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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

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.

doodlebug4 - 08 Apr 2013 21:07 - 23036 of 81564

Good post chuckles. It's interesting that a lot of the people who claim to be worse off now than they were in the 70's can now afford to go overseas for a nice holiday.

goldfinger - 08 Apr 2013 21:09 - 23037 of 81564

Chuckles......... Scargil claimed he had seen a secret hit list of 38 pits that were to be axed.

Hesaltine in the House OF Commons denied this and said no such list existed.

More or less than 1 year to the day 41 mines were closed.

Hesaltine had along with the PM lied to parliament.

Little wonder the miners grouped behind Scargil.

goldfinger - 08 Apr 2013 21:11 - 23038 of 81564

Chuckles err no. Read my profile.

doodlebug4 - 08 Apr 2013 21:12 - 23039 of 81564

Rants against Labour on the CR thread - copy and paste please gf. I seem to remember having a laugh about Milliband and Balls, but who wouldn't - hardly a "rant".

goldfinger - 08 Apr 2013 21:18 - 23040 of 81564

Milliband and Balls happen to be 13 points ahead in the opinion polls. I think the rant is on you DB for calling it so wrong.

chuckles - 08 Apr 2013 21:18 - 23041 of 81564

Goldfinger, the miners rallied behind Scargill because they had little choice. To stand against the Union meant been ostracised not only from the Union but even from family life. Scargill lied throughout the strike in an effort to maintain support, he's beneath contempt for what he did to the mining industry.

I have no doubt that politicians also lied at the time and I'm betting that politicians of all colours will continue to lie in the future. As for pit closures, of course there were going to be pit closures and rightly so. Many of the mines were uneconomical due to union practises and nothing was ever going to save them.

You did quite well out of Tory policies, yes? How do you square away that fact with your entrenched Labour standpoint? Or is it simply, I'll grab what's going but I'll wear me cloth cap whilst I'm doing it?

chuckles - 08 Apr 2013 21:21 - 23042 of 81564

Goldfinger - where do you think the ability to trade the dotcom boom came from?

Labour policies?

Don't be soft our lad, it came from the deregulation of the City introduced by Thatcher.

You made your fortune from Thatcher policies, PMSL :-)

skinny - 08 Apr 2013 21:23 - 23043 of 81564

Thank Scargill for helping Thatcher break the miners

AND just for the balance

Revisiting the miners’ strike

Bottom line - Scargill never called a national ballot.

goldfinger - 08 Apr 2013 21:29 - 23044 of 81564

I did not benefit from tory policies in fact I was unempoyed on 2 occasions once under Maggie and once under Major.

And Hesaltine and the PM lied through their teeth to not only the miners but also the electorate.

It was also proved at the time that coal could be sold to India and Belgium for a profit.

Like I said earlier I will take this matter up further with you and anyone else when the timing is decent.

And by the way please dont repost anymore posts to me I have on squelch or I will adhere to the sites policy and report you to Bully.

skinny - 08 Apr 2013 21:30 - 23045 of 81564

An interesting - if long winded read - The Great Miners Strike 1984-5: Twelve Months that Shook Britain: the Story of the Strike

chuckles - 08 Apr 2013 21:39 - 23046 of 81564

Goldfinger - I'll post what I like and when I like, if you don't like it, do what you feel is right. Running to Bully, who has sold his share in MoneyAM might not be very helpful?
You could always answer Hilary's question as to how you fingered Maxwell when you were 5 years old?

If you made your money from the City in the form of trading or investing then you benefited from Thatther's policies, I suppose that makes you one of Thatcher's children :-)

You're not doing very well at the moment, you're coming across as a bit of a twat. Not intended as an insult, just a view.

BAYLIS - 08 Apr 2013 21:41 - 23047 of 81564

SECOND BAILOUT

PORTUGALS PM WILL HAVE TO CUT SPENDING ON HEATH, EDUCATION AND SOCIAL SECURITY, HOW LUCKY ARE WEE.

goldfinger - 08 Apr 2013 21:42 - 23048 of 81564

Above post 20348 (chuckles) copied and reported. No need for that language when somone is losing a debate.

doodlebug4 - 08 Apr 2013 21:42 - 23049 of 81564

Just cut and paste my so-called "rant" gf. I can remember having a laugh about Milliband and Balls on some occasions, but who wouldn't. Hardly a "rant". No point in you posting comments on a forum if you can't back them up.

Absolutely right skinny, Scargill never called a national ballot. He was a jumped -up, Communist backed, militant, brainless idiot. The hard working miners deserved a better representative at that time and with one they would have managed to get their message across to a more sympathetic audience.

driver - 08 Apr 2013 21:47 - 23050 of 81564

skinny

Cheers, Good reads, the bit below just shows what a waste of money it all was and how deceitful and devious Thatcher and the Tories where back then and properly still are.

The Tories later admitted that it cost nearly £6bn to win the dispute, which they saw as a political attempt to break the power of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM). In the ten years following the end of the strike, the continued war against the miners cost a further £26bn in redundancy and benefit payments, keeping pits mothballed and lost revenue from coal.

chuckles - 08 Apr 2013 21:50 - 23051 of 81564

Like I said Goldfinger, the term 'twat' wasn't intended as an insult, just a view of how your sycophantic support of Scargil is coming across. On reflection I should have used the term 'twattish' but it's not in the dick and harry.

I have copied and reported your post 23050 to my cat as I don't think its very fair, I'm miles ahead in this debate. The cat just hissed, does't seem to rate your comments either.

Haystack - 08 Apr 2013 21:56 - 23052 of 81564

The cost was worth it as the destructive power of the unions was broken. The closed shops, restrictive practices, secondary picketing, forced union subs, strikes without ballots were all stopped.

How many of Thatcher's laws were repealed by Blair/Brown? - NONE!

Haystack - 08 Apr 2013 21:58 - 23053 of 81564

My cat didn't like them either. He just threw up!

goldfinger - 09 Apr 2013 02:03 - 23054 of 81564

Please fill in the Maggie survey.........

http://sampb.co.uk/politics/poll-was-thatcher-good-or-bad-for-britain/

aldwickk - 09 Apr 2013 02:58 - 23055 of 81564

Goldfinger is sounding more more like Fred , and we all know what a joke he is.

He said we should email him to resolve any conflict , then he goes running to his pal's at moneyam when i started a Fred free talk to your self thread. and now he his reporting chuckles for abuse when clearly it wasn't anymore that is posted on this thread every day, why does he not report Tanker ?
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