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
- 01 Dec 2014 23:52
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Everything is positive...lower oil price = go go economy
A couple of pence off the pump price = not a lot to the average punter
Where is the gain? Taxes are still way too high, money pissed up the wall of a go go economy.
Look at the social security budget....up, up, up, who are they trying to kid?
goldfinger
- 02 Dec 2014 00:00
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Social Security Budget is up because more people in work = more Tax Credits.
CRAZY.
Skinny employers not paying a decent wage.
Plus IDS and his cock up on universal credit.
Haystack
- 02 Dec 2014 00:35
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Of is interesting that none of Labour's predictions about economic policies under the coalition have come true. Where is the mass unemployment and the double dip recession?
goldfinger
- 02 Dec 2014 01:22
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And why have we lost out triple A ratings with 2 of the 3 Rating Agencies Hays??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????.
Plus prove to me the Unemployment figure shouldnt have at least 1.5 million added on to it.
And we missed the double dip by a cock hair.
goldfinger
- 02 Dec 2014 03:03
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#CameronMustGo
The third most retweeted post was from Twitter user @coolvibes77, a criminal barrister who tweeted a quote from Salma Yaqoob, the former leader of the Respect party who attacked Tory Iain Duncan Smith over his approach to austerity.
cynic
- 02 Dec 2014 07:44
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that footballer is just a rather nasty bully ...... characterful? .... well perhaps, but then so is alex salmond
MaxK
- 02 Dec 2014 08:33
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Fred1new
- 02 Dec 2014 08:35
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Fred1new
- 02 Dec 2014 08:43
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ExecLine
- 02 Dec 2014 08:49
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Stan
- 02 Dec 2014 08:50
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Eton's a charity is it?... for tax purposes obviously.
MaxK
- 02 Dec 2014 09:05
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doodlebug4
- 02 Dec 2014 09:31
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By Georgia Graham, Political Correspondent
10:00PM GMT 01 Dec 2014
Duncan Selbie, the head of Public Health England, says that people do not know how much they are drinking and warns alcohol is a 'silent killer'
Enjoying a glass of wine after work does the same harm as drinking three shots of vodka, the head of Public Health England has warned as he said alcohol was becoming the "silent killer" of working age Britons.
Duncan Selbie said that deaths from working age people have increased by 500 per cent since the 1970s because many people "pour a glass and have no idea how much they are drinking".
MPs say that people are safer enjoying an alcoholic drink in their local pub as measures are controlled rather than buying large quantities of wine at "rock bottom prices" in supermarkets and drinking in "non-sociable atmosphere away from people's communities".
They also warn that drinking at home is problematic among the middle classes who pour themselves a glass of wine at the end of the day.
Writing in his weekly briefing to staff Mr Selbie said liver disease is now the third biggest killer of working age adults: "And it is a silent killer, with 75 per cent of people with cirrhosis only being diagnosed once they are admitted to hospital."
He added that the illness is "largely preventable" but that one of the biggest risk factors, alcohol, was difficult to control. He wrote: "For example, a large glass of wine is like three shots of vodka, so it is very easy for people to pour a glass and have no idea how much they are drinking."
Last week the Lancet commission recommended that Liver scans should be offered by GPs as it said middle-class drinking is turning Britain into the capital of Europe for alcohol-related disease.
Senior doctors have said too many people were treating alcohol dependence as “a lifestyle choice, like Armani jeans” and that Britain is now the only country apart from Finland in western Europe in which prevalence of liver disease is increasing.
Greg Mulholland, the Liberal Democrat MP and chair of the all Parliamentary Save the Pub Group, said that if people enjoyed a drink in the "social atmosphere" of the pub rather than behind closed doors it was easier to keep track of their drinking.
He said: "The evidence clearly shows that where measures are controlled and where there is a landlord who has a legal responsibility not to serve people who have had too much to drink, that clearly is a much better place for people to enjoy a alcohol in that context.
"What the Government need to do now is stop so many pubs being turned into supermarkets where ironically alcohol so then sold at rock bottom prices in a unsupervised way and is then drunk in a non-sociable atmosphere away from people's communities.""
Tracey Crouch, the former chair of the alcohol misuse group, and Conservative MP: "The middle class professional is coming home of an evening and pouring themselves a glass of wine with dinner and then possibly another after that without realising that over the course of a week it can tot what is medically advised.
"I'm really please that Public Health England has raised this, because raising awareness of this is not about telling people they cannot drink it is about getting people to understand the drinking habits they have, and it does become a habit, it become a habitual part of your evening rather than some sort of special occasion when people enjoy a glass of wine.
"People will see it is a very different thing pouring a glass of wine to pouring a three measure vodka but this is why it important to have calorific content on the labels - you wouldn't pour three shots of vodka but you also wouldn't sit down and eat six doughnuts - but you tend to pour yourself a large measure of wine not a small glass.
"If you look at liver disease maps there is a perception that it is all going to be deprived areas but actually you see a significant increase in the number of people who are more affluent who are getting liver disease."
Baroness Hayter, the Labour peer, said: "Wine is stronger, and the ordinary wines you buy, we just don't look at how strong it is - we assume all wine is the same per cent and it isn't it can vary enormously... glasses are getting bigger is actually quite serious, it sounds silly but it means you can suddenly be drinking two units instead of one."
Fiona Bruce, the Labour MP, said: "This is an issue we need to take much more seriously, and revise our view of the binge drinker as a teenager out late at night.
"Increasingly too high levels of alcohol consumption are occurring in the home by older age groups and we all have a responsibility to challenge and help address this."
The Telegraph
MaxK
- 02 Dec 2014 09:33
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The horror, the horror
TANKER
- 02 Dec 2014 09:39
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bbc 1 fake Britain 60 discount stores selling fake goods and making people ill
if its cheap its fake .
TANKER
- 02 Dec 2014 09:44
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if you use a discount store you can not be sure the goods are safe .
do not use discount stores goods on your body .it is all most impossible to
tell if it safe or fake by the general public.
always buy from a main dealer
b@m home bargains two of the sops and 99p shops they did not no they were fake
TANKER
- 02 Dec 2014 09:47
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what a good programme to watch fake Britain . all fact .internet is full of fake goods dangerous to your children .be aware it could kill your child
tomasz
- 02 Dec 2014 09:49
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Enforce compulsory drug tests for all Members of parliament, and where necessary prosecute under the misuse of substances act.
Demand for Members of parliament to be drug tested. Starting with George Osborne.
To: Home Secretary (currently Theresa May)
Why is this important?
"Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne's appearance and bizarre behaviour during Prime Minister's Questions on the 26th of November 2014 begs the question of whether or not he was or had recently been under the influence of drugs. The government's exponentially failing drug policy puts public health at risk and defies the advice of their own researchers, whilst lining the pockets of dubious pharmaceutical companies and criminal gangs dealing on the black market. It is also in the public interest to know whether MPs are dabbling in legal highs, in a bid to escape failing a conventional drug test."
tomasz
- 02 Dec 2014 09:52
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TANKER
- 02 Dec 2014 10:06
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milions to be spent on internet buying fake goods that are useless and dangerous
always go to the shop to buy or be caught by crooks .
if you want goods go to the shop . if you buy on line then do not moan when you are ripped off and no were to go to get cash back