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
- 24 Mar 2015 21:44
- 57860 of 81564
A bronze statue of Margaret Thatcher is being erected in the Falklands.
MaxK
- 24 Mar 2015 21:45
- 57861 of 81564
Good!
MaxK
- 24 Mar 2015 21:52
- 57862 of 81564
ExecLine
- 24 Mar 2015 23:34
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Jeremy Clarkson is to be sacked as Top Gear presenter after a BBC investigation concluded he did attack a producer on the programme.
Lord Hall, the Director General of the BBC, is expected to announce his decision on Wednesday after considering the findings of an internal investigation.
Clarkson, 54, will be thanked for his work on the hugely popular motoring show, but will be told such behaviour cannot be tolerated at the Corporation.
It is understood a report into the so-called ‘fracas’ at a North Yorkshire hotel, concluded that presenter spent 20 minutes verbally abusing producer Oisin Tymon, before launching a 30 second physical assault on him.
According to well-placed sources, senior executives at the Corporation have been wooing Radio 2 Breakfast Show host and self- confessed ‘petrol-head’, Chris Evans in the hope he will agree to take over.
More at:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11493270/Jeremy-Clarkson-to-be-sacked-by-the-BBC.html
MaxK
- 24 Mar 2015 23:49
- 57865 of 81564
Good news for Sky/ITV, good news for the lawyers as well.
It really must be time to blow out the licence fee...this is getting beyond a joke.
cynic
- 25 Mar 2015 08:41
- 57867 of 81564
SNP to govern UK
an interesting thought, but in essence true
if SNP is kingmaker, and that is not impossible, then of course it will not be done without a heavy price
thus, there would be the incongruous situation where the party that is fighting hard to cut its ties with the rest of the country, will effectively be able to tell westminster what acts it can pass and which it will not allow
Stan
- 25 Mar 2015 09:14
- 57868 of 81564
Brilliant... I can't wait.
jimmy b
- 25 Mar 2015 09:16
- 57869 of 81564
Codswallop !!! and i'll be next President of the USA .
2517GEORGE
- 25 Mar 2015 09:18
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Be careful what you wish for Stan.
2517
Stan
- 25 Mar 2015 09:24
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Wishing's for wimps George?... Wana buy a jumper JJ -):
cynic
- 25 Mar 2015 10:17
- 57872 of 81564
following on from 57870, the obvious question then raises itself as to whether or not SNP MPs should have any say at all in issues that are not of scottish concern
Stan
- 25 Mar 2015 10:22
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The answer is yes.
Haystack
- 25 Mar 2015 10:23
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SNP threatening to vote down the Quern's speech if there is a minority Conservative government.
That would trigger a serious constitutional crisis.
It would be a serious problem for other parties as there would be another election, probably in the autumn and only the Conservative could afford it. The other parties are pretty much broke.
Stan
- 25 Mar 2015 10:27
- 57875 of 81564
Irrelevant, The usual scaremongering/negative post from the extreme right.
cynic
- 25 Mar 2015 10:29
- 57876 of 81564
stan - is that yes that scots should have a say in non-scottish debates, or yes that they should not?
Haystack
- 25 Mar 2015 10:31
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Chris Carson
- 25 Mar 2015 10:33
- 57878 of 81564
Will Alex Salmond ever shut up?
The man who lost the referendum on Scottish independence is swanning around like he owns the Union. How long will the English put up with him?
By Iain Martin9:42AM GMT 25 Mar 2015Comments47 Comments
It is becoming impossible to escape the defeated leader of the Yes campaign. Turn on a radio or the television and he is always there, burbling away about what is going to happen when he and the SNP are in charge of England. The man is so perpetually pleased with himself that he cannot get half way through a sentence without chuckling at his own amazing brilliance. In the excitement of the referendum campaign he seems somehow to have become convinced that he is absolutely hilarious.
I cannot account for whatever is going on inside that great big head of a gifted man who used to have a greater grasp of reality. Perhaps it is denial, or addiction to attention, or excitement about his return to the Commons (a place he loves). Whatever it is, he is behaving as though Nicola Sturgeon is still his deputy and he didn't resign.
It looks from the outside as though he is getting rather carried away by the thought of wiping out Scottish Labour, when history suggests it is usually better to cut back on the cockiness until after the votes are cast and counted.
But as a Scot I worry about the impact of all this. It is is not just that Salmond and the most obsessive Nationalists are trashing the Scottish brand outside Scotland. In the country itself, as Alex Massie has observed, the divisions of the referendum are also hardening into cold hatred. The so-called "zoomers" on the nationalist side will believe any crazy claim no matter how implausible. Polling even suggests that more than 50% of SNP voters think that the collapse in the oil price, which would punch a multi-billion pound hole in the finances of an independent or fiscally autonomous Scotland, is neither good nor bad for Scotland. That is mind-bendingly mad.
What worries me most as a Unionist is that in England more and more people I encounter just want the Scots, or the Scottish Nationalists who shout loudest, to stop whinging and whining. They ask: will Salmond ever shut up? Why, they ask, are so many Scots obsessed with talking about themselves in this grating manner? Indeed, Salmond's referendum has become a neverendum, in which the airwaves are dominated by smug Nationalists showing off their moral superiority complexes and boasting about how progressive they are. (That's the SNP, the party that savaged vocational education in Scotland's colleges to pay for the middle class perk of "free" tuition fees at Scottish universities.)
The tragedy in this for Scotland is that a great country that has long punched above its weight by being inventive and outward-looking is being steadily diminished by the boring chuntering of those who lost but want to keep going. Week by week, as they continue their destructive work, you can see Scotland shrinking.
Stan
- 25 Mar 2015 10:33
- 57879 of 81564
Of course they should Alf, no reason why not.