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.

Haystack - 26 May 2014 11:15 - 41431 of 81564

cynic
I think the bribery stats are probably for personal activity. From my knowledge, Italy has very little bribery that affects people. It is restricted to the business world and it happens here as well. I have been asked dpfor bribes in the UK in the business world. In Italy the Mafia and its two or three variants control business almost completely in some areas, but people are left alone.

cynic - 26 May 2014 11:19 - 41432 of 81564

italy doesn't ask for bribes, it just wants you to support their extended family :-)
as for internally, racing certainty that bribes, protection money and the like are rife

Haystack - 26 May 2014 11:21 - 41433 of 81564

Turnout at GE

2010 65.1
2005 61.4
2001 59.4
1997 71.4
1992 77.7
1987 75.3
1983 72.7
1979 76
1974 Oct 72.8
1974 Feb 78.8
1970 72
1966 75.8
1964 77.1
1959 78.7
1955 76.8
1951 82.6
1950 83.9
1945 72.8

aldwickk - 26 May 2014 11:21 - 41434 of 81564

labour seems to have done well in london

What do you expect when all those ethnic minoritys are growing in number. large numbers of them would not be in London if it was not for the EU open borders policy

Couldn't see them voting for UKIP

Haystack - 26 May 2014 13:15 - 41435 of 81564

There is somewhat of a paradox in the recent result for the Libs. Because the council elections happened at the same time as the EU elections this means the same people voted. The voters have destroyed the EU presence of the Libs leaving them just one MEP. In a contrary result, the same people only caused the Libs to losse under 25% of their council seats. This looks like firstly a protest over the Libs' attitude to the EU and secondly may indicate a return to the Libs at the GE. I saw a series of interviews on Sky earlier where Lib supporters said they voted for UKIP as a protest and would wait for a change of attitude by the Libs in listening to their views.

MaxK - 26 May 2014 14:20 - 41436 of 81564

Monday, May 26, 2014


Where’s Cleggy?





No sign of Britain’s biggest loser. Nick Clegg is said to be holed up in the Cabinet Office doing a ring round. Crying?


http://order-order.com/

cynic - 26 May 2014 14:33 - 41437 of 81564

i read an interesting comment earlier today from Theresa May I guess, who was saying that the conservatives had had some pretty serious arguments with lib/dems re restricting immigration and/or restricting their benefits etc once they arrived in uk

not for that much longer .... and possibly the conservatives won't have the worries either except in opposition! .... who knows

anyway, i still put my money on a hung parliament with the largest party being so by just a few seats

that won't do the markets any good either!

doodlebug4 - 26 May 2014 14:36 - 41438 of 81564

MaxK -he's just been on the news bulletins gibbering about about the Lib Dems standing up for their beliefs.

ExecLine - 26 May 2014 14:53 - 41439 of 81564

Things might now start to pick up. We have now got rid of Mr Bean, who has previously been helping to run the Bank of England.

goldfinger - 26 May 2014 15:44 - 41440 of 81564

The Staggering Cost Of One Man’s Delusions: £25 Billion Squandered On Bungled Welfare Reforms

Posted on May 25, 2014 by johnny void | 65 Comments

iain-duncan-smithThe recent report from the Major Projects Authority, which revealed that Universal Credit is such a fucking disaster they had to invent a whole new category to describe it, also laid bare the astronomical cost of Iain Duncan Smith’s welfare reforms.

Just under £11 billion is budgeted to be squandered on some of the DWP’s largest projects, and that figure doesn’t include Universal Credit. The cost of this hare-brained experiment is shrouded in mystery now it has been classed as ‘reset’, but last year the Major Projects Authority reported the that bill would reach £12.8 billion.

Even this is far from the whole story. Community Work Placements, the latest mass workfare scheme, will cost almost a third of a billion. The costs of other Jobcentre schemes, such as Mandatory Work Activity, are not included in the above figures. At the very least the budgeted costs of welfare reform exceed £25 billion pounds. The true figure is likely to be much higher as reforms such as the Bedroom Tax unravel and start to cost the tax payer even more money.

The good news is that not all of this budget has been spent. It had been assumed by the DWP that the Work Programme would actually help some people get jobs. They thought wrong. Such has been the dismal performance of the payment by results scheme that it is one of the few of Iain Duncan Smith’s pet projects that is actually running under budget.

The bad news is that this kind of crazed optimism has led to ludicrous spending projections in which IDS has decided his reforms will lead to the cost of Jobseeker’s Allowance falling by over a third by 2017. This is likely to be because of all the new jobs that he thinks will be magically created by Universal Credit. What it means is that there is a time bomb in the social security budget for whichever bunch of bastards manages to win the next election.

With all this money being thrown around it might be expected that spending on social security would fall, especially as claimants themselves have been subject to huge cuts. This is not the case however and total spending on social security this year is forecast to be £10 billion higher than before the cuts began. This figures includes pensions, but spending on unemployment benefits, housing benefits and tax credits has all reached record levels under this Government. Even spending on sickness benefits seems back on the rise despite Atos and the DWP’s attempt at curing people with endless assessments and workfare. It turns out people are still getting sick.

It is genuinely astonishing that a Government obsessed with austerity has given a blank cheque-book to a fucking idiot like Iain Duncan Smith. The real tragedy is that if some of this money had actually gone into to those who needed it then some of the worst impacts of the economic downturn could have been avoided. Instead the opposite has happened. The very poorest have been driven to destitution whilst billions has been shovelled into the pockets of grasping crooks in the welfare-to-work industry like A4e and G4S.

We are all paying the price of this reckless spending spree, and the social costs of child poverty, homelessness and despair that Iain Duncan Smith has spent billions creating will last for generations. One day people will look back in horror that one man’s folly was allowed to run rampant through so many lives. But for now the horror show continues unabated, and the financial cost is nothing compared to the tragedy of future’s destroyed and lives demolished.

To view the Major Project Authority report visit: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/dwp-government-major-projects-portfolio-data-2014

To see benefit expenditure and projections download the spreadsheet: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/310483/outturn-and-forecast-budget-2014.xls

cynic - 26 May 2014 15:48 - 41441 of 81564

oh lord ..... sticky old fruit, you've clearly not understood the adage "less is more" ......

one look at the length of your contributions and i immediately move on, and i suspect many others do too

Haystack - 26 May 2014 16:06 - 41442 of 81564

gf
Sounds like a bargain to get the welfare system fixed.

aldwickk - 26 May 2014 16:33 - 41443 of 81564

Sounds like a bad looser , its talking like that cost him votes to UKIP

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/05/26/david-cameron-ukip-nigel-farage-european-elections_n_5391709.html?ncid=webmail1

MaxK - 26 May 2014 18:01 - 41444 of 81564

European elections 2014: This is one peasants’ revolt that Brussels can’t just brush aside

All across Europe, the message is clear: the EU must hand back power to the people



from the story:

There is a kind of peasants’ revolt going on, a jacquerie. From Dublin to Lublin, from Portugal to Pomerania, the pitchfork-wielding populists are converging on the Breydel building in Brussels – drunk on local hooch and chanting nationalist slogans and preparing to give the federalist machinery a good old kicking with their authentically folkloric clogs. There are Greek anti-capitalists and Hungarian neo-fascists and polite German professors who want to bring back the Deutschemark. They are making common cause with Left-wing Italian comedians and Right-wing Dutch firebrands and the general slogan is simple: down with technocracy, down with bureaucracy, and give power back to the people!


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/10855860/European-elections-2014-This-is-one-peasants-revolt-that-Brussels-cant-just-brush-aside.html

MaxK - 26 May 2014 18:04 - 41445 of 81564

And Boris thinks we are peasants....

MaxK - 26 May 2014 18:31 - 41446 of 81564

cynic - 26 May 2014 18:54 - 41447 of 81564

41446 - load of rubbish!

whatever you may wish, FN, UKIP, Syriza and similar fundamentally have little in common (thank goodness) and would be incapable of forming a single-minded coalition
for all that, strasbourg/brussels will assuredly have to have some serious soul-searching if it wants to avoid a gradual disintegration at best

with a bit of luck, this will give DC some decent traction to wring some meaningful concessions from the more important members of eu
only problem is that he, or at least the conservatives, will have to be back in power in june 2015, which is not such an easy task

leave it to EM?
hahaha!
he and the unions and the rest of the labour party have no interest in reducing the power of brussels/strasbourg

MaxK - 26 May 2014 20:02 - 41448 of 81564

Written and published before the results...did this guy hit it on the head or what?





Whatever the European election result, Ukip has already won

Ukip has changed the shape of politics – for the better





Whether or not Ukip wins, this month’s European election campaign has belonged to one politician alone: Nigel Farage. Single-handedly he has brought these otherwise moribund elections to life. Single-handedly he has restored passion, genuine debate and meaning to politics. Single-handedly he has reinvented British democracy.



http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/9212811/ukips-triumph/

aldwickk - 26 May 2014 21:21 - 41449 of 81564

If it wasn't for Nick Clegg's good showing at the last election TV debate his party would not be shareing power with the torys and he would not be DPM.

and If it wasn't for Nick Clegg's bad showing on the Euro debate
with Farage more people would have voted for the LIB/DEMS

He should resign , the bad showing is all down to him and he brought down the tory vote as well with his party trying to block imigration control measures

Haystack - 26 May 2014 21:36 - 41450 of 81564

I am quite happy with poor leaders in charge of the Libs and the Labs.
Register now or login to post to this thread.