Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

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 - 06 Feb 2014 12:21 - 36246 of 81564

Boom, Burst.

The torrid party has learnt nothingsince leaving Eton and joining the Bullingdon Club.


They are probably still inhaling!

doodlebug4 - 06 Feb 2014 12:29 - 36247 of 81564

Fred - why do you have to double post everything, have you got a nervous twitch?

Haystack - 06 Feb 2014 12:30 - 36248 of 81564

With Labour, it is just bust.

Haystack - 06 Feb 2014 12:48 - 36249 of 81564

“It would be wrong, though, to think of Labour as a totally happy ship at the moment. There is the row over the visa status of Arnie Graf, the American community organiser and a close ally of Miliband. Graf’s friends think rivals inside the Labour machine deliberately leaked the news that he had no work permit in an effort to undermine him. Miliband’s confidants, by contrast, think the leak was designed to embarrass Iain McNicol, who as the party’s general secretary might would be hurt most by any administrative failure.”

Fred1new - 06 Feb 2014 12:49 - 36250 of 81564

Db$.

The Hazy one frightens me so much, that my hands tremor when I think where I would like to put them!

8-)




What a sight.

Imagine having to look at this appealing lot of vote getters.

Fred1new - 06 Feb 2014 12:50 - 36251 of 81564

Ps,

Is that a puppet on Clarke's knees.

Fred1new - 06 Feb 2014 12:50 - 36252 of 81564

Ps,

Is that a puppet on Clarke's knees.

Fred1new - 06 Feb 2014 12:50 - 36253 of 81564

Ps,

Is that a puppet on Clarke's knees.

Can't see Aschroft's strings around the bs of Cameron.

doodlebug4 - 06 Feb 2014 13:08 - 36254 of 81564

lol - excuse my ignorance, but who is that woman sitting on Ken Clarke's knees? :-)

goldfinger - 06 Feb 2014 14:12 - 36256 of 81564

Hays 39% gives labour an overall majority.

Looks like tories will be turning towards Boozy Nigel for a helping hand but will he accept it.

And the debate as moved on now from living standards to 'those who have and those who dont have'...............

Haystack - 06 Feb 2014 14:19 - 36257 of 81564

So Labour are so desperate that once again they are switching to the politics of envy.

goldfinger - 06 Feb 2014 14:23 - 36258 of 81564

Envy!!!!!!!!!! LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL.

Dont worry Hays the redistribution of income will affect YOU so dont worry about being left out.

TANKER - 06 Feb 2014 14:28 - 36259 of 81564


The average Dutch household could be better off by over £8,000 a year and national income will grow by over £1 trillion if the Netherlands leaves the euro and the EU, according to a new study.


The study by the respected British Capital Economics research consultancy into "Nexit" finds significant benefits over the next two decades to 2035 for the Netherlands in leaving the EU and negotiating a similar status as Switzerland.

TANKER - 06 Feb 2014 14:29 - 36260 of 81564

ever one in the uk would be over 17k better off . the EU as destroyed the uk people

Haystack - 06 Feb 2014 14:35 - 36261 of 81564

gf
Luckily, you are wrong there.

goldfinger - 06 Feb 2014 14:44 - 36262 of 81564

Dont you worry , we'l get you Hays.

You can run but you cant hide.

Socrates - 06 Feb 2014 14:53 - 36263 of 81564

Wake me up when summer arrives. Zzzzzzz

MaxK - 06 Feb 2014 18:47 - 36264 of 81564


Newsflash: Dutch would be better off if they had freedom to set their own economic policy

By Janet Daley World Last updated: February 6th, 2014

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/janetdaley/100258448/newsflash-dutch-would-be-better-off-if-they-had-freedom-to-set-their-own-economic-policy/


Well, fancy that. A study by Capital Economics (an organisation which won the Wolfson Prize, no less, in 2012), has concluded that the average Dutch household could be £8000 per year better off, and that the national income would grow if Netherlands left the EU. That's the political headline. But even more worthy of attention is the apparent banality of the report's basis for this assertion.

"…there are also good reasons to believe that a nation, untied from the bureaucracy of Brussels and able to make decisions for itself rather than have imposed one-size-fits-all policies will benefit economically…" You don't say. In fact, isn't that what you and I (and lots and lots of other people) have been saying ever since the inception of the single currency? Indeed, how could anyone in his right mind have thought that tying all the wildly differing states of the European Union, with their vastly disparate economic histories and cultural attitudes to taxation, debt, public spending, etc, etc, was a good – or even a remotely feasible – idea? How could locking them all into the same interest rate and monetary policy as the most successful and productive member (Germany) not result in the pauperisation of the southern Mediterranean countries? And how could those poorer countries possibly avoid permanent dependency on the richer ones? Without even the possibility of devaluation or lower interest rates, how could they ever emerge from their endemic poverty? And so on and on.

Yes sir, those are the questions we all asked at the time and answer came there none. And now the august Capital Economics report states portentously that the country would be able to manage its economy more successfully, "…by having the freedom to set monetary and fiscal policy to fit Dutch national conditions, and not the euro-zone as a whole." You bet.

required field - 06 Feb 2014 18:48 - 36265 of 81564

I have always thought that politics and come to that politicians should not be involved with disputes over strikes....I know it's difficult to separate the two but it is between the management and the workforce to come to an agreement over pay and conditions....that should happen if both parties agree within reason to sit down and talk things over....it is irritating to see politics becoming the main issue !.....I feel sorry for commuters...passengers and such....and I'm pretty certain that the tube staff can't be too happy as well by striking....let's hope this dispute is quickly sorted out without the main parties sticking their noses in !...
Register now or login to post to this thread.