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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.

MaxK - 29 Dec 2013 09:06 - 34657 of 81564

http://www.britishfuture.org/

Fred1new - 29 Dec 2013 09:24 - 34658 of 81564

As the public see Wavey Davey and crew,

Fred1new - 29 Dec 2013 09:51 - 34659 of 81564

Content of Post 34658 shows how out of touch the deluded elitist bunch the present Con party is.

Wavey Dave useless as a PM and and useless as a PR agent and cannot flog his policies to the voters.

Yet, despite a barrage of negative publicity about the arrival of migrants from Romania and Bulgaria, the new poll finds that only one in four Britons (24%) believe that restricting the free movement of people, while staying in the EU, should be one of the government's priorities. A similar proportion (26%) said leaving the EU should be a priority if it does not change its rules on allowing people to come to the UK.

Nearly half (45%) said that enforcing the minimum wage was one of the most important ways of stopping business undercutting British workers by paying European workers less. Around one in five (22%) believed in the importance of managing the impact of immigration by, for example, giving more support to areas heavily affected.

ExecLine - 29 Dec 2013 09:57 - 34660 of 81564

No wonder I keep putting on weight. I am going to stop using shampoo. Just the jobbie for my New Year Resolution.

It says on the back of the bottle, "For extra body and volume".

I have decided to use dishwashing detergent instead. On the back of that bottle it says, "Cuts straight through fat to help with its easy removal".

Simples.

MaxK - 29 Dec 2013 09:57 - 34661 of 81564

You don't take that article seriously do you Fred?

ExecLine - 29 Dec 2013 10:03 - 34662 of 81564

For Fred. Become 'Sir Fred' ready for the New Year:

Titles for Sale - only £14

MaxK - 29 Dec 2013 10:08 - 34663 of 81564

The Lord of Nowhere At All.

Fred1new - 29 Dec 2013 10:22 - 34664 of 81564

Never had that ambition.
--------

Leave medals and gongs for the elitists who need them to bolster their opinions of themselves.

===========


Fred1new - 29 Dec 2013 10:26 - 34665 of 81564

The Romanians and Bulgarians are coming and the Cons are being found out and UKIP are saying:


MaxK - 29 Dec 2013 10:37 - 34666 of 81564

cynic - 29 Dec 2013 13:12 - 34667 of 81564

and still fossy (rather pathetically) ducks telling us his views on hollande and his left-socialist policies, yet hollande should surely be fossy's idol on how to manage an economy with such policies

fossy's silence is deafening and likely to remain that way

Haystack - 29 Dec 2013 13:13 - 34668 of 81564

Another poll showing the opposite

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/immigration/10540590/Britain-must-keep-Romanian-and-Bulgarian-restrictions.html

Britain must keep Romanian and Bulgarian restrictions

Public overwhelmingly in favour of keeping restrictions on Bulgarian and Romanian migrants even if it means breaking EU law

Seven in 10 Britons believe David Cameron should retain restrictions on Romanian and Bulgarian migrants even if it means breaking European Union laws, according to a new poll for the Sunday Telegraph.

The ICM survey found that the public overwhelmingly backs a call by dozens of Conservative rebels for the Government to ban migrants from both countries coming to Britain for at least another five years.

The findings come amid fears that hundreds of thousands of migrants could arrive from Romania and Bulgaria – the poorest countries in the EU – when current restrictions are lifted on January 1.

More than 70 Tory rebels have called on David Cameron to ban migrants from both countries coming to Britain until at least 2019 amid concerns over the pressure they will put on the NHS, the jobs market and the welfare state.

Haystack - 29 Dec 2013 13:14 - 34669 of 81564

Funny how the last poll was the Guardian and this one is the Telegraph.

cynic - 29 Dec 2013 14:02 - 34670 of 81564

the labour party admit, though rather sotto voce, that they completely screwed up with their immigration policies

unfortunately, it is that nasty mess that now needs to be dealt with though it is a very fair criticism that the current crew should have put in place the road towards much tougher policies many months or even a year or two ago

i fear that what will now be produced will be something pretty wishy-washy so as not to run foul of the courts in brussels

halt immigration in its tracks?
no; that would just be damn silly and indeed counter-productive

a tough but realistic points system + restrictions on an immigrant's right to assorted welfare benefits, running the full gamut from health through housing and everything else?
most assuredly

will the latter be imposed and applied and immediately?
fat chance!

goldfinger - 29 Dec 2013 14:12 - 34671 of 81564

29 December 2013 Last updated at 11:45

Debt crisis will hurt millions, says think-tank

Even in a "good growth" scenario, the number of households facing a debt crisis would almost double

Millions of UK households will face "perilous" levels of debt when interest rates begin to rise, according to a think-tank focused on living standards.

The number of people using more than half their disposable income to repay debt could rise from 600,000 to a 1.1 million by 2018 if interest rates rise to 3%, said the Resolution Foundation.

If rates hit 5%, two million households would face huge repayments, it said.

Mortgages are the largest source of UK household debt.

The Resolution Foundation study used the latest five-year growth projections from the independent Office for Budget Responsibility.

"Even if we take a somewhat rosy view of how the economy will develop over the next few years the number of households severely exposed to debt looks as though it will double," said Matthew Whittaker, the senior economist at the Resolution Foundation.

"But the levels of debt built up by families in the pre-crisis years are such that even relatively modest changes in incomes and borrowing cost assumptions produce significantly worse outcomes."

The Resolution Foundation said the number of households in so-called "debt peril" - spending more than half their income to debt repayments - was 870,000 in 2007, just before the financial crisis.

If rates do not rise above 3% by 2018, then the Resolution Foundation suggests 1.1 million will be in "debt peril".

Unemployment rates
"On the most adverse, but still plausible, scenario looked at in the Resolution Foundation analysis the number of households in Britain who spend at least half their disposable income on repaying debts (and are therefore deemed to be in debt peril) could more than triple - from 600,000 in 2011 to 2 million by 2018," it said.

The predictions apply to all debt, including credit cards and other loans - but mortgages make up the largest slice of most debt in the UK.

The Bank of England has kept interest rates on hold at a record low of 0.5% since March 2009.

Under the Bank's policy of forward guidance, brought in Governor Mark Carney, it has said it will not increase interest rates until the rate of unemployment has dropped below 7%.

The UK unemployment rate this month recently fell to 7.4% during the three months to October, the lowest level since early 2009, which led some economists to predict that the Bank may raise rates as soon as next year.

Recently, the Conservative-leaning think tank, the Centre for Social Justice, said the average UK household has debts of £54,000, including mortgages. This is nearly twice the level of a decade ago and much more must be done to help the UK's poorest families, it said.

Haystack - 29 Dec 2013 14:36 - 34672 of 81564

aldwickk - 29 Dec 2013 14:38 - 34673 of 81564

Lord Prescott

aldwickk - 29 Dec 2013 14:40 - 34674 of 81564

Fred Lord of - - - - ? any idea's

aldwickk - 29 Dec 2013 14:44 - 34675 of 81564

The UK should take in some refugees from Syria's civil war, UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage has said.

He told BBC News that Western countries should agree to take an allocation, but he did not specify numbers.

Mr Farage, who has led opposition to allowing open immigration from Romania and Bulgaria in the new year, said refugees were "a very different thing".

The UK government is refusing to accept Syrian refugees, saying it is better to offer financial help.

Bad cop now good cop Will this get UKIP more or less votes ? risky move by Farage.

Haystack - 29 Dec 2013 15:05 - 34676 of 81564

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-25541739

France's 75% tax rate gains approval by top court

France's highest court has approved a 75% tax on high earners that is one of President Francois Hollande's signature policies.

The initial proposal to tax individual incomes was ruled unconstitutional by the Constitutional Council almost exactly one year ago.

But the government modified it to make employers liable for the 75% tax on salaries exceeding 1m euros (£830,000).

The levy will last two years, affecting income earned this year and in 2014.

Football clubs in France went on strike earlier this year over the issue, saying many of France's clubs are financially fragile and say the plans could spark an exodus of top players who are paid huge salaries.

The Qatari-owned Paris Saint-Germain has more than 10 players whose pay exceeds 1m euros, including the Swedish striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

There has also been a chorus of protest from businesses and wealthy individuals who have condemned the tax - including film star Gerard Depardieu, who left the country in protest.

Polls suggest a large majority in France back the temporary tax.

Unlike many other countries in Europe, France aims to bring down its huge public deficit by raising taxes as well as some spending cuts.

The highest tax rate in the UK is 45% and is applied to individuals.
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