Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

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.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 13:19 - 49977 of 81564

Manuel,

Gripes,

It is one of the reasons being used to inspire griping.

(If there are abuses they should be addressed, I wonder how big the abuses are.)

I think a diversion from addressing the real problems for migration in the first place.

cynic - 11 Nov 2014 13:30 - 49978 of 81564

ah well fred, it depends on how philanthropic one wishes to be at a given time

easy to rattle on at length of this one, and on various aspects, we would almost certainly agree .... however, the theory, practice and actuality are likely to many miles apart, for all sorts of reasons

MaxK - 11 Nov 2014 14:02 - 49979 of 81564

European Arrest Warrant: Last night's Commons farce reveals the disgusting way in which Britain is governed

This administration is in serious trouble for one reason – they fail to see that they did anything wrong


Cameron-Aide_3102154b.jpg



By Douglas Carswell

11:08AM GMT 11 Nov 2014


It was when Government ministers started mouthing insults across the Commons chamber that I knew they were in trouble.


Yesterday’s extraordinary scenes in the House of Commons might not have shed much light on the European Arrest Warrant. But they did reveal some uncomfortable truths about the way we are governed.


Thirteen days ago, the Prime Minister solemnly promised that our elected representatives in the House of Commons that “there will be a vote” over the European Arrest Warrant. He made it clear that this would happen “before the Rochester by election” on 20th November.


Yesterday was the day that this was supposed to happen. It didn’t.


Mr Cameron’s own whips engaged in a straight forward deception – and were brutally caught out.


Since the House of Commons no longer has the power to decide if we sign up to the European Arrest Warrant, whips decided to avoid having such a vote at all. Cunning, eh?

But then Speaker Bercow, doing precisely what a Commons speaker ought to do, made it clear that the Commons had been had. The vote that might follow, said the Speaker, would not be about the European Arrest Warrant. There was uproar. A contemptuous fury was directed at the Government benches by their own side.


More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/11222835/European-Arrest-Warrant-Last-nights-Commons-farce-reveals-the-disgusting-way-in-which-Britain-is-governed.html

MaxK - 11 Nov 2014 14:04 - 49980 of 81564

Does anyone other than Haystack seriously think Dave will be prime minister after the next GE?

doodlebug4 - 11 Nov 2014 14:07 - 49981 of 81564

Yes, I do ! :-)

hilary - 11 Nov 2014 14:09 - 49982 of 81564

It's pretty much nailed on.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 14:27 - 49983 of 81564

I suggest that DB4 that you hold both of Hilary's hand and pop down to the chemist and renew your prescriptions.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 14:27 - 49984 of 81564

.

Haystack - 11 Nov 2014 14:27 - 49985 of 81564

Of course he will be. He will also be the PM. It may be a coalition, but he will be PM.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 14:31 - 49986 of 81564

Haze.

The liberals would touch his hands and Farage would spit on it.

The public and the party recognise Cameron for what his is, as was shown by a large part of his party being revolted by him in the HP last night.

(Hilary's description of him as a "slime ball" seems accurate.)

Mind I can see how he is acceptable to you.

ExecLine - 11 Nov 2014 14:47 - 49987 of 81564

So what do the intellectuals, if indeed there are any on here, think to the following:

Chris Packham asks Ant and Dec to end 'animal abuse' on 'I'm a Celebrity Get me Out of Here!'

Personally and intellectually speaking, I like this program and find it quite entertaining too(? !!) but I do think Chris has a damn good point.

cynic - 11 Nov 2014 14:49 - 49988 of 81564

are the animals being abused the muppets who agree to perform on the show?

Stan - 11 Nov 2014 15:36 - 49989 of 81564

Muppets? Skinny your c&p pic skills are required.

goldfinger - 11 Nov 2014 17:06 - 49990 of 81564

Tories to miss immigration targets despite Cameron’s pledge11/11/2014

130804xenophobia.jpg?resize=529%2C331
Immigration fail: When Theresa May tried to get illegal immigrants to “go home” with an ad campaign on vans driving through London, it caused national protest – and this response from the campaigning group Liberty.

Remember when David Cameron pledged to get immigration into the UK down from the hundreds of thousands into the tens of thousands?

He and his party are trying to wipe that from history.

They’ve got a history of doing that with their mistakes. Do you also remember when the Tories’ pre-2010 election pledges were wiped from their websites?

On immigration, Cameron pledged to get it below 100,000 per year – but now his own spokesman describes it as an “objective” and Theresa May, the Home Secretary who was charged with achieving this feat, called it a “comment”.

A comment?

From The Guardian: “Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, the home secretary made clear that the government was preparing the ground for a public admission of failure on the migration target.

“Asked to explain the missed target, May said: “When we made that… comment, when we said … we would be aiming to bring the net migration down to the tens of thousands and we wanted to do that within this parliament – yes we were very clear that was what we wanted to do.”

“The cautious remarks by the home secretary, who stumbled slightly as she referred to the net migration target as “that comment”, contrasted with the unequivocal “no ifs, no buts” declaration made by the prime minister in April 2011.”

In fact, it is possible that Cameron’s party should be glad that their plans to limit immigration have failed. Recent figures have reiterated the oft-made point that immigrants contribute more to the UK than they take from it - and the measures that the Tories have introduced backfired badly for universities, where the number of foreign Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics students has plummeted due to the UK’s “unwelcoming” stance.

The government has now announced a push to increase the number of British STEM students, and this is clearly to counter the loss to universities. The cover story is that they want more young women taking up the subjects.

Still, there are arguments that immigrants are taking jobs away from British-born people – and that their presence is pushing down wages.

But Mrs May can’t say that to the other EU member states without seeming racist, so she is calling on them to “reform” one of the fundamental pillars of the Union – freedom of movement – on the grounds that it encourages criminality.

She said: “There is a growing concern across the European Union of the way in which the freedom of movement is now being used.

“We’re seeing it being abused, possibly by criminal gangs who are trafficking human beings, we’re seeing it being abused through sham marriages.”

Why not just admit that freedom of movement is being abused – most clearly because people in the less-advantaged EU countries see it as an opportunity for a better life elsewhere?

It could be argued that the EU made a huge mistake in letting some countries – particularly in eastern Europe – into the Union before they were on a level with the rest of us, economically.

If we’re going to let these countries in, then it seems reasonable that we should protect ourselves from this kind of opportunism by working to bring their standard of living up to the same level as the rest of us before allowing freedom of movement to kick in.

It seems certain that far fewer people would want to immigrate into the UK if it offered no material difference in their quality of life.

Doesn’t that seem reasonable?

What a shame reason has nothing to do with the Conservative Party.

Cameron, May and the rest are going to continue pushing in the wrong direction, ever-harder as each successive plan fails.

Perhaps they are the ones who should be shown the door.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 17:27 - 49991 of 81564

Agree with conclusions.

Haystack - 11 Nov 2014 17:47 - 49992 of 81564

Tony Blair has said that Ed Miliband has his full support.

ExecLine - 11 Nov 2014 17:56 - 49993 of 81564

Boris Johnson has said that Ed Miliband has his full support too.

Fred1new - 11 Nov 2014 18:28 - 49995 of 81564

Does he get paid for that?

MaxK - 11 Nov 2014 18:34 - 49996 of 81564

EU court rules benefit tourists can be excluded from welfare schemes

The European Court of Justice declares EU member states must have 'the possibility of refusing' social benefits to 'economically inactive' EU citizens






By Bruno Waterfield in Brussels and Steven Swinford

11:10AM GMT 11 Nov 2014





Britain can ban European Union migrants from claiming "special non-contributory cash benefits" for up to five years, according to a landmark judgement in Luxembourg.


The EU courts have ruled that it is up to the Government, not Brussels, how it drafts legislation that that excludes foreign, European nationals from claiming social assistance benefits.


As well as asserting national sovereignty over out-of-work welfare benefits, the European Court of Justice has stopped unemployed migrants from using human rights legislation to appeal against measures blocking them from benefits.


"The directive on free movement of EU citizens and the regulation on the coordination of social security systems do not preclude domestic legislation which excludes nationals of other member states from entitlement to certain ‘special non-contributory cash benefits’, although they are granted to nationals of the host member state who are in the same situation," the EU court ruled on Tuesday.


The flagship judgment, following a case in Germany, confirms that governments can treat European jobseekers differently from their own nationals who are in the same situation without any recourse by migrants to EU human rights laws.


"When the member states lay down the conditions for the grant of special non-contributory cash benefits and the extent of such benefits, they are not implementing EU law, and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU is therefore not applicable," said the ruling.



More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/11222702/EU-court-rules-benefit-tourists-can-be-excluded-from-welfare-schemes.html
Register now or login to post to this thread.