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.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 08:49
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yes whoooooooooooooooooooooosh.
cynic
- 15 Oct 2014 08:59
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scottish devolution
i'm very stupid, but why is salmond crying for his mummy?
it looks to me that the gov't is passing across powers as promised, but many mps are then rightly asking why scottish mps should then have any say in measures taken in parliament that affect england only
of course it's never quite that simple in practice as it is in principle
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 09:03
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Because its a Tory stitch up.
cynic
- 15 Oct 2014 09:06
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in a way, yes it is but i'll use the analogy of the heron and the frogs once more
MaxK
- 15 Oct 2014 09:11
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Go on then
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 09:11
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Use what you want bud, its not happening.
cynic
- 15 Oct 2014 09:17
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what's not happening?
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 09:23
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Landing a man on Mars.
cynic
- 15 Oct 2014 09:40
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yes and no would seem to be the answer to that ..... they can have their labour buddies instead :-)
for sure an awful lot of games being played behind the scenes, but quite amusing nevertheless
MaxK
- 15 Oct 2014 09:44
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It's in the Guardian, so it must be true!
UK unemployment rate falls to 6.0%, lowest since Lehman Brothers collapsed - live
LIVE updated 3m ago
Graeme Wearden
Wednesday 15 October 2014 09.39 BST
http://www.theguardian.com/business/live/2014/oct/15/uk-unemployment-wages-china-inflation-shire-business-live
ExecLine
- 15 Oct 2014 09:47
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Q. Remember the date '1066'?
A. Yes. Everyone knows the answer. It was the year of the Battle of Hastings.
The link below is to a very fascinating and carefully revised take on it by a guy called Dr Dominic Selwood, who writes the history blog for the Telegraph.
Selwood is a former criminal barrister, novelist and historian with a passion for the less visited corners of the archives. He is the author of the crypto-thriller, The Sword of Moses (2013), and the textbook on the Knights Templar, Knights of the Cloister (1999). He tweets as @DominicSelwood :
"We like to think that Anglo-Saxon England was brutally cut down in 1066 — unexpectedly — in a battle lasting just one day. To reinforce our assumptions, we still revel in Victorian and Hollywood melodrama stereotypes of dastardly Normans persecuting flaxen Saxons in box-sets of Ivanhoe or Tolkein’s thinly disguised versions set in Middle Earth.
The reality, of course, is far more complex."
The-true-story-of-the-battle-of-hastings-today-in-1066/
doodlebug4
- 15 Oct 2014 10:01
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The SNP want another referendum within the next few years as they think they will win the next time. Their argument that the Tories, Labour and Lib Dems colluded at the last minute to help the no vote -and are now trying to wriggle out of their promises- is going to help their cause. Cameron is obviously trying to stir things with Labour as he has little left to lose in Scotland.
hilary
- 15 Oct 2014 11:05
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Fishfinger,
I didn't just dismiss deflation yesterday. I simply pointed out that there is a difference between falling inflation and deflation (albeit I didn't explicitly say that), and there is absolutely no imminent threat of there being deflation within the UK (as opposed to Spain, where I think prices have actually fallen y/y).
The fact is that falling inflation is a good thing right now. It helps narrow the gap between inflation and earnings increases (you've been going on about falling living standards on this thread for, errrr, yonks). Another consequence is that it means the MPC are less likely to raise interest rates, which, in turn, prompts a sterling sell off and helps UK exporters.
In addition, and given that the UK has been a net importer of energy since 2013 as part of continuing trend of declining UK fossil fuel extraction, and that oil, like all other commodities, is priced in USD, then the chances of there ever being deflation within the UK are probably next to zero.
Haystack
- 15 Oct 2014 11:08
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The current policies seem to be working well. One consequence is that unemployment figures today are the lowest since 2008.
Haystack
- 15 Oct 2014 11:20
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Nicola Sturgeon has been conformed as the new DNP leader due being the only candidate.
SNP is now romping ahead of Labour in the GE polls. Labour are likely to be wiped out in Scotland. This may have very serious implications for Miliband. He may be ahead in the polls, but a possible majority would disappear without Scotland.
cynic
- 15 Oct 2014 11:24
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it has been telegraphed for quite a while that wages will continue to lag for a good many more months and while inflation is almost too low for comfort (so we are told), this will still not make the average joe any cheerier .... he needs more splosh in his pocket, but how
Haystack
- 15 Oct 2014 11:27
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Membership of SNP has trebled since the referendum.
Shortie
- 15 Oct 2014 11:33
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LONDON, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Sterling stayed near an 11-month low against the dollar on Wednesday, giving up early gains as weak jobs data did little to shake a growing conviction that UK interest rates will not rise until well into 2015. Jobs growth in Britain was at its slowest in more than a year in the three months to August, official data showed, even as the unemployment rate fell more than expected. Workers' earnings inched up, lagging far behind inflation. ID:nL9N0MN00B The Bank of England has said that any rise in interest rates from their historic lows will be dependent on economic data, especially wage growth. In the wake of Tuesday data showing inflation slowing sharply as food and motor fuel prices fell, sterling fell as low as $1.5878 GBP=D4 in Asian trade - its weakest since November 2013. After Wednesday's employment data, sterling hit a high of $1.5940 GBP=D4 but quickly slipped back and was last trading at $1.5915, flat on the day. "The key still remains this relentless downward pressure in imported inflation," said Simon Derrick, head of currency research at Bank of New York Mellon. "If you have no imported inflation, if there is no desperate need to raise rates, why should sterling be the place to park your money at the moment?" Against the euro, sterling strengthened to 79.50 pence per euro EURGBP= , up 0.1 percent on the day. Expectations that the BoE would be the first major central bank to raise rates drove sterling to a six-year peak against the dollar in July. But increased signs of economic weakness - partly the result of a spillover from the euro zone - and the sharp fall in inflation have poured cold water on those expectations, and sterling has fallen 7.5 percent since July. BoE Governor Mark Carney struck a somewhat dovish tone on Monday, saying the bank's rate-setting committee would have to take into account "a more modest global recovery, particularly if that's the case in Europe". ID:nL6N0S8220 "The lack of wage growth remains a thorn in the side of an otherwise fairly robust recovery," said Ben Brettell, a senior economist at financial firm Hargreaves Lansdown. "The absence of inflationary pressure - both in prices and wages - makes holding interest rates at 0.5 percent a straightforward decision, and as such this week's data may have come as something of a relief for Mark Carney and his colleagues."
Of course you could always question the official unemployment figure and how it's fallen more than expected..