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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.

cynic - 10 Nov 2014 12:47 - 49855 of 81564

aldo - shame on you! ..... try 1704 - captured during war of spanish succession

Fred1new - 10 Nov 2014 12:48 - 49856 of 81564

Why is Cameron ducking the TV debates.


What a cop out by a spiv!

MaxK - 10 Nov 2014 12:58 - 49857 of 81564

Cameroon has nothing to gain by taking part in any debate, he'd simply be shown up as the cardboard cut-out that he is.

hilary - 10 Nov 2014 13:06 - 49858 of 81564

Cameron isn't a cardboard cut-out by any stretch of the imagination. He's highly intelligent, and he's actually doing a great job (as is George Osborne) under very difficult circumstances of eradicating the awful mess that Gordon Clown left the UK in.

His problem is that he's perceived by the public as a slimeball. The public don't want a leader they can 'call Dave' - 99% of the public haven't been through Oxbridge with its ivory towers, and they expect their leaders to be people they can look up to and respect.

MaxK - 10 Nov 2014 13:16 - 49859 of 81564

Well if you say so hilly, then it must be true.

Stan - 10 Nov 2014 13:16 - 49860 of 81564

That obviously rules out both of you then.

cynic - 10 Nov 2014 13:16 - 49861 of 81564

which leaves a big fat ZERO for all 4 party leaders

goldfinger - 10 Nov 2014 13:19 - 49862 of 81564

He is a slimeball just accept it Hilary.

Hes a PR man who loves to lie.

Just look at this weekends polls, found out over the dodgy surcharge people dont trust him or Osbourne.

cynic - 10 Nov 2014 13:21 - 49863 of 81564

nor very clearly indeed, do they have any regard at all for EM!

goldfinger - 10 Nov 2014 13:21 - 49864 of 81564

Meanwhile the fortnightly Opinium poll for the Observer has topline figures of CON 29%(-4), LAB 32%(-1), LDEM 9%(+3), UKIP 19%(+1).

goldfinger - 10 Nov 2014 13:23 - 49865 of 81564

dawkthetalk • a few seconds ago
Mike Smithson ‏@MSmithsonPB 4m4 minutes ago

You can now get 6/1 on CON to win overall majority. This is the longest price ever.

The demise of the Tories as a majority party.

MaxK - 10 Nov 2014 13:26 - 49866 of 81564

that don't make sense gf.

hilary - 10 Nov 2014 13:29 - 49867 of 81564

I'm not interested in polls, Fishfinger. I told you before, look at the bookies and the let the trend be your friend till the bend at the end.

Conservative odds of getting most seats have been shortening over recent weeks, while Labour's odds have been drifting. By May, there's every probability that the Tories will get an overall majority if the trend continues. It could even be a landslide once the UKIPpers start to realise where their bread's buttered.

Fred1new - 10 Nov 2014 13:29 - 49868 of 81564

Hiliary,


The public are seeing Cameron for what he is "he's perceived by the public as a slimeball."

I think that is a fair appraisal.

But it is strange that Wilson and MacMillan and many others weren't seen in the same way. (Even if tarred by Oxford or Cambridge.)

But you have hit the nail on the head they public generally fall out with lying hypocrites and the eventually recognise one when they see him or her.

Chris Carson - 10 Nov 2014 13:32 - 49869 of 81564

By Steven Swinford, Senior Political Correspondent10:26AM GMT 10 Nov 2014
Britain is not prepared to remain in Europe "come what may" and Brussels needs to address people's concerns about immigration, David Cameron has said.
The Prime Minister said that "proper" controls on immigration are needed including reforms to movement within the European Union.
He said that Britain will not be "ordered around" by other European Union countries in the single currency union.
He told the Confederation of British Industry: "Britain will only succeed in Europe if we are a strong economy.
"From your economic strength comes a lot of your power in international engagement."You never get anywhere in life unless you have a clear strategy and plan.
"Frankly, Britain's future in Europe matters to our country and it isn't working for us at the moment and that's why we need to make changes.
"[We want to] belong to a Europe that addresses people's concerns, including concerns about immigration.
"Simply standing here saying I will stay in Europe and stick with Europe come what may is not a strategy, is not a plan and that won't work."
On immigration, he added: "We need to have proper immigration control. We need to do more, both outside the European Union and, frankly, inside the European Union.
"But the flipside of the coin on immigration is a welfare system that rewards work and an education system that turns out people with the skills necessary to do the jobs that we are creating in our country today.
"No immigration policy will succeed unless it's accompanied by that welfare and that education reform as well."

Fred1new - 10 Nov 2014 13:34 - 49870 of 81564

Napoleon,

Why don't you stand for PM, as the opposition looks pretty weak.

Take your white stick with you.


8-)

goldfinger - 10 Nov 2014 13:39 - 49871 of 81564

Hilary in 2 weeks time Camoron may be gone.

Theres a lot of Tory MPs going to be thinking how will I be set at the GE when Rochester as changed hands so easy.

I can see a stampede of defections.

And talking of bookies I think our posts crossed see post 49868

hilary - 10 Nov 2014 13:42 - 49872 of 81564

You do talk crap at times, Fishfinger. Cameron will still be prime minister going into the 2020 election.

MaxK - 10 Nov 2014 13:44 - 49873 of 81564

Well, millibandus is certainly working hard to get Cameroon re-elected.

MaxK - 10 Nov 2014 13:52 - 49874 of 81564

I can see where this TTIP is going for Dave and his masters, but I cant understand why Millibean and Cleggy are backing it, it goes against what they supposedly stand for.




The British government is leading a gunpowder plot against democracy

This bill of corporate rights threatens to blow the sovereignty of parliament unless it can be stopped



George Monbiot

The Guardian, Tuesday 4 November 2014 20.16 GMT

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/04/british-government-leading-gunpowder-plot-democracy-eu-us-trade



On this day a year ago, I was in despair. A dark cloud was rising over the Atlantic, threatening to blot out some of the freedoms our ancestors lost their lives to secure. The ability of parliaments on both sides of the ocean to legislate on behalf of their people was at risk from an astonishing treaty that would grant corporations special powers to sue governments. I could not see a way of stopping it.

Almost no one had heard of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, except those who were quietly negotiating it. And I suspected that almost no one ever would. Even the name seemed perfectly designed to repel public interest. I wrote about it for one reason: to be able to tell my children that I had not done nothing.

To my amazement, the article went viral. As a result of the public reaction and the involvement of remarkable campaigners, the European commission and the British government responded. The Stop TTIP petition now carries more than 750,000 signatures; the 38 Degrees petition has 910,000. Last month there were 450 protest actions across 24 member states. The commission was forced to hold a public consultation about the most controversial aspect, and 150,000 people responded. Never let it be said that people cannot engage with complex issues.

Nothing has yet been won. Corporations and governments – led by the UK – are mobilising to thwart this uprising. But their position slips a little every month. When the British minister responsible at the time, Ken Clarke, responded to my first articles, he insisted that “nothing could be more foolish” than making the European negotiating position public, as I’d proposed. But last month the commission was obliged to do just this. It’s beginning to look as if the fight against TTIP could become a historic victory for people against corporate power.

The central problem is what the negotiators call investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). The treaty would allow corporations to sue governments before an arbitration panel composed of corporate lawyers, at which other people have no representation, and which is not subject to judicial review.

Already, thanks to the insertion of ISDS into much smaller trade treaties, big business is engaged in an orgy of litigation, whose purpose is to strike down any law that might impinge on its anticipated future profits. The tobacco firm Philip Morris is suing governments in Uruguay and Australia for trying to discourage people from smoking. The oil firm Occidental was awarded $2.3bn in compensation from Ecuador, which terminated the company’s drilling concession in the Amazon after finding that Occidental had broken Ecuadorean law. The Swedish company Vattenfall is suing the German government for shutting down nuclear power. An Australian firm is suing El Salvador’s government for $300m for refusing permission for a goldmine over concerns it would poison the drinking water.

The same mechanism, under TTIP, could be used to prevent UK governments from reversing the privatisation of the railways and the NHS, or from defending public health and the natural world against corporate greed. The corporate lawyers who sit on these panels are beholden only to the companies whose cases they adjudicate, who at other times are their employers.

As one of these people commented: “When I wake up at night and think about arbitration, it never ceases to amaze me that sovereign states have agreed to investment arbitration at all … Three private individuals are entrusted with the power to review, without any restriction or appeal procedure, all actions of the government, all decisions of the courts, and all laws and regulations emanating from parliament.”

So outrageous is this arrangement that even the Economist, usually the champion of corporate power and trade treaties, has now come out against it. It calls investor-state dispute settlement “a way to let multinational companies get rich at the expense of ordinary people”.

When David Cameron and the corporate press launched their campaign against the candidacy of Jean-Claude Juncker for president of the European commission, they claimed that he threatened British sovereignty. It was a perfect inversion of reality. Juncker, seeing the way the public debate was going, promised in his manifesto that “I will not sacrifice Europe’s safety, health, social and data protection standards … on the altar of free trade … Nor will I accept that the jurisdiction of courts in the EU member states is limited by special regimes for investor disputes.” Juncker’s crime was that he had pledged not to give away as much of our sovereignty to corporate lawyers as Cameron and the media barons demanded.

Juncker is now coming under extreme pressure. Last month 14 states wrote to him, privately and without consulting their parliaments, demanding the inclusion of ISDS (the letter was leaked a few days ago). And who is leading this campaign? The British government. It’s hard to get your head around the duplicity involved. While claiming to be so exercised about our sovereignty that it is prepared to leave the EU, our government is secretly insisting that the European commission slaughter our sovereignty on behalf of corporate profits. Cameron is leading a gunpowder plot against democracy.

He and his ministers have failed to answer the howlingly obvious question: what’s wrong with the courts? If corporations want to sue governments, they already have a right to do so, through the courts, like anyone else. It’s not as if, with their vast budgets, they are disadvantaged in this arena. Why should they be allowed to use a separate legal system, to which the rest of us have no access? What happened to the principle of equality before the law?

If our courts are fit to deprive citizens of their liberty, why are they unfit to deprive corporations of anticipated future profits? Let’s not hear another word from the defenders of TTIP until they have answered this question.

It cannot be ducked for much longer. Unlike previous treaties, this one is being dragged by campaigners into the open, where its justifications shrivel on exposure to the light. There’s a tough struggle to come, and the outcome is by no means certain, but my sense is that we will win.


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