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.
required field
- 05 Nov 2014 22:13
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The danger is that Ebola mutates into something else......mankind must be on its guard as to nature's ruthlessness essence as to radificalized species (that includes ourselves)....
Chris Carson
- 05 Nov 2014 23:48
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by TOM PETERKIN
Published on the
05 November
2014
22:19
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A pithy tweet was posted yesterday by the Stirling University Scottish Socialist Party. “Scottish Labour is still the party of the left,” it said. “Lamont left, Sarwar left, Darling left. Nothing left.”
It was a biting comment on the state of a Scottish Labour Party which this week was reeling from yet more dispiriting opinion poll findings.
An Ipsos MORI poll which had predicted an apocalyptic outcome for Scottish Labour at Westminster went on to reveal that 57 per cent of Scots said they would vote for the SNP in Holyrood’s constituency seats. With Labour polling just 23 per cent, these are troubled times for the party that once regarded political control of Scotland as an inevitability.
All is not lost for Labour, however. If this leadership contest can reinvigorate Labour, a recovery may take hold. While the main focus will be on the main contest between Jim Murphy, Sarah Boyack and Neil Findlay, it is worth keeping an eye on the race for the deputy leadership.
Pressure was put on Anas Sarwar to quit the deputy leadership – the gentle arm-twisting was to ease Murphy’s bid for the top job. As Sarwar and Murphy are both MPs, it would have sent the wrong message to have both the leader and deputy leader of Scottish Labour looking after the party from Westminster.
Chris Carson
- 06 Nov 2014 00:07
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No sense of humour Exec that's your trouble :0)
Ok point taken. Nice looking trade by the way on STJ
MaxK
- 06 Nov 2014 08:18
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Haystack
- 06 Nov 2014 10:05
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Why shouldn't we have an Asian PM?
Haystack
- 06 Nov 2014 10:11
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The polls now are showing leads of -1, 0, 1 and 2 day after day. These figures are within the margins of error. This means that Labour and Conservatives are neck and neck. UKIP is stuck at the zero MPs won and the Libs should do better than expected by the polls.
The trend has been towards the Conservatives for months now. Hopefully that will continue. It won't need much of an increase to give them the highest number of MPs.
MaxK
- 06 Nov 2014 10:12
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Nothing to do with an Asian pm, more to do with shameless vote cadging.
Not that it will do him any good.
cynic
- 06 Nov 2014 10:14
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from today's guardian .......
Luxembourg tax files: how tiny state rubber-stamped tax avoidance on an industrial scale
Leaked documents show that one of the EU’s smallest states helped multinationals save millions in tax, to the detriment of its neighbours and allies
lots more of course
cynic
- 06 Nov 2014 10:17
- 49399 of 81564
HMRC vs Ingenious
the investment firm is due to challenge the demand in a tax tribunal starting on November 3. ....... He said Ingenious had pressed for its case to be heard as soon as possible in the face of attempts to delay by HMRC
Haystack
- 06 Nov 2014 10:19
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That's what MPs do. They try and appeal to identifiable subgroups of the population and curry favour with them. I would be annoyed if he wasn't doing that. Miliband does the same thing as do the others. It is the same with any public issues. MPs are always looking for issues to take a stand on especially if they can support the popular view.
I am always surprised that MPs vote against capital punishment when there is a clear majority of people in favour of it.
MaxK
- 06 Nov 2014 10:19
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Haystack
- 06 Nov 2014 10:22
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Amazon used Luxembourg to avoid charging vat. It is all legal. If countries want to change the rules then I am sure they will.
MaxK
- 06 Nov 2014 10:23
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It charged vat at the going rate, but paid it over at the Lux rate.
All legal supposedly.
cynic
- 06 Nov 2014 10:33
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Ingenious
well Max, let's see what the court finds
there were any number on here who were shouting the odds about what a bunch of crooks the Ingenious investors were blah blah blah blah ......
personally, i hope HMRC gets given a very bloody nose once again, for as i mentioned yesterday, they (VAT) has owed me £30k for well over a year but refuses even to acknowledge corres from my accountant let alone live by its own rules in the first place
TANKER
- 06 Nov 2014 10:33
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back to the eu and the EHIC a few facts go to any hotel on hol and get the desk or your rep to phone the first question they ask have you got cash or insurance doc
fact I go to spain 9 times ayear Majorca 5 times Portugal 3 times
france many weekends the only country that honour the ehic is malta
I go to Poland twice a year for my daughters company no free anything you pay or get no doctor
MaxK
- 06 Nov 2014 10:34
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MPs: Failure of IDS’s Work Programme is a scandal
Public Accounts Committee issues damning verdict
Nigel Morris Author Biography
Deputy Political Editor
Thursday 06 November 2014
The companies running the Government’s flagship scheme to cut joblessness have backtracked on promises to focus on hard-to-help claimants, a MPs’ report published today says.
The Public Accounts Committee denounced the failure to target more help on the most difficult cases as a “scandal”.
Firms operating the Work Programme are spending less than half the amount they had originally pledged on claimants with disabilities such as mental health problems. Such groups are being “parked” as the firms focus on finding jobs for people considered easier to help into employment, the PAC said.
In a damning verdict on the programme, which was launched three years ago, the MPs accused Iain Duncan Smith’s Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) of failing to give incentives to providers to support harder-to-help claimants to find a job.
Almost 90 per cent of claimants of Employment and Support Allowance, which is paid to the sick and disabled, who are on the Work Programme have not been found jobs.
the rest of the shambles report is here:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/mps-failure-of-idss-work-programme-is-a-scandal-9842188.html
TANKER
- 06 Nov 2014 10:35
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and have spoken to 4 conservative and one labour mp about the issue they said and do have a letter from clegg him self saying all countries have their own system you need to buy insurance when going out of the uk