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.
Stan
- 26 Jun 2013 08:57
- 26406 of 81564
Cheery post of the week go's to cynic.
cynic
- 26 Jun 2013 09:14
- 26407 of 81564
i thought it very constructive :-)
Fred1new
- 26 Jun 2013 10:01
- 26408 of 81564
Hilarious,
“ But, if you want to talk about past predictions, how about your prediction that a coalition government would be great for the country as no game-changing laws would ever get passed?”
I have no recollection of saying a coalition would be great for the UK. and doubt that I wrote it, but I am willing to be corrected. I did suggest that a coalition was likely well before it occurred.
As far as a coalition government is concerned, I understand the necessity for such when a country has an external enemy, but see some of the difficulties, when the problems are of an internal economic dissention and “morality” within a “society”.
Do I believe that coalition governments can work? Yes, but with difficulties.
As far the present coalition is concerned, I think that its formation a necessary evil with both tory and Lib/Lab leaders clambering for power within the atmosphere previously created by the media and the obvious political polarisation created during the run up to that election a solution.
I thought the resulting combination was of chalk and cheese, but at least it protected the UK from the ravages of the far right reactionaries.
As far as U-turns are concerned, it appears to me that it shows the immaturity of the leadership who rush out policies without due care and attention to detail. (The action of little girls and boys rushing to paper, or out into the world, with seemingly bright ideas, but later having to ask their mummies and daddies, to pay the bills when the practice of those ideas end in repeated disasters.)
Your analogy of “kitchen sink” economics with the economics of a “society” although having features in common do not hold in practice I am too old to try to explain why.
(Consider floating a company, or bailing out a viable company strapped for cash.)
Or, perhaps, ask the waiter.
====================
Tinker,
I agree and consider Neo-darwinism the solution.
Also, think there should be a purge of those families with more than two children, as long as I chose the individuals to be slaughtered.
Also, consider involuntary euthanasia a possible solution.
Again, can I pick the clients.
Stan
- 26 Jun 2013 10:01
- 26409 of 81564
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b02yksnv This really is becoming one of the best descriptions that I have heard to describe such a condition.. but only worth listening for people with an open mind.
3 monkies
- 26 Jun 2013 11:51
- 26410 of 81564
Well good morning to you all, I had a heart attack last Wednesday evening around 6.45 p.m. and have been in a critical care unit for 5 days in Southport and got transferred to Broad Green Heart and Chest Hospital in Liverpool On Monday, 4 stents put in so I am an extremely lucky lady, I got told after the procedure that I was so close to having a quadrouple bypass and that only one in three survive such an attack. They are not sure for now the full extent of damage it has done to the heart but return in 4 months for another scan. I for one cannot criticise the NHS, the nursing staff, consultants, Doctors etc., they were absolutely marvellous and I have a life back thanks to them. When one says one never knows the minute - how true. A great shock but I knew something was major and rang 999. Trust you are all well.
goldfinger
- 26 Jun 2013 11:54
- 26411 of 81564
So sorry to hear that 3M.
Certainly a shock.
I wish you a speedy recovery.
Get well soon.
Haystack
- 26 Jun 2013 12:09
- 26412 of 81564
I hope you are on the way back to rude health.
Was the heart attack as you would have imagined? Did you have any history of such problems? The answers to those questions and others could be useful to some on here.
3 monkies
- 26 Jun 2013 12:11
- 26413 of 81564
Thanks GF certainly was a shock, in fact I think I am still in shock - so many changes to be made with my life style and plenty of rest for some time. I am always on the go so that one is going to be hard but it has to be done. Hope you had a good holiday.
Fred1new
- 26 Jun 2013 12:22
- 26414 of 81564
Isn't it good to have a NHS available to all UK citizens, when they are in need.
2517GEORGE
- 26 Jun 2013 12:23
- 26415 of 81564
3 monkies very sorry to hear about your heart attack, it's extremely important for you to rest (not always easy for a female) with as little stress as possible, hopefully you have family or friends to help you. Good luck and take care.
2517
3 monkies
- 26 Jun 2013 12:40
- 26416 of 81564
Haystack I have never had a heart attack before but I certainly knew there was something radically wrong, I had just eaten my evening meal and got pain under my left boob but right inside my chest like cramp, the pain remained and there was a different pain across my chest above the boob, up into the neck, travelling down the left arm into my hand - I tried to lay down but I was having difficulty breathing and got very clammy if that is how one spells it across my forehead - still clutching everywhere I made it to the phone. Ambulance man said I was too good a colour to be having a heart attack - my neighbour who is a chest consultant arrived on seeing the ambulance and I was shaking , crying sweating, and said to him I am having a heart attack - not once but 3 times did I say it, an ECG was done and he looked at it with the paramedic and my neighbour was trying to calm me down and told me I had to go to Hospital. Apparantly I had an angina attack as I was told 13 years ago - it was never followed up and is looking like I had a small heart attack then but it was not detected. I think there are a lot of questions to be answered somewhere but hey ho probably not get to the bottom of that one but Chris my neighbour detected there had been something in the past by the ECG . He came to see me the following morning at 7.40 a.m. to see how I was and asked me why I hadn't told them I had had a heart attack before - I hadn't to my knowledge. Beware everyone - any chest pain whatsoever, phone 999 your life could be saved or any further damage eliminated. Very scarey stuff. Living on ones own sometimes is not easy but at least I did the correct thing. The so called angina attack 13 years ago was just a burning sensation in the chest and left me looking very grey and shaky and recovered in about 1 hour. My GP sent me to see a heart man at the local hospital and I came home with a 48 hr. monitor and then given a spray for under the tongue, never to be used as it did not occur again. Apparantly some people don't get any pain whatsoever - everyone is different. They couldn't believe I hadn't been sick. Going to rest now, the ordeal is over I hope, the stent procedure really took it out of me as one is awake and it took 2 hours. Very clever what they can do these days Now got to go on a Cardiac Rehabilitation Course in a couple of weeks.
TANKER
- 26 Jun 2013 12:41
- 26417 of 81564
3 m hope you get a speedy recover and best wishes
Fred1new
- 26 Jun 2013 12:43
- 26418 of 81564
A flash from the past:
“A cartoon by
The Independent's Dave Brown has been named Political Cartoon of the Year 2010.
Published in this newspaper the day after the Coalition government was formed in May, the cartoon shows David Cameron and Nick Clegg in a coal mine with the Liberal Democrat leader as the canary. Speaking at an awards ceremony organised by The Political Cartoon Society in London on Monday night, Dave Brown said the work reflected his belief "that Clegg was there as nothing more than personal protection for Cameron, an early warning of poisonous air ahead, and, of course, ultimately expendable."
=============
It would seem the canary had Avian Flu.
3 monkies
- 26 Jun 2013 12:44
- 26419 of 81564
Thank you all for your good wishes.
doodlebug4
- 26 Jun 2013 12:58
- 26420 of 81564
3 monkies, just read your post, I'm so sorry to hear about that and glad you are back on the mend. It's a reminder to us all that good health and good friends are everything.
Haystack
- 26 Jun 2013 13:09
- 26421 of 81564
The Angina episode is interesting. My father had it for some time before he died of a heart attack. Angina is a warning. The underlying problem won't just go away after an Angina attack.'The burning sensation is exactly what my father described. He also had a spray and small tablets under the tongue.
I guess you will have make some lifestyle changes concerning diet and exercise.
I remember Southport when my wife did the 24hour sailing race there a couple of times on the sea water lake.
mnamreh
- 26 Jun 2013 13:11
- 26422 of 81564
.
Stan
- 26 Jun 2013 13:19
- 26423 of 81564
Is that Rich the tax dodger? good riddance in that case.
TANKER
- 26 Jun 2013 13:23
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Osborne has now got something right any one who signs on or gets benefits
will be cut or stopped if they can not speak English .
3 monkies
- 26 Jun 2013 13:25
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What annoys me is the fact they did not do a follow up after the one and only angina attack, I just got told that by the 48 hr. monitor it looks like you have had one and we don't want to put you on a tread mill to bring another one on and gave me the spray - end of, no follow ups or anything else. I survived 13 years without another one and then nearly good night Vienna. I am sorry your Father died and hope he did not suffer too much pain,Haystack.