goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
TANKER
- 08 Apr 2013 14:48
- 23005 of 81564
she is not worth posting about so will not mention her again
TANKER
- 08 Apr 2013 14:59
- 23006 of 81564
people going to die because of the denial of treatment because of price now that is
what people should care about .
a young mother being told it would be to dear to save her life
yet we gave millions to tyrants running other countrys
that is disgusting
Fred1new
- 08 Apr 2013 15:04
- 23007 of 81564
Hays,
So would the present government be.
Can I look forward to changing times.
--------------
Referring to the miners strike, my father was a colliery manager for 25 years which he reopened in 1937.
He thought strikes were generally a disaster for both sides of the course and ending up usually in both sides in the dispute losing.
In the pit he ran he had only one strike in the 25 year period and he refused to recognise it.
The day of the strike was a Xmas day.
The day after Xmas work started as normal and both sides sat down and discussed their problems.
My father's pit was one of the very few year on year profitable pits in his area.
----------
He had respect for the miners unions and what they had achieved in working conditions, health and safety, but also thought there was a "mad
section to the unions and Scargill would have been included in that group.
Thatcher would have been an abomination to him.
----------
Ps for the Tinker.
My father employed at one time about 20 to 30 Italian and Polish immigrants whom he thought amongst the best of his employees.
Interesting reflection for me, was on a holiday in Italy at that time, while my mother went around the art galleries and churches he went to see the parents of the immigrant to report, at their homes how their children were doing.
All were happy with their holiday.
Funny old world.
greekman
- 08 Apr 2013 15:49
- 23008 of 81564
Its not been a good year for my investing.
Assistance Appreciated.
Any of you knowledgeable lot know if when registering a loss against any future CGT, how much detail you need to go into, IE do you need total price bought and sold or just the net loss.
Also do you need to mention all companies bought and sold to reach the required loss figure.
I apreciate that these are probably basic questions, but this is the first year that I have been unlucky enough (OK bad investing) to make a loss.
As I do not complete a tax return, I know a letter is required and there does not appear to be a pro forma on the HMRC web site.
regards Greek.
goldfinger
- 08 Apr 2013 15:55
- 23009 of 81564
Getting very emotional on here glad Ive been out fishing.
greekman in answer to your qustion re- Nigel Farage, the attack on that Belgian Euro politician was very nasty and ignorant and uncalled for. Id say if he can do that once he can do it again. Do we really want somebody like that leading the country?.
But its fine by me if torries limp over to UKIP and allow labour to take an overall majority no problems.
As for Maggie Im so sorry to hear about her death, todays not the time for discussing the policys she failed on from the heart of the Midlands to the tip of Scotland. Thats for another day and today and in the near future we should be giving respect to her family and friends.
cynic
- 08 Apr 2013 15:58
- 23010 of 81564
greek - if you trade, it's probably best to get your accountant to do it all for you, as there are also rules applying if you trade in/out of a stock with a 30 day period ...... if you use IG, the a/c dept will supply you with a full annual analysis suitable for submission to your own accountant
======
btw, it will certainly be mandatory for you to complete a tax return
greekman
- 08 Apr 2013 15:59
- 23011 of 81564
Hi Goldfinger,
I think we will have to agree to differ on Nigel Farage, as I see his 'attacks' as saying what many ordinary people think.
As to Maggie, I agree with your statement.
3 monkies
- 08 Apr 2013 16:01
- 23012 of 81564
Totally agree gf. Sorry I cannot help you greekman as I have never made enough to worry about CGT.
goldfinger
- 08 Apr 2013 16:05
- 23013 of 81564
Disgracefull..... just look at this posted on twitter and not caught by the BBC who posted it up on their web site.....
https://twitter.com/GerryGreek/status/321249961322872832/photo/1
bloody disgrace.
3 monkies
- 08 Apr 2013 16:15
- 23014 of 81564
Absolutely disgusting - no respect for anybody, just purely Tap Room Wallers. The lowest of the low.
skinny
- 08 Apr 2013 16:21
- 23015 of 81564
Miners' union takes legal action to evict Arthur Scargill from his £1.5m luxury apartment which costs them £34,000 per year
He was never known for compromise and neither were the men he led into one of the most epic industrial battles.
So when Arthur Scargill and the National Union of Mineworkers found themselves at loggerheads the struggle was always going to be drawn out and messy.
Embarrassingly for a radical socialist who long railed against the perks and privileges of the elite, the new confrontation is over a £1.5million luxury flat in the City of London.
The retired union chief, who was defeated by Margaret Thatcher in the miners’ strike of 1984 and 1985,
claims his members have to fund his pied a terre until he dies.
Arthur Scargill loses court battle to have costs of his London flat paid for rest of his LIFE by mining union
The former miners’ leader Arthur Scargill has lost his fight to have the National Union of Mineworkers pay the rent on his London flat for the rest of his life.
Mr Scargill, 74, had argued that he signed a contract which entitled him to a property throughout his retirement.
But the union disputed the claim and took the decision all the way to the High Court.
Fred1new
- 08 Apr 2013 16:44
- 23016 of 81564
A bit like MPs thinking the tax payer should pay for flats in London.
Where the land lady is the land lady.
How much did a chap called Jenkins the jink have to repay?
Fred1new
- 08 Apr 2013 16:44
- 23017 of 81564
PS.
He thought it part of a contract!
greekman
- 08 Apr 2013 17:10
- 23018 of 81564
Although never having worked down a pit, as I was born and lived in Nottingham till age 30 I can only go by what my many mining friends used to tell me, usually after a few pints had loosened them up a bit.
After the 1984/85 strikes I had many conversations with miners, many who had gone into mining straight from school, some still with jobs, most without and most had the same opinion that the Miners Union had bought a lot of the pit closures on themselves.
They did not want to modernise which was unavoidable but also understandable, as this would obviously mean job losses
The union was almost a 'vote for militancy or you were ostrasised' club.
There were many stories of an 8 hour day with only 3 or less spent on the coal face for face workers.
Time spent preparing, travelling and clean time after returning to the surface was often stretched out.
Foreign miners (and I don't mean the Chinese or other none risk averse counties) were producing far more coal per man than those in the UK making UK coal unprofitable.
This was proven post strike when some mines continued and produced far more tonnage per man and a higher wage than pre strike era.
There was little difference in the miners unions than the car industry unions where it was down tools till an electrician could fit a new light bulb.
Don't get me wrong, I had a lot of sympathy and admiration for the 'miner' and saw many families suffer as father disagreed with son and brother with brother.
As for Scargill, a commie from head to toe who only cared for himself!
skinny
- 08 Apr 2013 17:21
- 23019 of 81564
Arthur Scargill: The very image of a man whose time has passed
Someone was telling me the other day, say what you like about that Bob Crow, but I’ll bet his members really love him.
Well, they probably do. Certainly most of the people who work in London and pay their wages have views on Bob Crow.
Those opinions have only become stronger since the Tube and railway workers so successfully used the Olympics to jemmy even more money out of the rest of us.
As Boris Johnson has discovered.
But even in the world of the trade unions, where 10 years can be a short time, things can go around. The all-conquering union boss beloved of his grateful members in one decade can become a pathetic shadow in another.
Cue the clanking, chained, ghostly figure of Arthur Scargill, shuffling into a county courtroom in Sheffield to try to get the National Union of Mineworkers to pay for his phone bills and a car.
driver
- 08 Apr 2013 17:26
- 23020 of 81564
Only £12.99
Fred1new
- 08 Apr 2013 18:17
- 23021 of 81564
It isn't worth that much.
You could only pay for it in Camerons.
Her legacy the Financial Services and "Loads of Money" and a demoralised country of raped communities.
The Financial Services the main driver in the economic collapse of the country were liberalised .
cynic
- 08 Apr 2013 18:29
- 23022 of 81564
a question or two for the pack of huff-and-puff resident socialists on this site .....
1) Can you deny that when MT became PM in 1979 that the country was not on its knees, effectively bankrupt and with inflation running at 15-20%
2) Can you tell me (us all) which of MT's labour policies the next Labour gov't reversed?
3) Can you tell what the next Labour gov't did to re-empower the unions?
Fred1new
- 08 Apr 2013 19:34
- 23023 of 81564
DYOH.