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.
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:01
- 36003 of 81564
Its obvious you cant get your head around this matter Hays.
I dont mean to be rude but youd be better just accepting your lot are fiddling and call it a day.
nb, IB or disablement benefit are not Incapacity benefit, I think this is what is confusing you.
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:01
- 36004 of 81564
Its obvious you cant get your head around this matter Hays.
I dont mean to be rude but youd be better just accepting your lot are fiddling and call it a day.
nb, IB or disablement benefit are not Incapacity benefit, I think this is what is confusing you.
Haystack
- 28 Jan 2014 21:05
- 36005 of 81564
I think you are just looking for fiddling where none exists. The same applies to the Thatcher period.
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:09
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Ohhhhhh stop talking silly.
Haystack
- 28 Jan 2014 21:18
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After the growth figures released this morning, George Osborne was always likely to enjoy his bout with Ed Balls at today's Treasury questions. So loud was the roar from the Conservative benches when Balls stood up that the Speaker was forced to interject immediately, assuring them "you've got the man at the box for whom you were waiting".
Once the Tories had settled down, Balls began his question by noting that "after three damaging years of flatlining", today's growth figures were "welcome" (prompting another roar), before challenging Osborne on the "dodgy figures" used last week to claim that living standards were rising. Osborne, in full assassination mode, welcomed the "very important Labour economic announcement" that Balls will remain "in his job" and declared, "what they need on the other side of the House is new crystal balls". As Tory MPs guffawed, an unamused shadow chancellor replied: "very good, very good, Chancellor, a joke about my name being called Balls, fabulous."
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:19
- 36008 of 81564
Sorry but out of your depth on this subject, and you obviously dont understand it.
No probs as I said earlier rather complex.
Haystack
- 28 Jan 2014 21:23
- 36009 of 81564
You are just using the complexities to convince yourself that there is fiddling where there is none.
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:26
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Wont be saying that when it is brought up in PMQs and on front page of all rags tomorrow.
Could be very damaging for the Tories. Espcially given that ESA support is a much costlier benefit that JSA.
Haystack
- 28 Jan 2014 21:27
- 36011 of 81564
Ed Balls has learnt “absolutely nothing” from the years leading up the economic crisis, the PM said, after the shadow chancellor insisted Labour did not spend to much money while in power.
The party should have spent even more in some parts of the public sector, Mr Balls said on Sunday.
Mr Cameron told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: "I saw what Ed Balls said yesterday, which as far as I could see was that, if he had his time over again, he would probably spend even more.
"I think these people seem to have learnt absolutely nothing from what went wrong with our economy, that the problems were based on too much borrowing, too much spending, too much debt.
Haystack
- 28 Jan 2014 21:38
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"No one trusts Labour or likes Ed Miliband. So why the surprise over the party's poll collapse?"
goldfinger
- 28 Jan 2014 21:41
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Were still in front you plonker.
Same happened a few weeks back, soon up to 8 plus again.
Tory back benches 80 plus going for Camorons throat over Europe later this week.
Labour lead of 10 plus again.......EASY.
3 monkies
- 28 Jan 2014 22:31
- 36015 of 81564
This is not a very nice question to ask but is Tanker still with us??? After my days voluntary work I came home quite depleted and just wondering.
MaxK
- 28 Jan 2014 23:31
- 36016 of 81564
If things are on the up an up, more peeps in work, business going gangbusters etc
Why is the social security bill still rising?
Haystack
- 29 Jan 2014 00:45
- 36017 of 81564
One of the causes is that the biggest component of the social security bill is pensions and we are living longer. The rise in life expectancy has been faster than expected. This is why there is so much pressure to raise the pension age.
goldfinger
- 29 Jan 2014 02:06
- 36018 of 81564
I suspect Max means the Welfare component of the Social Security bill and the answer is part time workers having their wages topped up with tax Credits ie those who work 16 hours or less because the boss is too mean to set them on for more hours.
Plus the debate discussed this evening where IDS and Co are fiddling the unemployment figures going up to election by putting more workers on the sick a far higher paid benefit than job seekers allowance.
Strangely a related topic on news night tonight why are British workers so low in productivity.....again part time hours.
cynic
- 29 Jan 2014 08:31
- 36019 of 81564
sticky - can't be bothered to wade through the latest verbiage, but i don't think you contradicted any point i made yesterday evening, and more to the point, as far as i can see, "your mob" did nothing at all to reverse what you now see as iniquity - but such is generally the case with the opposition when they come to power
cynic
- 29 Jan 2014 08:33
- 36020 of 81564
topped up with tax Credits ie those who work 16 hours or less because the boss is too mean to set them on for more hours.
i sit in open-mouthed amazement that you (sticky) could make such a preposterous remark .... it really does beggar belief
goldfinger
- 29 Jan 2014 08:45
- 36021 of 81564
Ohh shut up.
goldfinger
- 29 Jan 2014 08:47
- 36022 of 81564
PATHETIC.........
Twitter parody accounts critical of government closed down on same day gagging law passes
29 Wednesday Jan 2014
Posted by Tom Pride in hopeless naivety ≈ Leave a Comment
TagsCoalition, open government
(not satire – it’s the UK today!)
Yesterday the government’s gagging law was passed by the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats – marking yet another nail in the coffin for freedom of speech in Britain.
And as if to celebrate the occasion, three parody accounts that were critical of coalition policies were closed down on Twitter after complaints from government officials.
@UKJCP – a satirical account parodying the DWP, @IDS_MP – a parody account of Iain Duncan Smith and @Skip_Licker – another satirical account were all suspended by Twitter.
Here’s a direct warning from the Department for Work and Pensions to @UKJCP just a week before it was shut down:
DWP shuts down satire
“it is not satire”. So now we’ve not just got government departments deciding what forms of public criticism are acceptable, but also deciding for us what exactly is humorous and what isn’t.
This country’s getting more and more like China every day.
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You can follow the new incarnations of @UKJCP on Twitter at @DeadParrotJCP and @Director_UKJCP.
Please feel free to comment.
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