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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 - 10 Jul 2014 13:34 - 43447 of 81564

gf
The 27% wasn't the number who voted for strike. It was the percentage who voted. The number who voted for strike was quite a bit lower than that. The difference is that Cameron was voted in in an election where more than 65% voted.

Cameron is going to add a requirement of more than 50% having to take part in a union vote to be valid. It will be in the next Conservative manifesto.

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 14:14 - 43448 of 81564

Their will be a manifesto but theyl never get to put it to use Hays......smile. .......smirk.

And anyway its nothing to do with anybody outside the Unions.

Their as always been a right to strike.

Just as the professional unions eg, Accountants, solicitors etc etc have the right to use RESTRICTIVE PRACTICES and dont say they dont use them, because they do.

Not only artificial manipulation of competition and prices, but restrictions to labour entry.

Far far worse than the unions but do we here Camoron complaining.......NO. Not a bleat.

Now sling your hook (this is an official TUC picket line) and meet up with your Moll.... Hilary. Take her for an ice cream in the park.

ps, thats if the buses are running....he he.

pps, and the park is open.

aldwickk - 10 Jul 2014 14:46 - 43449 of 81564

Anybody know about 770 account's [ American ]

At the end of the video he does a u turn and want's you to invest in his stockmarket tips

http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=1487917&msgid=38294&act=9EHD&c=1444719&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thealternativedaily.com%2F%3Futm_source%3Dinternal%26utm_medium%3Demail%26utm_campaign%3DAdv

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 14:53 - 43450 of 81564

Id give it a wide berth alders.

Theirs a lot similar to this in the US all after their own cut one way or another.

Wait for my new System coming out october........its a beut.

Haystack - 10 Jul 2014 14:56 - 43451 of 81564

It has everything to do with the wider public due to the disruption that strikes cause. It is important to see that a strike is a representative view of the members of a union. That is why union legislation has been introduced of a number of years. It prevents the crazy activists from causing trouble and highjacking unions for their political purposes. The professions are not closed shops in the sense of unions. They do have qualifications though. I would generally be happier if my accountant, doctor, solicitor were qualified. Perhaps you would not mind being operated on by a shop assistant.

The Labour party would love to restrict the unions but are scared of them. You can see that in the way that no Labour government has ever repealed union legislation.

aldwickk - 10 Jul 2014 15:02 - 43452 of 81564

Its only for US tax payers 770 tax law , can't seem to paste the video

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 15:04 - 43453 of 81564

ohhhhh stop being silly Hays Im a member of 4 pro bodies and have to pay the large annual fee or my chances of obtaining work are almost nil. (even though I hardly practice these days)

You forget the Politicians and Management of British companys cause far more disruption to the public than the Unions.

Look at the passport office, look at the Banking sector. Far more disruption than todays 1 day strike. Thats just the tip of the ice berg i could go on and on.

You seem to go through life blinkered in a sleep walk.

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 15:05 - 43454 of 81564

Alders yep I couldnt get it to work i thought it was one of them usual scams.
cheers.

Haystack - 10 Jul 2014 15:10 - 43455 of 81564

The workers! United! Will never be defeated! All eight of them…

http://order-order.com/2014/07/10/6-photos-of-the-mass-strikes-crippling-britain/?shared=email&msg=fail

aldwickk - 10 Jul 2014 15:22 - 43456 of 81564

Don't think QT 2nite will be much its from Inverness , am not interested in the Scotland in/out debate. It depends who is on the pannel and what else they will be disscussing

ELM house.

They say that Cliff Richard is on the guest list
How do they know he signed it , or did someone else thought it funny to sign his name like people calling themselves Micky Mouse do.

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 15:32 - 43457 of 81564

Ohhhhhhh QT is wasted..... when in scotland and Wales. Usualy turns out to be a regional discussion. (no disrepect to wales or scotland)

Haystack - 10 Jul 2014 15:41 - 43458 of 81564

Tthe panel features campaigners for both sides from a range of occupations: singer-songwriter Ricky Ross, Daily Record columnist and agony aunt Joan Burnie, businessman and chairman of Orion Group Alan Savage, and the Scotland and British Lions rugby player Scott Hastings.

ExecLine - 10 Jul 2014 16:09 - 43459 of 81564

Oh dear! What about the implications for us all of these at the airport security check in?



Taken from an article with more of this sort of stuff at: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/instagram-of-us-airport-security-chiefs-lipstick-knives-and-ied-training-kits-among-items-seized-9597766.html

Click on the link and you'll see why you need to have 'a charged up and ready to go mobile phone' when you check in to airport security

Haystack - 10 Jul 2014 16:19 - 43460 of 81564

It looks like the day of strikes has been a damp squib as expected. All public services still running almost normal. As we don't have a Labour government we can ignore the strikes, especially as they do not represent most people.

aldwickk - 10 Jul 2014 17:51 - 43461 of 81564

Sounds like QT will be a damp squib

ExecLine - 10 Jul 2014 20:32 - 43462 of 81564

From: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4b0ce5ce-0815-11e4-9afc-00144feab7de.html#ixzz375z8JYWw

Fears over Banco Espírito Santo trigger stocks sell-off
By Ralph Atkins and Martin Arnold in London and Peter Wise in Lisbon

Fears about one of Portugal’s biggest banks led to a sharp sell off across European financial markets on Thursday, forcing bankers to pull bond and equity issues and testing the resilience of this year’s rally in eurozone shares.

Greece had to scale back its ambitions for an issue of government debt after shares in Banco Espírito Santo plunged more than 17 per cent to the lowest price in a year, before Portugal’s stock market regulator suspended trading pending a statement from the bank.

Portugal’s PSI 20 share index closed down 4.2 per cent – its biggest daily drop in more than a year – while the jitters spread across Europe, with Italian and Spanish shares also tumbling. The FTSE Eurofirst 300 share index ended down 1 per cent.

Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, said problems at BES meant that questions about the health of banks in weaker eurozone countries were “back in the spotlight”, as were the still-evolving mechanisms for dealing with struggling institutions.
The turbulence followed an extended period of exceptional low volatility in global markets – which may have encouraged profit-taking. “Given the levels everything had reached, it is not surprising to have a day when everyone reappraises their exposures,” said Matt King, strategist at Citigroup.

A banker who has worked closely with BES said the Portuguese bank had a €2bn-€3bn capital shortfall and the most likely solution was some kind of state-brokered rescue deal, as a private sector solution would take too long. “There are rumours of an M&A solution, but no one has the speed to do the necessary due diligence and move fast enough to do a deal,” the banker said. “This needs a solution now – in the next couple of weeks – and that means a state intervention.”

The Bank of Portugal reiterated on Thursday that “the solvency of Banco Espírito Santo is solid”.

Intervention by the Portuguese government, however, could reignite fears about the potential exposure of weaker eurozone governments to bank sector problems.

Cristiano Ronaldo does not sing particularly well. Portugal had a revolution in 1974. These are two discrete facts. They are also ineluctably associated with Espirito Santo, the Portuguese finance house.

Dire industrial production numbers for France, where output dropped 1.7 per cent for May compared with a month earlier, and Italy, where it fell 1.2 per cent, added to nervousness about the strength of the eurozone recovery.

Amid the sell-off, Banco Popular Español, a Spanish bank, aborted plans to issue a “contingent convertible” bond, or coco, to raise at least €500m. Separately, ACS, the Spanish construction company headed by Real Madrid boss Florentino Pérez, shelved its inaugural euro bond sale.

In Italy, Rottapharm, a pharmaceuticals group, pulled its initial public offering after failing to achieve its target price. Trading was halted in several Italian banks.

Athens had expected strong demand for a Greek bond issue after a debt sale in April attracted €20bn in orders, more than six times the amount sold. But after investors placed orders of €3bn the bond raised €1.5bn.

Yields on Portugal’s 10-year bond rose 21 basis points to close at 3.99 per cent.
German Bunds – often a haven during periods of volatility – rallied with yields falling to a low of 1.17 per cent, the lowest level since early 2013.

goldfinger - 10 Jul 2014 21:18 - 43463 of 81564

You need agony aunt Joan Burnie you Hays, taking on a moll at your age is a bit too risky bud. Listen to uncle goldfinger and be wise.

Just think if one of your lads catch you with her online.

Itl be curtains or at least youl lose your bal-s.

Dont think being premium hides you.

MaxK - 10 Jul 2014 21:43 - 43464 of 81564

Re: #43464

Common or garden these days Exec....nothing to worry about, move along now.

goldfinger - 11 Jul 2014 01:11 - 43465 of 81564

Max you get more like me ever day now.

God help you. he he.

MaxK - 11 Jul 2014 09:56 - 43466 of 81564

Getting priorities right....




Obesity surgery could be offered to a million more people on NHS

Nice suggests lowering the threshold at which people are offered weight loss surgery – which costs the NHS around £6,000 per operation


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/10960538/Obesity-surgery-could-be-offered-to-a-million-more-people-on-NHS.html




Extending pension age 'only way to clear UK debt'

People will have to work until they are 70 to help reduce the impact of Britain's ageing population on the economy, OBR warns


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/10960560/Future-generations-will-work-longer-to-pay-off-Britains-debt.html
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