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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 - 05 Jan 2015 10:34 - 54308 of 81564

that actually wasn't what you wrote at all, but never mind

certainly the character of high streets continues to change - i don't suppose ours is very much different from others - with many more coffee and sandwich shops and similar, and fewer "normal" retailers whether indy or chain

however, indy shops that sell the right quality and variety for their area do fine, though landlords need to be a lot less greedy if they want to avoid high vacancy, and local authorities also need to get their brains working (should they have any) to encourage footfall - eg cheap or fee parking, pedestrianised zones, cafes encouraged to use their outdoor space (RBK&C is a disgrace in that respect), and arguably biz rates slanted to help indies

Stan - 05 Jan 2015 12:05 - 54309 of 81564

Never mind all that Alf, E/Line's still waiting.

ExecLine - 05 Jan 2015 14:49 - 54310 of 81564

'Baking Day' was usually the same day of the week as 'Pay Day' and so one housewife would ask for a short term loan from one of her housewife neighbours until baking day came. The inference was given, that this was obviously the same day as pay day but the inference was given without embarassingly having to refer to 'pay day' as such. (You know what women are like, I'm sure?).

The loan would be without any monetary interest but appreciation for it would be given, perhaps with the gift of, say a pie, tart, small cake, loaf of bread or similar as a token of thanks.

Hence, "Can you lend me 'half a crown' until I bake?"

Of course, with inflation, 'half a crown' these days is now roughly the same as £50.

Fred1new - 05 Jan 2015 14:55 - 54311 of 81564

I will bake you a pie for £50.

Interesting.

What area is the practice from?

cynic - 05 Jan 2015 15:00 - 54312 of 81564

hourly baking rates were obviously high in those days too :-)

goldfinger - 05 Jan 2015 15:11 - 54313 of 81564

Hey Cynic bugalugs........... "The Guardian reports that John Lewis' boss Andy Street has warned other retailers that Black Friday promotions must be kept under control in 2015, as strong demand over the promotional weekend hit Christmas profitability.

thruppppppppppppp

Shortie - 05 Jan 2015 15:11 - 54314 of 81564

I now have these on the mind.... They do a sausage cheese and bean slice which I like..

ExecLine - 05 Jan 2015 15:19 - 54315 of 81564

Fred

You miss the point. Are you fick or wot?

Way back then loans were for 'half a crown'. I guess the reason for this was that we are talking weekly wages back then of, say perhaps £3 - £7 or so. And so a short term loan of 'half a crown' for a couple of days wouldn't be too much to take on for either party.

Hence, (£20 to) £50 or so would be a comparable amount these days, dontchafink?

And the area? Well, this was a 'working class ' practice. So let's suppose, somewhere 'up North' (of Watford?).

cynic - 05 Jan 2015 15:20 - 54316 of 81564

i did better than read the guardian ... i listened to the guy on the box this morning :-) ..... i recollect that store/store was flat or perhaps marginally down, but on-line was +19% and overall, a more than satisfactory result

NXT has performed similarly well

==============

indeed, when i reflect, i bought nearly all my pressies on line, though i checked out quite a lot in the stores first ..... saved lugging stuff around, and/or was then ble to find the colour or size or whatever on line, where the store may not have had it in stock

doodlebug4 - 05 Jan 2015 15:29 - 54317 of 81564


Ed Miliband launched Labour's election campaign with a call to arms - which is to say, an invitation to class war. This was going to be an election about "who we are as a country" , and NOT about the economy or his party's historical embarrassment in the running of same. The speech was surprisingly (to me) short on policy and very long on ideology of the most frankly sentimental kind. There was scarcely any attempt to answer the charge that Labour's spending plans were utterly unrealistic - except for a flat, unsuppported denial that any of their pledges required additional borrowing.


Labour would be "fighting to be the kind of country we know we can be - more just, more equal and more prosperous." And this fight would be a "house to house" campaign, which made it sound like a bloodcurdling last-ditch battleground of the ugliest sort of street war. Except that this battle would consist entirely of "conversations" - four million of them to be precise - to be held on the nations' doorsteps. The enemy - demonically evil as it was - would be talked to death. Mr Miliband gave little indication of how the other side of this conversation might have its questions answered. For example, if greater spending is the answer to the problems of the NHS, why didn't the doubling of health spending under the last Labour government improve healthcare beyond recognition?


Neatly slipping in a change of direction, Mr Miliband made an emotional commitment to the value of immigration which has "helped to build this country" but then added that in the interests of fairness, people should have to contribute before they could receive benefits. This was a gesture to his white working class core vote but also a warning to his party that any change in policy on immigrant benefits must be carefully framed so as not to appear xenophobic or racist.


There was a clear message for his activists on how to fight this War of the Doorstep: don't get bogged down in detail about deficits and borrowing and economic logic. If Labour is to have a hope in hell of being credible, we must make this election about ideology - or what ordinarily people might call moral values. It is about "justice", "equality" and bashing the rich: food banks vs bankers' bonuses, the "scandal of zero hours contracts". Above all it must be about "putting working people first" - by which he appeared to mean the kind of working people Labour approves of, not the striving young professionals who suddenly finding themselves paying higher rate tax when they manage to acheive any degree of financial well-being.


This was a speech which brazenly put vacuous moral blackmail before economic or social reality. It ought to provide the Conservatives with an open goal.

The Telegraph

goldfinger - 05 Jan 2015 15:32 - 54318 of 81564

Onlines OK for non clothing gifts but clothing and tech surely you want to feel the quality never mind the width.!!!!!!!!!!!!!

cynic - 05 Jan 2015 15:40 - 54319 of 81564

daughter - found the gift, but not the colour ... colour was available on line
son - local shop did not have the size and could not order for delivery before christmas .... ordered direct on line
wife - daughter advised style etc and took pic in shop .... ordered on line

general grocery shopping - almost a one-off, but as we had a family invasion between christmas and new year, Beloved ordered nearly everything via OCDO - they were very efficient indeed

wine - i always buy on line or at least on the phone
books - i nearly always buy on line
non-fitted clothing (eg socks etc) - would be more than happy to buy on line, but only from a trusted and known supplier/shop

MaxK - 05 Jan 2015 15:49 - 54320 of 81564

Fred1new - 05 Jan 2015 15:50 - 54321 of 81564

Exec.

Not more obtuse than average.

Firstly, I was gently taking the piss.

Secondly, I have not read or heard the expression before and was interested to know from whence it came.

===========

MaxK - 05 Jan 2015 16:02 - 54322 of 81564

Ed Miliband is still unable to make eye contact with the public

The 2015 general election campaign started today. Britain is still waiting to hear from the Labour Party and its leader.



By Dan Hodges

11:41AM GMT 05 Jan 2015




This morning I woke up to the sound of the Today programme announcing the start of the Labour Party’s general election campaign. And by the time I’d rubbed the sleep from eyes I was again reminded why Labour is going to lose.


I obviously didn’t have my notebook in bed with me. But I was sure I heard the presenter telling me that Ed Miliband would today pledge to win the election via grassroots activism and a campaign of fighting from doorstep to doorstep. That, unless I missed something, was Labour’s top line.


So I got up, switched on my TV, and waited for Miliband’s campaign launch. And sure enough, there it was.


“Our campaign is setting the goal of holding four million conversations with people in just four months about how we change our country. That is almost twice the number we’ve ever done before..”


Did you get that Britain? As you set off this morning on your first chilly commute of the year, this is what Labour is offering you. Twice as many doorstep conversations as it achieved in the last election. Not just a few more conversations. Not even a lot more. Twice as more.


And that’s not all. The man who wants to be your next prime minister also plans to “set out clear principles for the way this campaign will be conducted so that it can address people’s cynicism and anger towards politics”.

So as you stood there on your windswept platform, waiting for the delayed 7.53, tortured by worry over how this year’s election campaign would be conducted, you did so needlessly. Ed Miliband has principles. Clear principles. And here they are.

He will “win this election, not by buying up thousands of poster sites, but by having millions of conversations”. So if, over the next few weeks, if you see a poster that looks like it’s been put there by the Labour Party, you can safely ignore it. Some other guy called Miliband must have put it there.


Ed Miliband will also “offer hope, not falsehood”. So remember that election poster Labour unveiled over the weekend, (even though Labour obviously doesn’t do posters), claiming the Tories would take Britain back to the 1930s where there was no NHS? It’s all true. On May 8, if you’ve voted David Cameron back in, your local hospital will put up a huge “For Sale” sign. And a few months after that it will be a giant block of luxury flats. And every time you get a twinge, you’ll have to go and visit a dodgy-looking bloke with a tall top hat and a sinister looking black bag in some back alley in Shoreditch. Unless you live outside of London. In which case, if the Tories win, you will just drop dead on the spot.



More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/labour/11325177/Ed-Miliband-is-still-unable-to-make-eye-contact-with-the-public.html

cynic - 05 Jan 2015 16:04 - 54323 of 81564

Ed Miliband is still unable to make eye contact with the public

perhaps he's still too green and has still not sufficiently practiced to perfect his sincere look

Fred1new - 05 Jan 2015 16:15 - 54324 of 81564




I worry about "said to be" politicians like this one!

Fred1new - 05 Jan 2015 16:17 - 54325 of 81564

'Train 'Em Up, Kick 'Em Out. It's A Bit Shortsighted, Isn't It?'




I am now looking for Cameron.

May knows where to grab Farage and Cameron.

By their curls.

doodlebug4 - 05 Jan 2015 17:16 - 54326 of 81564

When Miliband speaks it's as if he is trying to masticate his way through some raw squid in his mouth.His nashers are never going to last the pace until the GE in May.:-)

Shortie - 05 Jan 2015 17:23 - 54327 of 81564

I cant stand looking at any politicians or be bothered to listen to their snail paced dribble.... I for one will be happy when the whole thing is over and couldn't really care less who the next PM is, same old shit just a different face on the end of it...
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