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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.

Fred1new - 10 Nov 2013 19:44 - 32539 of 81564

Hays and Manuel.

a friend of yours?


I thought him a leading light of the Tea party.
=============



Stratford on Avon MP Nadhim Zahawi repays expenses

Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi

Nadhim Zahawi said he was "mortified" (I bet he is.)

A Conservative MP has apologised for claiming parliamentary expenses for electricity to supply his stables and a mobile home in the stable yard.

The expenses relate to Nadhim Zahawi's second home in the village of Tysoe, near Banbury, in his constituency of Stratford on Avon in Warwickshire.

The MP said he had contacted the expenses watchdog.

The Sunday Mirror reported last week that Mr Zahawi had claimed some £6,000 in the year up to March.

Mr Zahawi said the watchdog, the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, had included claims for the previous year and the figure was nearer £4,000.

In a statement issued on Saturday, he said: "I have been looking into this matter further and can confirm that all claims for heating fuel relate purely to my second home.

"However, I have made a mistake with my electricity claims.




------------

Lucky that he is not a unemployed labourer or single mother.

======

Sorry guv, it was all a mistake comes to mind.

======

PS


Mr Zahawi was educated at Ibstock Place School and at King's College School, at the time a boys-only independent school in Wimbledon in West London, followed by University College London, where he studied Chemical Engineering, receiving a BSc. and at sometime joined the Con Party of Great Britain of which he is still a member.

------

None of the above is my own fault.

Haystack - 10 Nov 2013 20:26 - 32540 of 81564

gf
Yougov today 5%

goldfinger - 10 Nov 2013 21:18 - 32541 of 81564

Its the TREND the TREND Hays that counts.

MaxK - 10 Nov 2013 21:27 - 32542 of 81564

The trend shows that short of a miracle, Broon in some form or other will lead the next gov of Britain.

Heaven help us!

Fred1new - 10 Nov 2013 22:59 - 32543 of 81564

Why should heaven help you.

What about my needs.

It will need an eight day week to help me!

8-0-0-0-0-0-00)

Haystack - 10 Nov 2013 23:51 - 32544 of 81564

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/investors-threaten-to-abandon-big-six-over-political-interference-in-pricing-8931492.html

Fund managers controlling billions of pounds invested in UK energy companies have warned that they are considering pulling out of the sector because of political interference in the market.

The Big Six suppliers have been heavily criticised in recent weeks over the prices they are charging customers, with Centrica, npower, Scottish Power, SSE, E.ON and EDF – many of which have recently introduced above-inflation price rises – being accused of exploiting vulnerable consumers while at the same time making huge profits.

The controversy prompted the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, to promise a price freeze for 20 months if his party wins the 2015 election. In response energy companies claimed any such action would curtail their ability to invest and could even lead to blackouts. The threat of political intervention has hit the share prices of the Big Six, and raised questions about future profitability. The speculation has angered some of the country’s leading institutional investors, who have said privately that they will act if the meddling continues.

Another fund manager, James Smith of Premier Asset Management, said: “We run a couple of funds that have exposure to utilities across the world, including the UK where shares have fallen in recent weeks. We are considering whether things are going to get worse because if they do we might need to reassess our strategy relating to our UK investments.

nvestors say they are particularly angry at the comments from Mr Miliband given his role as Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change under the last Labour government. Mr Smith added: “He is ignoring the role he played in increasing the environmental costs faced by utilities. Nor does his sticking-plaster approach do anything to address why prices are rising. Perhaps he will legislate to stop supermarkets increasing the price of bread when wheat prices increase?”

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 07:39 - 32545 of 81564

Happy days are here again.......




Help to Buy scheme take-up praised by David Cameron

PM says mortgage lending scheme helping first-timer buyers with 75% outside south-east on average price of £163,000


Andrew Sparrow, political correspondent

The Guardian, Monday 11 November 2013


Early figures on the take-up of the government's new Help to Buy scheme should allay fears that it will fuel a housing bubble in London and the south-east, David Cameron .suggested on Monday.

In a statement welcoming the news that 2,000 people have already put in offers on homes using the mortgage guarantee scheme, on properties worth £163,000 on average, Cameron said the money was helping young first-time buyers on average incomes.

More than three quarters of the applications have come from outside London and the south-east.The government has been operating its Help to Buy equity loan scheme for newly-built homes since April, but the Help to Buy mortgage guarantee launched only four weeks ago. It enables people to buy homes worth up to £600,000 with a 5% deposit because the government will guarantee 15% of the mortgage.

Downing Street said that 2,000 people had used the scheme to put in offers involving mortgage lending worth £365m. On average people are asking to borrow £155,000, for properties worth on average £163,000, well below the UK average price of £247,000.

More than three-quarters of applicants are first-time buyers and many are in their early 30s, Downing Street said.


More bollox here:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2013/nov/11/help-to-buy-david-cameron

cynic - 11 Nov 2013 07:42 - 32546 of 81564

Stan - read the article on apprenticeships, and then you'll understand what it was about and be able to comment on it accordingly.

nevertheless, at least some of the points you mentioned are valid even if debatable - but not remotely applicable to the article in question

by the way, are you also saying that the apprentice should be obliged to join a trades union? ..... surely not

Stan - 11 Nov 2013 07:45 - 32547 of 81564

So more people encouraged to live beyond their means on our Low wage, Ageist and Sexist little Island eh?

Stan - 11 Nov 2013 07:48 - 32548 of 81564

What article is that Cynic, I must have missed it?

cynic - 11 Nov 2013 07:49 - 32549 of 81564

stan - i have yet to work out quite how this h-t-b thing works, as from my youngest's investigation, it seems to apply only to those who cannot raise the deposit .... that doesn't sound quite right to me either, but i'm sure there must be some strange hoops through which to jump ... that said, i'ld guess that a number of the big builders offer their own help scheme, just as car dealers do

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 07:58 - 32550 of 81564

It's all to do with people who cant raise a deposit for a £600k house.

cynic - 11 Nov 2013 08:02 - 32551 of 81564

that's not true either :-)

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 08:07 - 32552 of 81564

So why the sudden jump in prices and transactions?

Are people in general really earning more?

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 08:15 - 32553 of 81564



Grammar schools do not aid social mobility. Stop this deluded thinking

The figures show clearly that selective schools entrench inequality rather than help the poor. They should all be scrapped


John Harris

The Guardian, Monday 11 November 2013

What can we do about the seizing-up of social mobility, the yawning attainment gap between rich and poor, and all the other aspects of inequality about which politicians and commentators affect to fret? If you have never adequately understood the effects of post-Thatcher capitalism on inequality and always mistrusted the idea of comprehensive education, the answer is simple enough: rewind the clock to the 1940s, bring back selection at 11, and usher in a new age of exacting meritocracy.

Indeed, in certain parts of the country where children sit a version of the 11-plus and grammar schools have never gone away, little islands of wonder are allegedly thriving. Just listen to the former Independent columnist Mary Ann Sieghart, writing last year: "If you are bright but poor and you live in Kent, Essex, Buckinghamshire or Northern Ireland, your parentage doesn't have to dictate your progress. You have nearly the same chance of becoming a cabinet minister, a judge, a newspaper editor or a top rower as your privately educated neighbour. Why is that? Because these areas still have grammar schools, those turbo-chargers of social mobility."

Unfortunately, this is rot. Last week the Sutton Trust educational charity released a report about who exactly goes to England's 164 remaining grammar schools. Though the news was not exactly revelatory, the figures were still striking: 2.7% of their pupils are entitled to free school meals (FSMs) as against 17.5% in other state schools; 13% of entrants to English state–funded grammars come from fee-paying schools, more than double the proportion of 10-year-olds in private education; in areas that have stuck with selection, 66% of high-achievers at 11 who are not on FSMs get places at grammars; among those who are entitled to them, the figure is 40%.


More lefty claptrap here: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/11/grammar-schools-social-mobility-deluded-thinking

cynic - 11 Nov 2013 08:22 - 32554 of 81564

nothing to do with peeps trying to buy £600k houses for sure!

there's help around and frankly, i see nothing wrong with that at all .... certainly houses prices and transactions etc are still well below what they were several years ago, so equally certainly, no bubble remotely in sight at present

btw, the salary multiple for buying is no more than 4x which is about what it always was, so again, that puts a brake on peeps getting hopelessly over-extended .... there's other quite strict parameters too .... this is from youngest who is no fool (surprise!) and who earns a good salary

Stan - 11 Nov 2013 08:29 - 32555 of 81564

Cynic, see my post 550. In the mean time I wish to correct you on the x salary, Think that you will find it was x2 which was generally excepted as stable and reasonable, it also worked for many years very well.

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 08:31 - 32556 of 81564

David Cameron: 95pc mortgages will help people buy their dream home

David Cameron defends government's Help to Buy Scheme as new figures show 75 people are using it to make offers every day



By Steven Swinford, Senior Political Correspondent

10:30PM GMT 10 Nov 2013



David Cameron will on Monday defend the government's controversial Help to Buy scheme new figures revealed that 75 people a day have used it to make offers.


The Prime Minister will say that the scheme is "already delivering" and by helping thousands of families to buy their "dream home".


According to the first official figures released by the government, a total of 2,384 have put in offers under the scheme, which enables people to take out government-backed mortgages of up to 95 per cent. Ten deals have been completed.


Mr Cameron will tomorrow meet some of the first people to apply for mortgages under the scheme in Downing Street. The meeting has echoes of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's meetings with the first right to buy tenants in their new council home in the 1980s.


The meeting comes amid continuing controversy over the scheme. Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, has warned it could lead to a housing bubble.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/10439606/David-Cameron-95pc-mortgages-will-help-people-buy-their-dream-home.html

cynic - 11 Nov 2013 08:33 - 32557 of 81564

for sure not when i bought in the 70's .... base was most assuredly 3x and, with persuasion, a bit more .... also, if buying as a couple, the second-earner's salary could be utilised (in some way) in the calc

MaxK - 11 Nov 2013 08:41 - 32558 of 81564

It was 3 x main earner plus 1 x second earner.

Now it's 5 x main earner (at least) plus a bit more if you have a reasonable deposit. Not sure about the 2nd earner.
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