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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 - 28 Jan 2015 16:52 - 55989 of 81564

depends on whether you think dow will jump or dump when yellen speaks

prob with indicating that rates will rise is that $ is already very strong
there's also the underlying factor that though the US economic recovery has been strong, latest numbers have generally had cautious to weak outlook and further, US wages have (also!) not been increasing

goldfinger - 28 Jan 2015 17:00 - 55990 of 81564

Cyners when is Yellen speaking please?

goldfinger - 28 Jan 2015 17:01 - 55991 of 81564

Haystack Send an email to Haystack View Haystack's profile - 28 Jan 2015 13:27 - 55971 of 55992

cynic
It was the Mirror

Farage has admitted setting up offshore trust. His current view is that it was a mistake and he regrets it...........ends

Hays you shouldnt be complaining this is the kind of thing YOU applaud and support. Is it because you and your boys fear him.

cynic - 28 Jan 2015 17:16 - 55992 of 81564

i presume at 19:00 this evening

farage - as i said when the post went up, why shouldn't he?

doodlebug4 - 28 Jan 2015 17:47 - 55993 of 81564

Ukip has been plunged into crisis after senior activists and a general election candidate quit over the violent past of a campaign chief.

Nigel Farage has given his '100 per cent' backing to county organiser Paul Lovegrove after a storm sparked by his previous convictions for assault.

The row has seen Don Jerrard quit as Ukip candidate in Fareham and sent shockwaves across the party in Hampshire, where Mr Lovegrove is in charge of the election campaign.

Mr Lovegrove has served two prison sentences - one for wounding with intent in 1996 and one for actual bodily harm in 2000, the Portsmouth News reported.

His past has been the subject of heated rows at Ukip meetings, culminating in Mr Jerrard abandoning plans to stand at the election.

Former Portsmouth City Councillor Paul Godier and ex-Fareham and Gosport chairman Bob Ingram have also left the party, blaming Mr Lovegrove's criminal past.

He was jailed for two years when he got into a fight over a family feud and grabbed a bread knife before slashing a man across the face. He served a year behind bars.

He received a number of criminal convictions for drug possession but then went to college in an attempt to turn his life around.

However, he then got into a fight with a man but fled to Spain to avoid a charge of actual bodily harm.

With his partner he had two children on the Costa Del Sol, before returning to England after five years.

He claims he was later beaten up in Guildford, and was charged with an allegation of sexual assault at knifepoint.

He was cleared of this offence at a trial but was jailed for 12 months for the earlier actual bodily harm charge.

However, Mr Farage is standing by Mr Lovegrove, insisting 'people deserve a second chance in life'.

He told the newspaper: 'Mr Lovegrove may have fallen off the rails earlier in his life but he is now totally reformed and we are standing by him 100 per cent. We knew about his past.

'With any political party, having people from all walks of life is a bonus. After all you can't have every party full of Oxbridge graduates.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2930136/Ukip-plunged-crisis-row-campaign-chief-s-criminal-past-leads-election-candidate-quitting.html#ixzz3Q8hWUT5U

Stan - 28 Jan 2015 18:18 - 55994 of 81564

So where's your off shore A/C Alf?

Haystack - 28 Jan 2015 18:21 - 55995 of 81564

You can guarantee that UKIP and Labour will be plunged into crisis several times before the GE. Miliband alone will contribute several major gaffs. There is bound to a 'bigoted woman' moment heading his way.

goldfinger - 28 Jan 2015 18:42 - 55996 of 81564

LOL Hays the peodo scandal is going to hit the papers any day now. Camoron and your boys will have fingers pointed at ETON.

goldfinger - 28 Jan 2015 18:43 - 55997 of 81564

Cheers Cyners. 15 minutes to go then.

cynic - 28 Jan 2015 20:14 - 55998 of 81564

stan - i have none; used to have a perfectly legit off-shore biz a/c in bahrain, but it was too much of a pain so brought it back to uk

MaxK - 28 Jan 2015 20:31 - 55999 of 81564

MaxK - 28 Jan 2015 20:33 - 56000 of 81564





Read all about it:

http://order-order.com/

Fred1new - 28 Jan 2015 21:02 - 56001 of 81564

Having heard her interview I think I would prefer her choice to the probable choice of this bunch,:



or



or

doodlebug4 - 28 Jan 2015 21:07 - 56002 of 81564

Miliband's attack on NHS privatisation left in tatters as figures reveal Labour outsourced TWICE as much as the Coalition
Andy Burnham has promised to end the 'failed Tory market experiment'
But he has refused to say how many private health firms he would stop
Official figures show less than 6% of the NHS budget is outsourced
More than 4.4% of the NHS was contracted out under Labour
Last Labour government outsourced 0.5% of the NHS budget every year
But the Coalition has only contracted out 0.25% of the budget each year
Comes after Blairite former ministers publicly attack Miliband over NHS
Alan Milburn said Miliband was failing to drag Labour out of 'comfort zone'
John Hutton said Miliband 'foolish' to distance the party from New Labour
By TOM MCTAGUE, DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 12:20, 28 January 2015 | UPDATED: 18:46, 28 January 2015

Fred1new - 28 Jan 2015 21:23 - 56003 of 81564

Check what the outsourcing was use for.


It was to make up for the failures of the previous tory administration.

Check what it was use for and the results and if you have a brain look underneath the figures for the real reasons why.


Also, after 4 years of tory incompetence and a Lansley 4 billion pound "reorganisation" (some would say attempt to Privatised) the NHS have a look at how the NHS and Welfare Services are beginning to and actually failing the the voters.

The voters are not as daft as you or the tory elitists think they are.

doodlebug4 - 28 Jan 2015 21:29 - 56004 of 81564

"The failures of the previous Tory administration" Which administration are you referring to Fred and which years?

Stan - 28 Jan 2015 21:39 - 56005 of 81564

Thank you for your cooperation on the subject Alf, you are free to go.

goldfinger - 28 Jan 2015 23:06 - 56006 of 81564

Dont be fooled by this definition of outsourced by the Tories and the Tory press, this is a fact.......

Official figures show less than 6% of the NHS budget is outsourced, ie, just under 6% FACT

More than 4.4% of the NHS was contracted out under Labour, 4.6%. FACT (and was that high because of there inheritance)

But again the tories and there pay masters are playing with figures and statistics and not presenting facts, eg, how many contracts have the Tories awarded to there freinds who run and supply drugs to the NHS.!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have the figures and it is mind blowing.

Were not just talking services here.

doodlebug4 - 28 Jan 2015 23:06 - 56007 of 81564


By Telegraph View

6:35AM GMT 27 Jan 2015

To go into an election promising tax cuts and welfare curbs is a traditional Tory position. But David Cameron has an advantage on many of his predecessors: he is putting these policies before the voters not as an aspiration, but as a proven and rock-solid recipe for job creation, economic success and truly compassionate Conservatism.


Much has been made, and rightly, of the Coalition’s record on employment. Britain is, as the Prime Minister has said, the “jobs factory of Europe”: employment is rising at roughly twice the rate of our nearest competitor, Germany. Yet this is due not to vast macroeconomic forces, but specific policy decisions. The Coalition has, by cutting business taxes, made it more attractive for firms to create jobs. And by bringing in tighter welfare restrictions, it has pushed unemployed workers to take them – causing what Mr Cameron describes in an interview with this newspaper today as a “stampede to the job centre”.


With just 100 days to go until the election, the Prime Minister is doubling down on this policy. Along with the promised tax cuts once the deficit has been closed, he tells us that the first priority of a majority Conservative government will be a further tightening of the welfare cap to £23,000, with the proceeds devoted to the creation of three million apprenticeships. The aim is to ensure that every school leaver is going into either training or university, thereby helping young people to get a grip on the job ladder, rather than languishing on welfare thanks to the kind of handouts long preferred by Labour.


Mr Cameron boasts that this move is “deeply progressive” – and he is right. Measures that were initially denounced as callous and inhuman, which we were told would drive millions into poverty, have instead boosted the labour market and the wider economy, while cutting dependency and giving the individuals concerned a sense of purpose and self-worth – the chance, as the Prime Minister says, “to make the most of their God-given talents”.


It is not just good news that the Conservatives are doing this. It is good news that they are talking about it. We pointed out recently that, for all the strength of the Tories’ economic record, their campaign had focused on Ed Miliband’s manifest inadequacies rather than their own qualifications for power. Yes, voters need to be told of the need for further cuts, and for fiscal discipline. But they also need to be reminded of how the Conservatives have made this a better country, and how they will continue to do so. That is a task which the Prime Minister’s interview with us today, and the policies contained within it, will make a great deal easier.

Stan - 28 Jan 2015 23:11 - 56008 of 81564



Bit strong isn't it.
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