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.
Haystack
- 09 Jan 2015 18:14
- 54744 of 81564
Good news.
Abu Hamza (Mr two hooks) has been sentenced, in New York, to life in prison.
doodlebug4
- 09 Jan 2015 18:33
- 54745 of 81564
Excellent. Are his wife and children still living in this country at the taxpayer's expense?
Stan
- 09 Jan 2015 18:45
- 54746 of 81564
"It is a funny thing that if you try and type Farage on an Android tablet it corrects it to Garage. Smart this new technology!"
Well well, H/S defects to the kipper Party alert!
MaxK
- 09 Jan 2015 18:55
- 54747 of 81564
Greek minister moves to allay fears of bank run
Gikas Hardouvelis says probability of a bank run is small and deposits are safe, as Greece prepares for snap general election
Helena Smith in Athens
The Guardian, Friday 9 January 2015 17.31 GMT
Greece’s finance minister has sought to allay fears that political uncertainty prompted by snap polls later this month will spark a run on banks, amid worrying signs that savers are rushing to withdraw deposits.
As Athens prepares for a general election on 25 January, Gikas Hardouvelis said the banking system was safe, although he acknowledged mounting evidence that the rich were transferring money abroad. In December alone, €2.5bn left lenders.
“The probability of a bank run is very small; the public understands that deposits are safe,” he said, adding that around €70bn had left Greece since its economic meltdown five years ago.
Hardouvelis conceded that the sudden increase in outflows at the start of a campaign that is expected to become increasingly caustic could not be taken lightly.
“It is still the beginning and we have to watch depositors’ behaviour very carefully,” he told the Wall Street Journal. “You don’t just need a stable government to be formed quickly, you need a government with a clear policy forward.”
Greek investors, led by shipowners and other industrialists, have stepped up transfers of funds since inconclusive presidential polls in parliament forced the two-party coalition government to call the election. One insider said bankers were being instructed to make multimillion-euro transfers daily.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/09/greek-finance-minister-bank-run-election
quote:
"Der Spiegel, which has good links to Germany’s intelligence service, also reported that a Greek euro exit was considered inevitable if the radical leftists won."
Fred1new
- 09 Jan 2015 19:42
- 54748 of 81564
Haze,
I thought privatisation of the NHS was the solution to conservative problems.
Also, it seems the English NHS in spite of money being poured into it by Osborne is worse for delays and treatment that Wales.
You seem very quiet.
==-=-0--
Hinchingbrooke Hospital: Circle to withdraw from contract
doodlebug4
- 09 Jan 2015 19:57
- 54749 of 81564
"Haze,
I thought privatisation of the NHS was the solution to conservative problems."
Even by your standards Fred, that is a totally asinine comment.
doodlebug4
- 09 Jan 2015 20:25
- 54750 of 81564
For you Fred since you like to play party politics;
Before Circle took over the contract, Hinchingbrooke was a struggling hospital. It was labouring under £40m of debts and in 2009 the then Labour government decided to launch a process to bring in private providers.
MaxK
- 09 Jan 2015 20:33
- 54751 of 81564
Yes, but that doesent count in Fred's world.
Also, the hated zero hour contracts lark really got going when Noo Lab tipped the wink to their mates. (2008)
goldfinger
- 09 Jan 2015 20:51
- 54752 of 81564
Max that doesnt mean that the Tories have to make it government policy.
Youl also find food Banks started under Labour but they werent meant to be an alternative to the welfare state. They just gave additional backing at a time when welfare meant welfare and not pleading for life. There was an handfull under labour, under the Tories its a National Institution.
The 5th richest country in the World. Next under IDS its back to the Work House.......do you really want that??????.
Its a disgrace what this present Tory government have done to the real working class man, but you mark my words they will seek and get revenge.
MaxK
- 09 Jan 2015 21:07
- 54753 of 81564
gf.
The current mob of tories are beyond the pale imo. However, your lot aint much better, and indeed, are threatening to out-do the tories. plus there is the small matter of where the money for Millibandus's promises is coming from.
They are all as bad as one and other, they just dress it up differently.
That's why I have gone from a straight tory voter to a ukip voter.
We have to break up the cosy consensus between the main players, or it's just more of the same, ad finitum until we go bust.
required field
- 09 Jan 2015 21:21
- 54754 of 81564
They've caught and killed those bastards....but these arab terrorists are a world menace....there might be big trouble in France between the extreme right and muslims...
Stan
- 09 Jan 2015 21:34
- 54755 of 81564
Laugh a minute you winging right wing dreamers, why don't you all move to Australia?
doodlebug4
- 09 Jan 2015 21:36
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I don't fancy a 24 hour plane journey and the place is infested with flies.:-)
Stan
- 09 Jan 2015 21:41
- 54757 of 81564
Fair enough -): how about Turkey then... a bit nearer, warm and not keen on human rights.
Haystack
- 09 Jan 2015 21:45
- 54758 of 81564
France has a much bigger problem than us. We are around 2.4% Muslim. France is over 10%. They have a bad colonial record in North Africa running Algiers, Tunisia, Morocco and in Africa with various colonies. That is apart from Asia in Vietnam etc. The North Africans live in slums in southern Paris, Marseille and several other cities. Unemployment is massive amongst them as is criminal activity due to lack of employment. We have similar problems with ethnic groups having much higher unemployment than the rest of the population.
There were major attempts in our recent history to bring in more ethnic immigrants. Whatever the rights and wrongs of it, we are stuck with the result. Those immigrants have had children, who legally are just as English, Scottish etc as we are. We cannot move them off anywhere.
The only way we can solve our problems that we have now or may have in the future, is by education and job opportunities. If we do not achieve that, we are in for much more serious problems. We are breeding an underclass. That underclass will end up bighting us. They already contribute more criminals that the general population.
Stan
- 09 Jan 2015 21:51
- 54759 of 81564
Might be better if someone was to invent contraception world wide... Oh wait a minute.
doodlebug4
- 09 Jan 2015 21:51
- 54760 of 81564
Not too sure about Turkey, perhaps okay for a holiday but not to stay. Plus I don't think my dogs would like it. I could move back to Scotland and play golf with Chris, but the climate is getting worse there.
Stan, will you leave the country if the Conservatives win the GE? :-)
Haystack
- 09 Jan 2015 21:53
- 54761 of 81564
You mean, will you leave the country WHEN the Conservatives win the GE?
Haystack
- 09 Jan 2015 21:53
- 54762 of 81564
An appeal has been launched for people to knit mittens for koalas whose paws have been burnt in bushfires.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) said many of the marsupials have become the "sad victims" of the fires in South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales.
Some koalas to be put down because their injuries are so severe, but others can be treated at wildlife hospitals.
Josey Sharrad, IFAW native wildlife campaigner, said cotton mittens are needed to help them recover.
"Just like any burns victim, koalas’ dressings need changing daily, meaning a constant supply of mittens is needed by wildlife carers," she said.
Stan
- 09 Jan 2015 21:58
- 54763 of 81564
Well as you asked... I ain't going nowhere -):