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.
iturama
- 26 Nov 2015 12:03
- 65355 of 81564
I believe Putin wants Assad to stay in the interim. We shouldnt be bombing anyone apart from IS in the kurd areas, or in a safe zone outside, until a post conflict political road map has been agreed.
cynic
- 26 Nov 2015 12:04
- 65356 of 81564
any israeli participation in the syrian conflict will be kept under covers for decades just as it was in the oman civil war of the early 60s
Fred1new
- 26 Nov 2015 12:05
- 65357 of 81564
Interesting figures on immigration.
If the government can't keep their promises on the levels, how can anyone trust this government figures on anything?
Haze, quick, off to PHQ to ask Lynton what the new ideas are and what to say!
cynic
- 26 Nov 2015 12:33
- 65358 of 81564
fred - stop running with the fox and hunting with the hounds
Haystack
- 26 Nov 2015 12:43
- 65359 of 81564
Hidden away towards the back of the Autumn Statement was the section on “Reducing the cost of politics”, which consists of a modest 19% reduction in Short money allocations. This means the taxpayer-funded wedge to which opposition parties are entitled will be cut by millions. Good news for the taxpayer, bad news for the already massively in debt Labour Party.
Below is the sum each party was previously due to receive in each year of this parliament. In brackets is what a 19% cut would potentially look like:
Labour: £6.2 million (£1,178,000 CUT)
SNP: £1.2 million (£228,000 CUT)
UKIP: £650,000 (£123,500 CUT)
LibDems: £540,000 (£102,600 CUT)
Greens: £212,000 (£40,280 CUT)
A handy benefit of being a Chancellor with an eye on the next election is you can severely wound your opponents where it hurts: in the pocket…
Fred1new
- 26 Nov 2015 12:46
- 65360 of 81564
Manuel,
Not, when is supports my cause!
ExecLine
- 26 Nov 2015 13:08
- 65361 of 81564
Aldi has re-entered the war of the Christmas ads with a cheeky take on the John Lewis Man on the Moon tearjerker.
Jean Jones, the pensioner with a penchant for Aldi gin who first appeared on screens in 2011, returns as the "Christmas friend" to cheer up a lonely old man on the moon who bears a striking resemblance to the star of the John Lewis ad.
Aldi's man in the moon comparing telescope prices
The ad opens with the gentleman comparing the price of telescopes at John Lewis and Aldi, before he is cheered even more by the sight of Jean flying across the sky in an armchair held aloft by a bunch of balloons.
Jonathan Neale, joint managing director of corporate buying at Aldi, said: "Jean quickly became a national treasure for her love of our Oliver Cromwell London Dry Gin when she first appeared on screens in 2011. ("My husband likes this tea and he also likes this tea. I don't like tea. I like Gin.")
"We're confident our customers will be excited by her return this Christmas."
The full two-minute John Lewis ad, featuring the story of a young girl named Lily striking up a connection with an elderly man living alone on the moon, had been watched around 5.9 million times within the first 24 hours of it appearing on YouTube earlier this month.
Aldi's offering, which is set to My Favourite Things from The Sound Of Music - recorded by up-and-coming British artist Jade Williams, was watched just under 7,000 times in the 14 hours after it was uploaded.
The new Aldi ad kicked off on TV screens last night.
TANKER
- 26 Nov 2015 13:12
- 65362 of 81564
if assad must be removed because of is policies then why are we not going to remove the biggest tyrant on the plant a real evil regime Saudi
cynic
- 26 Nov 2015 13:22
- 65363 of 81564
apart from the more obvious reasons, if you depose the current saudi regime, you could easily end up with something far more radical, controlled by the wahhabi
TANKER
- 26 Nov 2015 13:26
- 65364 of 81564
cynic the king is evil a thousand times worse than assad
yet Cameron and the royals seat and eat with the scumbag
he drinks along with is family yet the peasants can not he speaks with a false lying tongue the best wine money can buy for him
cynic
- 26 Nov 2015 13:26
- 65365 of 81564
hey numpty .... try reading
Stan
- 26 Nov 2015 13:32
- 65366 of 81564
H/S whats the cut in your "Con" Party in post 65362?
Fred1new
- 26 Nov 2015 13:46
- 65367 of 81564
Stan,
Just another donation, or commercial bribe or two from the Cayman Isles with perhaps a few exiles in Austria etc. throwing a bob or two into their kitty.
Everyday arse l.
Haystack
- 26 Nov 2015 13:48
- 65368 of 81564
I am sure you will be pleased to know that the cuts do not involve the government in power. That's nice, isn't it.
Stan
- 26 Nov 2015 13:56
- 65369 of 81564
Well well.. now there's a surprise.
jimmy b
- 26 Nov 2015 13:56
- 65370 of 81564
Osborne played a blinder yesterday ,i bet even Fred is bleating on about how great he is today .
Haystack
- 26 Nov 2015 14:01
- 65372 of 81564
Labour introduced 'short money' and raised it excessively when they were last in power. It is just being cut back to a sensible level.
Stan
- 26 Nov 2015 14:03
- 65373 of 81564
James your turrets seems to be getting worst.
jimmy b
- 26 Nov 2015 14:04
- 65374 of 81564
That Clarke's a proper slag Stan !! ...
What turrets Stan ? I live in a normal house..