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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.

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 11:42 - 57036 of 81564

Bring back the Romans.

Forgot they were a mixed bunch, perhaps, the Vikings!


jimmy b - 26 Feb 2015 11:51 - 57037 of 81564

They have all gone now Fred when they realised what a cesspit Britain is .

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 12:16 - 57038 of 81564

JB.

I am critical of the level of government corruption, which is probably no worse now than it was in previous periods and due to media exposure possibly a little less. (The figures look worse and it is the hypocrisy which goes with it which irritates me along with blatant lying.)

But the same "racial" fingering of "foreigners" is similar as in the 30s with the bloody Irish in Britain and the Jews, Gypsies, and Mentally "handicapped" in Germany.

Like "fingering" the unemployed and "handicapped" by the government as excuses for their incompetences now.

Do problems in Welfare Service, NHS, Local government etc, need addressing? Yes, but after close review and examination to see what the real problems are and "WHY" they occurred and then long-term planning to remove those problems in a sensible manner.

Not Dodgy Dave, the Cameron knee jerk method of forming sound bite policies. Here to-day gone to-morrow.
-=-=-=-=

Interesting how Andrew Neil can get a tory (government) spokesman to answer questions on Immigration.

Wonder how the Kippers would approach the problems.

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 12:19 - 57039 of 81564

Interesting to see as UKIP modify and moderate their "mantras" they polling rates are beginning to soften.

ExecLine - 26 Feb 2015 13:15 - 57040 of 81564

I'll tell you what!

As we walk the dog in the local park, the standard of girls' legs is going up in leaps and bounds!

If I see some absolutely fantastic legs in front of me, well, it's mostly a case of 'Thank you Eastern Europe!'

Anyone concur?

VICTIM - 26 Feb 2015 13:49 - 57041 of 81564

I'd be careful in this environment ExecLine.

cynic - 26 Feb 2015 13:49 - 57042 of 81564

russian gas
no one here seems to have noticed that putin is threatening to cut off gas supplies to ukraine and others in a very few days time

ExecLine - 26 Feb 2015 14:06 - 57043 of 81564

Frackin' 'ell! He's not, is he?

cynic - 26 Feb 2015 14:20 - 57044 of 81564

so it was implied on the wireless earlier - ie ukraine's pre-paid gas is due to expire in a few days time

MaxK - 26 Feb 2015 14:22 - 57045 of 81564

That's the funny thing about people, they like to get paid.

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 14:45 - 57046 of 81564


Exec,

What sort of dog are you looking at?

-----0-00-

Manuel,

Perhaps, the sanctions can include non-payment of bills.

MaxK - 26 Feb 2015 14:50 - 57047 of 81564

Take a break? More like give us a break... Danny Alexander pins his election chances on toe-curling garish pamphlet including his own recipe for 'sausage and butternut squash stew'

Garish campaign pamphlet produced by Treasury minister appears to be based on Take a Break magazine

Talk of the Glens contains no fewer than 17 photos of the Chief Secretary to the Treasury – including one as a child

'Danny's sausage and butternut squash stew' which includes 'roughly diced' squash but 'finely chopped' onion

He is pictured posing with Quentin Willson and a bottle of Dalwhinnie whisky is offered as a crossword prize

By Alan Roden For The Scottish Daily Mail

Published: 11:58, 26 February 2015 | Updated: 14:10, 26 February 2015







Like all good lifestyle mags, it features family recipes, a crossword and minor celebrities. But 'Talk of the Glens' is a magazine with a difference – it is actually a political campaign leaflet for one of Britain's most high-profile MPs.

Apparently modelled on 'Take a Break', the garish pamphlet is Danny Alexander's secret weapon as he bids to see off a major election challenge from the SNP in his Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey seat.

It contains no fewer than 17 photos of the Chief Secretary to the Treasury – including one of him as a young child and several digitally manipulated images of Mr Alexander from the internet.

With the catchline 'true life stories from the Highlands', the magazine includes a recipe for 'Danny's sausage and butternut squash stew' – which includes 'roughly diced' squash but 'finely chopped' onion - and a crossword that offers the prize of a bottle of Dalwhinnie single malt whisky.


the whole thing is here: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2970162/Take-break-like-break-Danny-Alexander-pins-election-chances-toe-curling-garish-pamphlet-including-recipe-sausage-butternut-squash-stew.html

Stan - 26 Feb 2015 15:06 - 57048 of 81564

Max will you stop posting DimLib nonsense I though you were a Kipper, also I was just on my way to the Ukraine but just caught Alf's warning... close thing eh? -):

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 15:16 - 57049 of 81564

Manuels, how many boats and canoes can you rent to the Ukraine, Germans to ship gas from USA, Canada, Argentina, and Mexico.

Is it feasible to replace "necessary" gas supply?

===

Mind you, the 75 Instructors and specialists Dodgy Dave has sent to the Ukraine should frighten the life out of Putin and quieten him down.

cynic - 26 Feb 2015 15:25 - 57050 of 81564

i don't know fred
i confess i don't even know if there are pipelines running from europe (as opposed to russia) into ukraine

for sure there are LNG tankers that hold "lots!!", but how many could be mobilised at short order and whether or not that would even give a short term solution, i really don't know

simplest, and what i suspect will happen, is that eu will throw several $bn to ukraine so they can top up their gas meter for another few months

Stan - 26 Feb 2015 15:27 - 57051 of 81564

Dead right Fred and as one of DD's trusty 75 I've pulled out on account that they can't keep the heating on now... so there.

Fred1new - 26 Feb 2015 15:55 - 57052 of 81564

Manuel,

I have 3 things in the back of my mind and can't tie them up.

1) back in the period of the Yugoslav civil war, one of the whispers was that there was an oil pipe line being built through Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia and into "Western Europe" from Romania and its middle east suppliers.

There were innuendos that this was one reason Nato got involved. I thought it baloney at the time.

2) another feint memory is that the USA (Japan) were building some colossal gas tankers a few years back.

3) that some gas refinery plants were being built at sea for cleaning up the gas, directly freezing it and shipping from berths at sea in "refrigerated" tankers.

What volumes I do not know.

I thought it may having being done in anticipation of Putin and ME.

cynic - 26 Feb 2015 16:17 - 57053 of 81564

1) don't know

2) yes, they exist but there's still only so much that can be carried

3) LNG is carried in refrigerated form - ie chilled so cold it turns to liquid as it takes up much less room of course
i have certainly heard of floating storage tanks (ships) which are used as intermediaries between incoming vessels and distribution on shore, but not the other way round

Chris Carson - 26 Feb 2015 16:23 - 57054 of 81564

Ed Miliband told his energy price freeze could make the lights go out
Ed Miliband, the Labour leader, is confronted over his energy price freeze by a small-business owner who warns that 'massive investment' is needed in Britain's energy infrastructure


By Steven Swinford, Deputy Political Editor1:23PM GMT 26 Feb 2015
Ed Miliband has been warned during a keynote address to business leaders that his energy price freeze could lead to the lights going out.
The Labour leader was confronted during an address manufacturers and engineering companies about his plans to reduce the profit margins of energy companies.
One director at a small business warned that "new power investment" is "desperately needed" and said that the energy companies will need to make "massive investments".
Mark Carleton, services director at Mestec, a company which measures factory performance, said: "Power generation capacity margins are at historic lows. Investment in new power generation is desperately needed. The Labour party's apparent position is that energy company's profit margins of between 3.5 and 4.5 per cent are excessive.
"What level of profits would you regard as acceptable, and do you believe that profit margins of below the current levels are going to be sufficient to incentivise energy companies to make the massive investments that are required to keep our lights on? Or do you believe that the funding to build new generation facilities is going to come from elsewhere."


Mr Miliband has said that one of his first acts in office would be to pass emergency legislation forbidding energy firms from increasing domestic prices for almost two years.
Speaking at the EEF conference in London, he said: "Let me just be straight with you. When it comes to the way that our energy market works, I don't think it's working well. All of the evidence on margins made on each customer, what happens to wholesale retail prices, all of the evidence suggests I am right on this.
"We need energy companies to invest in the future. But the judgment I took, and I think it was the right judgment 18 months ago, was that we needed to reset the market. That's the point of the price freeze. We have also set out a very detailed set of proposals for how the energy market should work in the future.
"You can only carry public consent on this if you have a regulatory system that works and people have faith in."
During his speech Mr Miliband said he would be a "champion" for engineering and manufacturing if he becomes Prime Minister.
He admitted that "if I am Prime Minister we won't always agree", but added that businesses will "always have a voice, we will always listen".
The Labour leader said: "If I am Prime Minister after May 7, I will champion your cause ...
"I believe manufacturing and engineering are the wave of the future. Not simply the pride of our past.
"I dare say if I am Prime Minister we won't always agree. But you will always have a voice. We will always listen.
"We will always engage in dialogue. And we will always strive to work together. Our future depends on it."
Mr Miliband said he wanted to give businesses more control over funding, as well as asking companies who win government contracts and those recruiting from outside the EU to take on apprentices.
"Our 10 year aim, our shared mission as a country, must be to ensure that as many young people leaving school at 18 go on to an apprenticeship as go into higher education," he added.
Mr Miliband also stressed his desire to stay in the EU – in contrast to the Tories' commitment to an in-out referendum.
"There is no greater threat to the long-term stability and prosperity of Britain and British business than leaving the European Union," he said. "That is why it is so wrong to play fast and loose with our membership of the European Union."

Chris Carson - 26 Feb 2015 16:32 - 57055 of 81564

Bill Jamieson: The predictable economic recovery
WORLD of punditry must own up to getting it wrong about the remarkable resilience of the business cycle, writes Bill Jamieson

Record numbers in work, inflation at a new low, business start-ups booming, the stock market at a new high: first one milestone, then another.

Welcome to the recovery – yes, the Recovery that Should Never Have Been.

Let’s take a trip down Memory Lane, to 2009. The global banking crisis had struck. The economy was spinning into deep recession. Financial markets were gripped with fear. Shares were plunging. On newsstands and on television, then on bookshelves and social media, the harbingers of doom closed in.

Earnest commentators warned of apocalypse. House prices would dive, millions of homes would be engulfed in negative equity. Capitalism as we knew it was in its deepest crisis. Across America and Europe thousands of businesses would be closed and millions thrown out of work. On BBC Newsnight the studio back wall projected terrifying graphs of plunging markets. And in bookshops and book festivals the gloomiest tomes poured forth. Talk of recovery was dismissed as facile: we had not grasped the full magnitude of the crisis. Mass unemployment would be with us for years as governments rammed through dreadful austerity programmes.

For the doom-mongers it was boom-time. Hours of analysis were given to them on TV and their books – the more grisly and apocalyptic the title the better – flew off the shelves.

Now it’s certainly true that we suffered a sharp and painful recession. Recovery took its time. On net trade – our balance of payments – the figures are still dire. There’s a long way to go yet before we can pronounce a full recovery.

But look, too, at what actually happened. The business cycle did something totally predictable. It turned. Here’s a tip: that’s what cycles do. The economy, both in Scotland and across the UK, has now been in recovery for three years. Last year output passed its pre-recession peak. In the year to the third quarter of 2014 – the latest for which official figures are available – the economy in Scotland grew by 3 per cent. Hands up those who forecast this? No hands.


For many it is the labour market that provides the best indicator of our economic health. What happened here? Far from mass unemployment, many companies hoarded labour during the downturn. Business recovered, there was a deluge of business start-ups, firms started recruiting, unemployment fell and numbers in work climbed steadily. Since 2010 three private sector jobs have been created for every one public sector job lost.

Don’t say Scotland missed out on this. Figures last week showed unemployment in Scotland fell by 15,000 in the three months to December and is now down to 5.4 per cent – lower than the UK average (5.7 per cent). And numbers in work rose to a record high of 2,625,000 over the same period.

Are these recovery milestones soon to be wiped out as we falter and slump backwards? It never does to believe in a linear path of upturn any more than a linear descent into a Great Depression.

But the stock market isn’t too gloomy about prospects. This week the FTSE 100 index of leading shares passed a new milestone. It hit an all-time high, beating the previous record set 15 years ago.
Investors took heart from the OECD’s latest survey of the UK economy noting its 2.6 per cent growth last year was the highest in the G7. And it expects the same this year.

Yet over the past five years leading forecasters such as the Fraser of Allander Institute consistently under-estimated the strength of recovery. It was not alone in this. But its analysis constantly argued that the recovery needed higher government spending and warned that “austerity” cutbacks would hold back our performance.

Yet despite five years of spending constraint, economic growth in Scotland and across the UK has defied these gloomy predictions. Of particular note has been the surge in new business start-ups – the number in Scotland has risen by almost 50 per cent since the end of the recession, taking us to the highest level in the series back in 2004.

Across the UK a record number of new businesses were started last year – more than 580,000. But all this should not have happened.

What of that house price collapse? Scotland’s mainstream market was indeed hit by economic worries, poor sentiment and lending constraints. But according to upmarket estate agency Savills this week, it is likely to show a strong performance over the course of 2015, with the highest rate of growth across all UK regions. “There continues to be”, it says, “strong market activity in Scotland’s traditional prime market hotspots like Edinburgh, Aberdeen and the West End of Glasgow.”


Consumer confidence has recovered too. A study by Lloyds Bank finds that household confidence in spending has risen to its highest point in four years.

Finally, what of spend on infrastructure projects, a particular concern of the Keynesian School? Yes, many projects were cancelled or deferred. But today we are standing on the threshold of a regeneration of our infrastructure across the UK running into hundreds of billions of pounds and the biggest upgrade to our power, roads and railways since the Victorian era.

Add up all the scattered, disjointed bits of news about road projects, rail upgrades, nuclear plant refurbishment, flood mitigation and plans to transform transport connectivity and it comes to a massive sum.

Nor is Scotland missing out here, either. All told, Scotland’s five largest transport projects will total more than £7.5 billion over the next three decades.

The Scottish Government is never slow to bleat about grinding Westminster austerity. But this week infrastructure secretary Keith Brown forgot to put on the ragged trouser outfit and the threadbare jacket. He spoke of schools, colleges, hospitals, transport and other public infrastructure projects worth around £1.5bn set to be completed this year.

Well said, Mr Brown.

But this, too, fits with a story nobody foretold. It may be a classic case of economists being right in theory – but wrong in practice. Never mind. Let’s raise a glass – to the recovery that we were kept being told would never happen.



VOTE LABOUR AND THROW IT ALL AWAY! LOL!!!
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