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
- 19 Jan 2015 16:48
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He couldn't answer the question because Labour had not come up with the official spin on the subject.
goldfinger
- 19 Jan 2015 16:50
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Cynic dont come that, you made at least £20 grand on FLYB short, you said he was green behind the ears.
doodlebug4
- 19 Jan 2015 17:05
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I would enter into this discussion about who made what on FLYB, but I don't think other posters on this thread are remotely interested - just for that reason I will resist. Suffice to say I bought in at 52p for a recovery play, so you can stick that where the sun don't shine!
cynic
- 19 Jan 2015 17:10
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would that i had!
doodlebug4
- 19 Jan 2015 17:41
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Haystack, in other words Umunna didn't have the nous to answer the question with a modicum of grace! Hardly worth throwing the teddies out of the pram and making himself look silly.
Stan
- 19 Jan 2015 17:41
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doodlebug4
- 19 Jan 2015 17:45
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Utter madness this compensation culture we have inherited from the USA.
MaxK
- 19 Jan 2015 18:40
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I think there is a bit of needle there Fred, it aint the money...although I notice he didn't offer to make up for the lost fee's like any reasonable peep would do.
MaxK
- 19 Jan 2015 18:45
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Fred1new
- 19 Jan 2015 18:48
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DB3 1/2,
You belong to a party which like yourself shoots its mouth off at every opportunity, that is why many prefer the alternative of Labour/Libdem/SNP coalition than have the Nasty Part of past timers.
Hopefully, and probably, having lookig at this period of period of tory mismanagement, of u-turns, skid reversals and falsehoods, they will be prepared to think about decisions rather than rush the PR statement out only to retreat a few days later.
I think Umunna is extremely able, thoughtful and modest and was wise not to make spontaneous replies without due considerations.
Far more preferable for me than the rent a mouth spokesmen that the torid party often puts up as spokesmen for them.
You are backing a loser once again.
doodlebug4
- 19 Jan 2015 19:03
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I thought you said these televised debates were a good idea because politicians had to make spontaneous replies without due considerations? Did you say that Fred, or have you changed your mind? Umunna showed his true colours, when put under a little bit of pressure he lost his cool.
Chris Carson
- 19 Jan 2015 19:23
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Labour's energy freeze is dead and Ed has nothing else to offer
After endless U-turns, the party is now going into the election without a flagship policy
By Boris Johnson6:10AM GMT 19 Jan 2015
I remember the time when it was absolutely clear how Labour was going to fight the election. They had a flagship policy, an idea that resonated across the country. Somehow or other, and in defiance of all known laws of economics, they were going to freeze the price of energy. Ed Miliband announced the idea in the autumn of 2013 – and immediately the party surged in the polls.
Yay, said the public: free money! Some of us pointed out that it is very difficult for politicians to intervene effectively in the price of commodities. The emperor Diocletian tried it – and gave up in humiliation after a few years. Not many have followed his example, and none successfully. Still, the punters believed it, and Labour remorselessly pushed that sole policy until it became their most famous proposal, their rallying cry, one of the few solid ideas in the general porridge of their anti-business agenda.
And then something unexpected happened: the oil price started to fall. Fracking was massively boosting production in America. The Saudis were turning on the taps – and keeping them on. Perhaps the Arabs were trying to undercut the frackers; perhaps they were trying to make life difficult for the Iranians. It didn’t matter. The cost of energy started to come down, and down – until suddenly there was the prospect of an actual cut for you and me.
The energy companies are now preparing a long-overdue reduction in their bills – and there is only one theoretical objection. What are they supposed to do if Labour gets in, and implement their “freeze”? What if the price “freeze” were to prevent the rapacious power companies from passing on further cuts to the consumer? In the last few weeks, it has seemed that Miliband was impaled on a ludicrous policy of insisting that energy prices should remain higher than the market demands. Now the Labour Party say that they didn’t mean to talk about a “freeze” at all; the idea was to have a “cap”.
Well, their propaganda has so far been exclusively about a freeze, and if there is to be a cap – then at what level? We don’t know; they can’t tell us. All we know is that the “freeze” policy has been junked; the flagship has been holed beneath the waterline. It was always a short-term policy, designed to drive a news agenda for a week or so. It was never part of a principled and rational agenda for government – and now it is dead.
No wonder that so many naturally bossy and Left-wing people are thinking of going for the Greens, rather than Labour. At least they have a world-view; at least they know what they think. For the last few years I have had the joy of engaging with the Greens in London, and I believe I understand their mindset pretty well. They don’t like capitalism, they don’t much like economic growth and they hate, hate, hate anything to do with the motor car. They especially hate and fear the advent of low-carbon vehicles, because they consider these to be an unfortunate diversion from their main purpose: to drive everyone out of private cars – with their horrid connotations of individual liberty and autonomy – and on to public transport.
On some points I agree with the Greens; on some I disagree strongly. But when I think of my friend Jenny Jones, now Baroness Jones, I see a doughty and often successful campaigner for a set of environmental or pseudo-environmental objectives. She was at all the mayoral debates in the run-up to the London election in 2012 and enlivened them. David Cameron is absolutely right in taking his stand on her behalf. Of course the Greens should be in the TV showdowns. They may be occasionally batty, but at least their case is gaining ground with the public, and at least it has some bravery and rigour about it. That is not the case with the hopeless hodge‑podge of Milibandery.
Just in the period since Christmas, the Labour Party seems to have executed no fewer than 21 U-turns – many of them junking their previous green policies. They were going to bring back a pro-bike quango called Cycling England; now they are not. They were going to ban food waste going to landfill; now they have given up. If the Greens are watermelons – Lefties disguised as environmentalists – then Miliband is a ripening tomato, moving conspicuously from green to red.
In fact, I am not sure how green Ed ever really was. His backers in the media claim that he was responsible for some kind of midnight breakthrough communiqué at the Copenhagen climate change conference in 2009.
Well, I was at Copenhagen, and I don’t remember any breakthrough at all – the whole thing was a fiasco – and I certainly don’t remember any intervention by Ed. And the reason I was there was because we in London were trying to promote a serious and sensible agenda for installing insulation, retrofitting homes, and so cutting fuel bills.
When we went to see the secretary of state at the Department of Energy and Climate Change (E Miliband) I was amazed by how little he seemed either to know or to care. He was much more interested in gossip than in a long-term programme for the country – and I fear the same is true today.
Yesterday’s paper contained a wonderful account of how he nearly died in a fire in Doncaster, during a long stay with the former mayor of that town. He took it into his head to move a convection heater off a pair of bricks and plonk it on the carpet. Both the carpet and the under-carpet ignited, and gave off such noxious vapours that Ed was sitting zonked in an armchair, in danger of being asphyxiated – until he was saved by his quick-thinking neighbour, who tipped him into the garden.
Miliband later made amends by buying a carpet to cover the burns, though the effect was slightly spoiled when his hosts realised that it was a Muslim prayer mat.
What’s that burning smell? It’s another giant hole appearing in Ed Miliband’s policies – and there isn’t a mat big enough to cover them.
Fred1new
- 19 Jan 2015 19:55
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DB3 1/2
P55325
I can't recollect posting :
"I thought you said these televised debates were a good idea because politicians had to make spontaneous replies without due considerations? "
I believe I posted that Cameron was trying to chicken out of the debate with Nigel as a protagonist and also thought he was frit of Wee Alex.
Not sure of the actual words I used, but you can C+P and correct me if I am mistaken,
Head lines at the time Cameron would rather look ‘frit’ than face a bashing from Farage
I don't think I made reference to the value of the debates, but think I might enjoy them.
But, I do fancy the idea of Farage, or Farage and Alex ravaging the pompous spiv, who is said to be leader of the Tories, but is more often than not, trailing behind UKIP and the Right wing Neo-cons within that party.
====-=-=-=-
As far as I can see with Uma, it was an attempt at a set up which backfired on the presenter.
Similar to Cameron's outburst in defence of the Fastest Milkman in the West over an inappropriately constructed letter.
required field
- 19 Jan 2015 21:05
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Apparently... a kid has been sent an invoice for £16 for a party no-show......sounds like America...but it's not !........ok...wait for it.....: ...I have a business idea !...
Stan
- 19 Jan 2015 21:13
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"Stan - 19 Jan 2015 17:41 - 55320 of 55328"
This is true RF, and whats up with that? -):
MaxK
- 19 Jan 2015 21:29
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The lesser spotted millibandus is a complete and utter fool, how did the robber barons pick him over his bruvver....I know they want to control, but whats the point if the bloke is a duffer? They'll never control anything.
goldfinger
- 19 Jan 2015 21:29
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Fred..........stop taking the piss out of doodlebug 4...........................NOT
fantastic entertainment.
Stan
- 19 Jan 2015 22:04
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Fred1new
- 19 Jan 2015 22:08
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Max,
Are you sad that you have been passed over.
Even a duffer like you may find a party which would accept you at a price.
Unfortunately, the price may be too high for you.
Haystack
- 19 Jan 2015 22:16
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If you get Sky Arts 1 channel, there is a Frank Zappa concert on.