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.
TANKER
- 10 Jul 2015 08:08
- 61348 of 81564
fred your views as a labour voter tells why they had a very bad result
lunatics and dimwits
jimmy b
- 10 Jul 2015 08:12
- 61349 of 81564
Those cartoons do get very boring , post a nice picture of something interesting .
cynic
- 10 Jul 2015 08:27
- 61350 of 81564
thanks MrT (61348) ...... this young chap certainly made an appalling mess of his early life and it took him 20 years to wake up that he had to help himself
TANKER
- 10 Jul 2015 08:48
- 61351 of 81564
cynic do not blame him it is the system .
Fred1new
- 10 Jul 2015 08:49
- 61352 of 81564
JB,
Each to their own.
Personally, the cartoons are often very succinct and fair representation of public opinion.
-=-=-=
Manuel,
Perhaps, he needed better guidance in his earlier life!
Fred1new
- 10 Jul 2015 08:49
- 61353 of 81564
.
TANKER
- 10 Jul 2015 08:50
- 61354 of 81564
teachers not allowed to teach just follow stupid rules .
by non educated scum called ofsted
jimmy b
- 10 Jul 2015 09:02
- 61355 of 81564
cynic
- 10 Jul 2015 09:38
- 61356 of 81564
61355 - certainly true in part, though that is not the whole story ......
btw, it is pretty brave of you to state that your (tiresome) cartoons are a reflection of general public opinion
were that so, it would be a reasonable supposition that labour would have swept to power in the election ..... i don't recollect that that was the case!
jimmy b
- 10 Jul 2015 09:54
- 61357 of 81564
And so much better to look at two chickens playing football.
Haystack
- 10 Jul 2015 09:55
- 61358 of 81564
What a shower the Greek government is. It looks like the deal being offered by Greece is even tougher that the one rejected in the referendum.
Fred1new
- 10 Jul 2015 09:59
- 61359 of 81564
Torrids got approximately 37% of the votes.
They were not to the taste of 63% of the voters.
After lying to the voters and the public, they are now tearing up their manifesto promises.
The U-turns have now started again and they are once more selling out politics to their donors.
Corruption continues with attempts at slippery tongues.
Fred1new
- 10 Jul 2015 09:59
- 61360 of 81564
.
Haystack
- 10 Jul 2015 10:23
- 61361 of 81564
I see from my email update that the EU referendum bill has had a large number of amendments tabled for it by Alex Salmond. He wants the referendum to fail if there is not a majority within Scotland.
cynic
- 10 Jul 2015 14:28
- 61362 of 81564
well fred, labour clearly got a lot less and scfotland told them in no uncertain terms what it thought!
============
hays - what you do not see are the very important deals that will have been struck behind closed doors
MaxK
- 10 Jul 2015 14:40
- 61363 of 81564
Haystack
- 10 Jul 2015 14:44
- 61364 of 81564
I would still throw them out. A new deal will come back to bite both parties.
MaxK
- 10 Jul 2015 15:01
- 61365 of 81564
The conspiracy nutjobs may be onto something here, the capitulation in the land of €l Greco is all a bit too pat.
http://kingworldnews.com/paul-craig-roberts-a-shocking-behind-the-scenes-look-at-what-is-now-unfolding-in-greece/
MaxK
- 10 Jul 2015 20:55
- 61366 of 81564
The other side of the story:
Yanis Varoufakis, former Greek finance minister
Friday 10 July 2015 19.25 BST
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/10/germany-greek-pain-debt-relief-grexit