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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.

MaxK - 09 Oct 2014 12:07 - 47146 of 81564

Clacton:




Heywood and Middleton:





More graphs here: http://order-order.com/

Chris Carson - 09 Oct 2014 12:14 - 47147 of 81564

Ok cynic, I'll take your word for it re Andrew Marr's book. I do enjoy his Sunday morning TV programme though.

doodlebug4 - 09 Oct 2014 12:34 - 47148 of 81564

By Tim Walker
7:30AM BST 09 Oct 2014
Melvyn Bragg, the Labour peer, says Ed Miliband's mansion tax could cost the party the marginal Hampstead & Kilburn seat

On the Labour benches in the House of Lords, members wanting to take a swipe at Ed Miliband may soon have to form an orderly queue. After Lord Prescott rebuked his party’s beleaguered leader for being “too timid,” Melvyn Bragg now says that his mansion tax policy may well have “wiped out” Hampstead and Kilburn as a Labour seat.

“It’s a very crude weapon,” says the broadcaster and long-time Hampstead resident of Miliband’s proposal for an annual levy on all homes worth in excess of £2 million. “I think if they put more effort into clawing back massive tax avoidance from pop groups, comedians, actors and sports people, they’d make more money back in a month than they would in a year from the mansion tax. It’s the biggest scandal — they let sports personalities and pop celebrities get away with murder and they should do something about it before they start swinging the axe about the place. It is going to be grotesquely unfair. Most of the people in London probably couldn’t afford to buy the houses they live in today.”

Bragg fears that the policy could make the difference between Labour winning or losing Hampstead and Kilburn, which is the tightest marginal in Britain: Glenda Jackson beat her Tory opponent by a meagre 42 votes in the 2010 election.

Bragg, 75, has been a life-long Labour voter and remains a friend of Tony Blair. In 1998, he was named as one of the largest private financial donors to the Labour Party.

Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 13:27 - 47149 of 81564

Vict

The new republic of London and S/E!

Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 14:02 - 47150 of 81564

What I dislike it the double standards of the Osborne's confidence trickster's party.

Blaming all economic problems on Labour's economic incompetence and "suggesting" that none of it was due to problems outside UK borders1

Suggesting that Britain should have been able to walk on water and obviously he and Cameron can do.

However, from an interview with Preston earlier:


"The chancellor is no mug when it comes to seeing potential holes in the road ahead.

That said, the holes have been pretty loudly flagged up - the IMF warned earlier this week that there is a 40% risk of the eurozone slumping back into recession and of a danger that China's housing bubble will have an unhappy ending.

So today, George Osborne has said, in an interview with me, that the UK cannot and will not be immune to a slowdown in global economic growth that looks unavoidable.

Or to put it another way, the oomph will fade from the UK's strong recovery - we are probably past the peak of this phase of the UK's growth in GDP or national income."


=========


Making excuses and blaming everybody other than himself!

He learnt a lot at Eton.

Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 14:02 - 47151 of 81564

.

VICTIM - 09 Oct 2014 15:16 - 47152 of 81564

Eric Clacton.

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 15:46 - 47153 of 81564

The MANSION TAX is proving very popular with residents in West Yorkshire.

We want a better NHS they say.

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 15:59 - 47154 of 81564

Tories drive NHS staff away as 64% of student nurses planning to work abroad
Oct 07, 2014 22:54 By Andrew Gregory

Tory wage cuts mean students nurses think they would be better off working in places such as Dubai

Nearly two thirds of the UK’s 60,000 trainee nurses may go abroad to work due to the Tory-led Coalition forcing down wages, a poll reveals today.

Experts warned an exodus of talented, trained staff would put patient safety “at risk” and cripple the National Health Service.

Brit nurses are highly sought after in countries such as Australia, Canada, Dubai and the US, where they can earn upwards of £10,000 a year more. The Royal College of Nursing survey shows that 64% of undergraduates are considering pursuing a nursing career abroad.

Earlier this year the Coalition ignored the recommendation of an independent pay review body to give nurses a paltry1% rise.

Dr Peter Carter, chief executive of the RCN, Britain’s biggest nursing union, said: “The Government is putting patient safety at risk by making it harder for hospitals to attract and retain the number of nurses they need.

“With thousands of vacant nursing posts and surging patient demand, the NHS simply cannot afford to keep under-valuing its nursing staff, forcing thousands to go abroad.

“The Government is making a rod for its own back by refusing a cost of living increase.”

The poll found 90% of student nurses believe their ­profession is undervalued and 98% fear future pay will carry on falling behind ­inflation.

NHS staff, including nurses, will go on strike for four hours next Monday over pay.

Student nurse Helen Dalgleish (pictured) is “seriously considering” beginning her nursing life in Qatar.

Helen, of Milton Keynes, Bucks, said: “There are lots of children’s hospitals being built – which is the area I want to specialise in.

“They also offer nurses a great wage, with some starting salaries between £36,000 and £40,000.”

The second-year student, 21, added: “A 1% rise, even though it’s below inflation, would still have been a positive gesture.

“Instead, you are being made to feel like you’re not contributing to society, like you’re not worth paying a decent wage.”



http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tories-drive-nhs-staff-away-4398630#ixzz3Fez11ayd
Follow us: @DailyMirror on Twitter | DailyMirror on Facebook

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 16:09 - 47155 of 81564

Live counter: Watch how much NHS money is going into private hands
Oct 07, 2014 13:44 By Federica Cocco

And how much is being pocketed by Conservative supporters.

http://i3.mirror.co.uk/news/ampp3d/article4394363.ece/alternates/s615/deal.jpg

For every £1 of NHS contracts sold, 15p has been contracted to Tory supporters.

This is how much Conservative donors have received in public NHS money since you opened this page.

£61.90

Last year private companies received £6.3bn of public money
Department of Health accounts show that non-NHS bodies were paid £6.3bn by the National Health Service last year on contracts ranging from general supplies to clinical services.

This is how much public money these private firms have received since you opened this page.

£535.60

How it started
Since the Health and Social Care Act was passed in 2012, NHS services have been gradually outsourced.

As part of the NHS reform, the Coalition government instructed local NHS bodies to license commercial companies - known as AQPs or "any qualified provider" - to provide care to patients across thirty-nine treatment areas.

GPs, dentists and pharmacists were already run by private businesses on behalf of the health service. But the new services range from abortion services to child and adult mental health services.

Over £13bn worth of contracts advertised
Overall £13.5bn worth of deals to run and manage NHS service have been advertised since the Coalition Government removed restrictions on who can bid for NHS contracts.

The NHS Support Federation, a campaigning group. analysed the contract and award notices advertised on the two main official contract websites: TED and Supply2Health. Thy identified 492 adverts concerning contracts to supply clinically related services. These are contracts that have appeared since the government regulations (section 75) covering the procurement of health care came into effect.

£13.5bn

The total value of the contracts in this sample was £13,533,761,213.

This may seem small in comparison to the NHS' £109bn yearly budget.

But NHS privatisation has been so rampant that 68% of contracts for NHS services in England between April 2013 and April 2014 were won by private firms, according to data from the European public procurement website.

Tory donors have pocketed at least £1.5bn in the last two years

According to research from Unite the Union health firms with links to Conservative party donors have been awarded around £1.5billion in NHS contracts.

Care UK was awarded £660m in NHS contracts. Its former chairman Lord Nash and wife Caroline have gifted £247,250 to Conservative MPs like Andrew Lansley, Nick Herbert, David Ruffley, and Chris Skidmore.
Circle Health has won £121m of work from the NHS. People involved with the firms that own its parent company Circle Holdings PLC have donated a total of £1.7million to the Tories, including Mark Simmonds, Baron Higgins of Worthing, Nicholas Soames, Jacob Rees-Mogg, Kwasi Kwarteng, and Boris Johnson's brother Jo Johnson.
Private firm Serco has won £432 million in NHS contracts. One of its shareholders is FIL ­Investments International, which has donated £1.1million to Tory party coffers, specifically Lord Glendonbrook and Baroness James of Holland Park.


http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/ampp3d/live-counter-watch-how-much-4389075#ixzz3Ff1juVFl
Follow us: @DailyMirror on Twitter | DailyMirror on Facebook

Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 16:39 - 47156 of 81564

Another thing which interest me, is how many doctors are leaving the Country annually to escape paying tuition fees and how many are preparing to so in the future:


From what I would suppose to be Manuel and Hays favourite paper.

The doctors' exodus: They cost us £610,000 to train - but 3,000 a year are leaving us for a life in the sun in Australia and New Zealand
Nearly 3,000 doctors a year apply for a certificate to work overseas
Australia and New Zealand preferred destinations as work is easier there
Number of GPs arriving from Greece, Italy and Romania has also increased
By SOPHIE BORLAND FOR THE DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED: 23:43, 7 October 2014 | UPDATED: 07:59, 8 October 2014

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Increasing numbers of doctors are deserting the NHS for a better life in Australia and New Zealand, figures reveal.
The exodus of doctors – who cost the taxpayer up to £610,000 to train – is forcing the NHS to import staff from southern and eastern Europe.
According to a major report from the General Medical Council, the number applying for certificates to work abroad has risen by a fifth since 2008, to nearly 3,000 a year.
Scroll down for video


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2784318/The-doctors-exodus-They-cost-610-000-train-3-000-year-leaving-life-sun-Australia-New-Zealand.html#ixzz3Ff8kwQ14
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


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Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 16:43 - 47157 of 81564

What I think amusing is Cameron and Osborne thought up the Fixed Term parliament to protect their own backsides and bacon

Another of the "smart" ideas is coming back to haunt them and they can't do an U-turn on it.


What a bunch!!!!!

Even Manuel and Haze would fit in comfortably at their table.

Fred1new - 09 Oct 2014 16:49 - 47158 of 81564

A simpler version of the rules for dissolution of parliament!

Triggering an election other than at five year intervals

The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 provides for general elections to be held on the first Thursday in May every five years. There are two provisions that trigger an election other than at five year intervals.

A motion of no confidence is passed in Her Majesty's Government by a simple majority and 14 days elapses without the House passing a confidence motion in any new Government formed
A motion for a general election is agreed by two thirds of the total number of seats in the Commons including vacant seats (currently 434 out of 650)

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 17:19 - 47159 of 81564

Fred I think the Mansion Tax should be lowered to £1,750,000 to nab the marginals in and around Manuels London location and similar.

Lets face it if you believe in private education and indulge in it you can spare a few bob for the NHS and the poor.

cynic - 09 Oct 2014 17:23 - 47160 of 81564

i don't live in london :-)

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 17:28 - 47161 of 81564

Im not conversing with you, your on my filter list.

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 17:29 - 47162 of 81564

Edited, around Manuels greater london and outlying locations.

cynic - 09 Oct 2014 17:30 - 47163 of 81564

so it would seem, though have no idea why :-)
btw, do you know what's scared the markets so badly?

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 17:38 - 47164 of 81564

Just been reading in the evening paper that, that snooty git Melvyn Bragg is complaining about the mansion tax, and says labour will lose the Hampstead seat, because of it.

Guess where he lives, Hampstead, what a selfish little weazel and hes a labour donor.

My god it will only be 1 or 2 seats sacrifised for the good of the National Health Service.

They should move abroad with all the pop stars and other so called B Grade celebrities.

goldfinger - 09 Oct 2014 17:39 - 47165 of 81564

FEAR OF FEAR.
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