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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.

MaxK - 26 Dec 2014 22:58 - 53763 of 81564

The point of both articles have sailed straight past you...you didn't even come close to twigging.

Haystack - 26 Dec 2014 23:36 - 53764 of 81564

Both the articles are similar to a number of similar pieces written recently. It is a sort of alternative reality. I am not sure what the motives are of the authors.

ExecLine - 27 Dec 2014 00:04 - 53765 of 81564

Our area has a warning for tomorrow for 'yellow snow'.

Or was it a 'yellow warning' for snow? Hmmm? Well, whatever....

Warning: Do not eat yellow snow.

MaxK - 27 Dec 2014 09:31 - 53766 of 81564





From the comment section:


If you pay for your van, pay for the fuel and pay for the insurance City Link will still give you a job! (According to their website).


Become a Service Delivery Partner with City Link

Do you have enthusiasm, determination and ambition? If you would like the flexibility of being self employed, with the support of a large established company, choosing to become a Service Delivery Partner with City Link offers the perfect partnership.

Some of the benefits of being a Service Delivery Partner with City Link include:

Low-cost entry (Giles Insurance, fully liveried sub-letting vehicle scheme, flat rate VAT scheme)
Competitive rates of pay
Prompt BACS payments
Full training
A branded uniform
Working as a Service Delivery Partner is rewarding both financially and personally. You can expect flexibility, great rates of pay and plenty of support and advice from us.
Click below to apply for the opportunity to partner with City Link and earn as you deliver.

Apply now
City Link Owner Drivers
A branded uniform! 170 drops a day!

*City Link gives no guarantee that there will be parcels for delivery and/or collection on any day. City Link is not under any obligation to provide a minimum amount of work or any work to the SDP.



http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cartoon/2014/dec/26/ben-jennings-collapse-city-link-cartoon

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 10:23 - 53767 of 81564

It is up to HMRC to determine self employment. The basis always was that self employment was not allowed where you worked exclusively for one company for a long period, meaning you were not running a proper business. This relationship was always regarded as employer/ employee. There has always been casual labour to cope with temporary needs such as seasonal demand.

MaxK - 27 Dec 2014 10:29 - 53768 of 81564

Yes, thats's the way it used to be.

It's obviously changed, and not for the better.

Most self employed people don't know how to run a business, they confuse going to work with making money...see city link story above.

Even if the company had kept going, most of the self employed drivers would have eventually gone bust...you cant run a business on the rates being offered, not with the overheads that come with the "job"

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 10:42 - 53769 of 81564

The courier business is a very difficult one to run. Without the self employed incentive, parcels turn up much later. Since the mass changeover to self employed status, we now receive packages in record time. The drive for this speed has come from online businesses such as Amazon, EBay and stores like Argos, Tesco, John Lewis. The genie out of the box now and it would be difficult to return to the previously slower service. The current self employed system gives an incentive to couriers to deliver at speed.

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 11:27 - 53770 of 81564

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/dec/26/labour-bloodbath-scotland-general-election-2015-snp-westminster

Labour set for a bloodbath in Scotland in general election, poll says

Labour is on course for a bloodbath in Scotland in 2015, according to a special Guardian/ICM online poll.

The Scottish National party, which took only 20% of the vote in the 2010 general election, has subsequently more than doubled its vote to reach a commanding 43% of the prospective poll next May. Scottish Labour, which secured a very strong 42% in Gordon Brown’s homeland last time around, has since tumbled by 16 points to just 26%.

The Conservatives sink from 2010’s 17% to 13%, while the great bulk of the 19% share that the Liberal Democrats scored last time around is wiped out as they fall by 13 points to 6%.



On a uniform swing, these results – which are reinforced by a recent Survation poll for the Daily Record – would entirely redraw the political map. Labour’s band of 41 Scottish MPs would be reduced to a parliamentary rump of just 10 members, underlining that the Scottish party’s newly elected leader, Jim Murphy, has a mountain to climb.

The SNP, meanwhile, would storm ahead from the mere six MPs it returned in 2010 to take a crushing majority of 45 of Scotland’s 59 constituencies. The Lib Dems, who currently hold 11 seats, would lose all but three, and the Tories would continue to languish with the single seat they currently hold.

Such dramatic Labour losses north of the border could easily offset the gains Ed Miliband hopes to make in England and Wales and potentially put Downing Street beyond his reach next year. But a unique analysis, conducted for the Guardian by Prof John Curtice, of Strathclyde University, suggests that the crude assumption of a uniform swing could actually be understating the catastrophe facing the party.

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 13:29 - 53771 of 81564

I would be surprised if Mundell held held his seat and would expect at the May election that Labour will hold on to 30 seats.

Cameron's bribery will back fire.

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 13:29 - 53772 of 81564

I would be surprised if Mundell held held his seat and would expect at the May election that Labour will hold on to 30 seats.

Cameron's bribery will back fire.

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 13:34 - 53773 of 81564

We’ve almost arrived at the Christmas break. Today we have new polls from Opinium (their last of the year) and YouGov (their penultimate of the year – there is one more to come on Monday night). I’m not sure when Populus put out their final poll of the year, and Survation have a Scottish poll being published next week, but that should be it for the year.

Topline figures for today’s two polls are:

Opinium/Observer – CON 29%(nc), LAB 36%(+2), LDEM 6%(nc), UKIP 16%(-3), GRN 5% (tabs)

YouGov/Sunday Times – CON 32%, LAB 34%, LDEM 6%, UKIP 15%, GRN 8% (tabs)



Latest YouGov / The Sun results 22nd December - Con 32%, Lab 36%, LD 6%, UKIP 16%; APP -22


Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 13:36 - 53774 of 81564



Just like Osborne and Cameron and cronies have done!

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 13:42 - 53775 of 81564





Cruella, has just done a deal with Boris Berlusconi.

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 13:50 - 53776 of 81564

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/referendum-reset-voting-dials-as-scottish-majority-switch-to-support-snp-over-labour-9946040.html

Labour Party faces wipe-out in Scotland as majority expected to vote for SNP

The Labour Party could face being wiped-out in Scotland – despite a leadership change – due to the growing popularity of the SNP in the run up to the general election next May, a poll suggested on Friday.

The stronghold threat comes two weeks after Jim Murphy was declared the new leader of the party which is expected to get 26 per cent of the vote while the pro-independence Scottish National Party is on track for 43 per cent, a Guardian/ICM poll of 1,004 Scottish adults states.

A dramatic turnaround, based on Labour’s 42 per cent in 2010, could diminish any hopes for Ed Miliband to beat the Conservative and Lib Dem coalition to form his own Labour-lead government next year.

Labour’s previous hold on 41 seats could slip down to 10, while SNP are set to increase their takeover from six seats to 45 of Scotland’s 59 total places in the House of Commons.

Although the SNP lost a historic independence referendum in September, by 55 per cent compared to 45, it has been said to have forever changed the landscape of Scottish politics with a high voter turnout of nearly 85 per cent of the whole population.

“We are prospectively looking at the collapse of citadels that have always been Labour since the 1920s,” Professor John Curtice, a polling expert from Strathclyde University, told the Guardian newspaper.

“It is becoming clear that the independence referendum has reset all the dials.

“Previously rock-solid Labour seats in Glasgow voted yes in the referendum, and this now appears to be giving rise to a particular surge of nationalist sentiment in those parts of Scotland where it was once assumed that the SNP couldn’t reach.”

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 13:53 - 53777 of 81564

This is the important part of the article above


A dramatic turnaround, based on Labour’s 42 per cent in 2010, could diminish any hopes for Ed Miliband to beat the Conservative and Lib Dem coalition to form his own Labour-lead government next year.

MaxK - 27 Dec 2014 14:13 - 53778 of 81564

Unless the SNP do a deal with old labour.

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 15:40 - 53779 of 81564

Tories are clutching at straws!

They are sinking in the mud.

Probably become 2 minor parties of looney right and the lost.

cynic - 27 Dec 2014 15:43 - 53780 of 81564

The courier business is a very difficult one to run. Without the self employed incentive, parcels turn up much later.

hays - how on earth did you dream up that crap? .........
clearly you have never bothered to talk to any of the courier drivers, for if you had, you would (might!) have learnt that drivers get treated like dirt, whether it's city sprint, hermes, yodel, dhl or 99% of all other such companies .... why else do you think there is such a turnover in drivers?

the drivers do not even get paid the minimum wage, but are merely given a pretty miserly flat rate per drop or whatever, which will then quite regularly get "chiselled" through refusal to pay tunnel or road tolls (drivers can't get receipts), or even just plain swindling on the calculations at the end of the week/month

sick pay, holiday pay, guaranteed work? ...... hahaha!

i could go on at much greater length, but you should get the general idea from the above

Haystack - 27 Dec 2014 15:47 - 53781 of 81564

It is looking increasingly likely that due to Scottish losses, Labour may not be the biggest party but instead it could be the Conservatives. The rule is that the largest party has the first chance to form a government. That could be the Conservatives as a minority or a coalition with the Libs and or the DUP. Labour may be left waiting for leftovers of which there may be none.

Fred1new - 27 Dec 2014 16:14 - 53782 of 81564

Well, if the did I would suppose I would like a blood less revolution!
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