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.
doodlebug4
- 06 Mar 2014 18:42
- 37826 of 81564
I reckon your absolutely right rf, they had a row, she locked herself in the loo for safety and he was in such a rage that he lost the plot. He seems to be quite a creep really, I remember when he didn't win his second gold medal at the Olympics and threw a hissy fit, complaining about the guy who beat him supposedly having blades which were illegal. I think he was tested for drugs and alcohol after he was arrested and both tests proved negative. His defence council seems to be doing a good job at the moment, unfortunately.
MaxK
- 06 Mar 2014 18:57
- 37827 of 81564
I think you have hit the nail on the head rf.
But guns dont kill anyone, as you well know, it's the loon behind the gun that's does the damage.
Haystack
- 06 Mar 2014 18:59
- 37828 of 81564
Yesterday there was evidence about when he discharged a gun in a restaurant and injured his friend in the foot and tried to get someone else to take responsibility. That was a month before shooting girlfriend.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/05/oscar-pistorius-gun-shot-restaurant-reeva-steenkamp-trial
goldfinger
- 06 Mar 2014 19:20
- 37829 of 81564
In my eyes hes as guilty as sin.
No ifs and buts, you can tell hes a hot head.
Been like that on the track for last 10 years.
goldfinger
- 06 Mar 2014 19:24
- 37830 of 81564
Hays tonight......7.30 on ITV The Rise Of The Working Poor.
Forget watching Eastenders and your favorite soap actor cockney thug.... Phil Mitchel.
Haystack
- 06 Mar 2014 19:45
- 37831 of 81564
I wonder if Pretorius has been on the steroids. They can make you aggressive.
Fred1new
- 06 Mar 2014 19:50
- 37832 of 81564
Hazie,
How do you know?
I thought you would be a 5 st. weakling.
Chris Carson
- 06 Mar 2014 20:03
- 37833 of 81564
Hays - STV headlines just now, Aberdeen City Council are enclosing a letter with Council Tax updates on the benefits of staying in the UK. Mr Salmond won't be impressed with that. :O)
Haystack
- 06 Mar 2014 20:16
- 37834 of 81564
The raison d'être of the SNP is leaving the UK. If Salmond loses badly in the referendum, what will become of him and the SNP? How long before the next push for a referendum? They can't have one every year. Would gap of a generation be enough?
MaxK
- 06 Mar 2014 20:32
- 37835 of 81564
Is it time to tell the yanks to f/off?
Ukraine crisis: US imposes first sanctions on Russians
US senator warns Britain that sanctions are "a test" of transatlantic relationship
Senator Chris Murphy, the chair of the Senate's Europe committee, warned Britain and other European nations that the US expected them to take a stronger stand against Moscow Photo: GETTY IMAGES
Raf Sanchez
By Raf Sanchez, Peter Foster in Washington
5:24PM GMT 06 Mar 2014
The US has imposed travel bans on Russian and Ukrainian officials deemed responsible for the Crimean crisis as a leading senator warned the British government that its willingness to place sanctions would be "a test" of the transatlantic relationship.
In its first sanctions since Russian forces seized control of Crimea, the White House announced visa restrictions banning "those who are most directly involved in destabilising Ukraine" from entering the US.
The Obama administration also granted itself powers to freeze the assets of individuals and companies involved in the Russian invasion, but said it had not yet put those sanctions in place.
"Anybody involved or complicit in activities that threaten the sovereignty, territorial integrity or stability of Ukraine is on notice that they may be targeted for US sanctions," a White House official said.
The American sanctions can also be extended to the subordinates of any Russian or Ukrainian officials judged to be responsible for the incursion.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10681360/Ukraine-crisis-US-imposes-first-sanctions-on-Russians.html
Haystack
- 06 Mar 2014 20:37
- 37836 of 81564
I think the US is right. We need to confront aggression and not ignore it. Ukraine may be in the balance. Putin could take advantage of weakness. The appeasement prior to WWII was partly responsible to Hitler thinking he could get away with his expansionism.
Chris Carson
- 06 Mar 2014 20:41
- 37837 of 81564
Aberdeen City Council has been accused of "promoting a No vote" in September's independence referendum by endorsing Scotland's membership of the UK in a letter circulated to council tax payers.
In a message outlining the council's budget plans, leader Barney Crockett writes:
"The Council's position is clear,as we agreed in our meeting in December last year we recognise that Aberdeen is stronger now and will be stronger in the future - economically, politically and socially - as a partner in the United Kingdom."
The statement goes on to attack the Scottish Government for giving the city council the lowest grant of any local authority in Scotland, saying: "This cannot be acceptable."
Mark McDonald, SNP MSP for Aberdeen Donside, accused the council of using public money to support the No campaign and claimed the Labour-led coalition running the city was "out of control."
He said "I have demanded to know who authorised the approach and that the Chief Executive must intervene to ensure that this attempt to misuse council resources is stopped.
"The simple truth is that this would be a grotesque misuse of council resources by the council leader, attempting to influence the voting behaviour of the citizens of Aberdeen and using local authority money to pay for it."
The row is the latest in a series of confrontations between the Scottish Government and the city council.
On Wednesday Labour councillor Willie Young suggested a motion calling for First Minister Alex Salmond to be banned from all council-owned facilities.
Mr Young claimed the First Minister "abused his position" by visiting Bramble Brae Primary school in the run-up to the Donside by-election last year.
He said: "Our relationship with the Scottish Government has reached an all-time low and all we are saying to Mr Salmond and his ministers is that Aberdeen doesn't want you here."
SNP councillors responded by proposing a motion of no confidence in Mr Young in his capacity as finance convenor. The motion was ruled incompetent and not debated.
(City council leader Barney Crockett and Donside MSP Mark McDonald discussed the row on Scotland Tonight on Thursday.).
Haystack
- 06 Mar 2014 20:51
- 37838 of 81564
Hey you Jimmy, want a fight?
Chris Carson
- 06 Mar 2014 20:56
- 37839 of 81564
Certainly no love lost there for Salmond :O)
aldwickk
- 06 Mar 2014 21:13
- 37840 of 81564
goldie
I will take a look at ABG
goldfinger
- 07 Mar 2014 00:48
- 37841 of 81564
Yep alders but dont expect too much please remember this is a beaten up sector looking to recover. I had a good look at all the miners last saturday and was suprised what a beating they had all taken because of falling prices and lack of demand.
Certainly the chart is one of the best gold miners charts around.
MaxK
- 07 Mar 2014 08:00
- 37842 of 81564
MaxK
- 07 Mar 2014 08:27
- 37843 of 81564
goldfinger
- 07 Mar 2014 08:48
- 37844 of 81564
Osborne said to face £20bn black hole in Budget
07 Mar 2014 | 07:38
Investment Week
George Osborne is potentially facing a £20bn black hole in the public purse when he delivers the next Budget, according to a re-creation of government models put together by the Financial Times.
Ahead of the upcoming 2014 Budget in under two weeks, the paper said models it had created which replicate the Office for Budget Responsibility's own forecasts showed a huge gap in the public finances.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer could now face a difficult challenge to cut back on spending - having already reduced welfare allowances sharply - and may have to announce spending cuts or tax rises to tackle the overspend.
The FT said the black hole it had found stems from the difference between the actual deficit - expected to be close to £111bn in 2013-14 - and the cyclically adjusted deficit estimated to be £85bn this financial year.
So far politicians have assumed that they only need to look at the lower figure, but this could change in the coming weeks.
The upshot is that it could cause austerity - which has already been extended - to remain in place for longer.
Changes in the OBR's cyclically adjusted estimates have already been the primary cause of the government's extension of austerity policies from the five years planned in 2010 to the nine years currently thought needed.
aldwickk
- 07 Mar 2014 08:56
- 37845 of 81564
The extent of corruption in Europe is "breathtaking" and it costs the EU economy at least 120bn euros (£99bn) annually, the European Commission says.
EU Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem has presented a full report on the problem.
She said the true cost of corruption was "probably much higher" than 120bn.
Three-quarters of Europeans surveyed for the Commission study said that corruption was widespread, and more than half said the level had increased.