great. I mean, I would love to not have to see any sort of sharp instruments for sale online but I think licensing can help control that.
>“And whoever is buying that, if it’s for a legitimate purpose – like martial arts or gardening – I think they should be licensed as well.
That would make the UK even more of a laughing stock.
Oi! Got yer loicense for that hedge trimmer, mate?