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
- 04 Jun 2014 09:34
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Probably not!
goldfinger
- 04 Jun 2014 09:36
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ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh i thought wed have to go back to the previous government.
Yep blame it on labour as per norm.
4 years in government and they are still trying that on.
Thats why the electorate are leaving the Tories they are fed up of their excuses.
And Goves new policy on subjects that should be DROPPED. totaly PATHETIC.
He should be sacked hes lost all control.
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 09:41
- 41895 of 81564
i merely asked a question :-)
as you know, i find most of the political polemic that you and fred perpetually post singularly dull and not worth the reading for they always lack balance
goldfinger
- 04 Jun 2014 09:51
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Explain your definition of balance.
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 09:54
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i have no need to and can't be bothered to anyway
goldfinger
- 04 Jun 2014 09:58
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Well in future dont expect me to clarify points you want answering then. ill just ignore you in future if thats your ignorant attitude.
Just remember that.......................................ALF.
Fred1new
- 04 Jun 2014 09:59
- 41899 of 81564
Manuel.
Well, you comments are in a similar vein.
You are becoming quite repetitive.
Something to do with Alzheimer's?
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 10:01
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do whatever you like, including posting totally unbalanced political polemic, but it doesn't mean that i or anyone else has to bother to read it
i suppose hays might, but then he's equally as rabid as you and fred
lak xxx
Stan
- 04 Jun 2014 10:31
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Alf, If I've told you once I've told you a dozen times ...get back to work! and get back to work now.
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 10:34
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i've got a proper director's job this morning - filing, and it's boring :-(
Shortie
- 04 Jun 2014 10:50
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Cynic, don't knock the easy jobs... I'm credit checking and would swap for some nice easy filing any day... just watch out for those paper cuts!!
Shortie
- 04 Jun 2014 11:07
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BRUSSELS, June 4 (Reuters) - Lithuania meets all the criteria for joining the euro, the European Commission said on Wednesday, clearing the way for the small Baltic state to become the 19th member of the single currency from the start of next year. To adopt the euro, a country has to have government debt no higher than 60 percent of gross domestic product, a budget deficit below 3 percent of GDP, low inflation and interest rates and its own currency has to be stable against the euro. For a factbox on all the criteria see ID:L6N0OL28E . Out of the 28 countries in the European Union, only Britain and Denmark do not have to adopt the euro because they have negotiated formal opt-outs. All the others are obliged to switch to the single currency at some point provided they meet the criteria. The Commission assesses such compliance every two years in what it calls a convergence report. "The 2014 Convergence Report concludes that Lithuania meets the criteria for adopting the euro. As a consequence, the Commission is proposing that Lithuania adopt the euro on 1 January 2015," the Commission said. The formal decision to accept Lithuania into the euro zone will be taken by EU finance ministers in the second half of July, at which point the ministers will also agree on a conversion rate of the litas currency into the euro. The remaining seven countries that still remain outside the euro zone -- Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Sweden -- do not meet all of the criteria to adopt the currency. ID:L6N0OL24P With the addition of Lithuania's 3.4 million people, the euro zone will have a total population of 336 million people and a GDP of approximately $9.5 trillion. The single currency was launched in 1999 and started trading as notes and coins in Europe Jan. 1, 2002.
Haystack
- 04 Jun 2014 11:21
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Of course Greece and Italy and a couple of others met the criteria and later it was obvious that they fixed the figures.
Stan
- 04 Jun 2014 11:30
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Filing? Oh really how the fallen have fallen further -):
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 11:33
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as always, directors/owners shoulder the jobs that no one else wants :-)
Stan
- 04 Jun 2014 11:36
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Never mind the shoulder about time you got the elbow? -):
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 11:38
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i'm currently on a 5-year consultancy contract that may well get extended :-)
Stan
- 04 Jun 2014 11:38
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Hah! I've heard it all now.
cynic
- 04 Jun 2014 11:39
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no you haven't, not even the half of it :-)