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
- 29 Feb 2016 10:54
- 68416 of 81564
what ever happened to the rule that migrants were obliged to stay put in their first safe port of call?
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 10:56
- 68417 of 81564
their is a vast oil and gas in the seas off cornwall billions of gallons bp own the rights
but they are saving the resources for the future .
the gas in the ground around parts of wales is massive fracking would be very good for wales
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 11:01
- 68418 of 81564
cynic that is the big question do you want the answers to your question
well I will give you the answer
france Germany spain Greece Italy Poland and others do not give
FREE HAND OUTS FREE HOMES FREE MONEY
IN GERMANY THEY NOW DO NOT ALLOWT THE MIGRANTS TO SIGN IF THEY CAN NOT SPEAK GEMAN OR HAVE NO SKILLS
THE UK IS GREAT FOR MIGRANTS THEY DO NOT HAVE TO WORK GET FREE HOMES
AND MONEY TO BUY GOODS
AND IF YOUR WIFE IS A MUSLIM WHO WEARS A VEIL SHE IS NOT FORCED TO WORK BECAUSE OF HER HUMAN RIGHTS SO SHE GES BENEFITS AND DOES NOT WORK JUST COLLECT THE CASH
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 11:04
- 68419 of 81564
OVER 150000 MIGRANTS HAVE LEFT GERMANY AND SPREAD AROUND THE REST OF THE EU
its all their to read german will not allow non skilled works to claim asylum
cynic
- 29 Feb 2016 11:44
- 68420 of 81564
MrT - so you can start to get your facts right, try the following as an introduction
http://www.bmi.bund.de/EN/Topics/Migration-Integration/Asylum-Refugee-Protection
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:02
- 68421 of 81564
Each immigrant costs the taxpayer up to £8,350 a year in healthcare, education and benefits bills, according to official government figures.
Home Office analysis shows that imposing a £200 annual NHS charge on immigrants from outside Europe when they enter the country would deter thousands from travelling to Britain in the first place.
This will result in British residents gaining up to 1,000 jobs a year which would otherwise have been taken by foreign workers, the Home Office said.
The deterrent effect of the health levy is also expected to save the state up to £60 million a year in public services, such as schools, medical care, and welfare spending which would no longer be needed.
The estimates emerged in a report on the government’s Immigration Bill, which has been produced in an attempt to stop migrants travelling to Britain to take advantage of free healthcare, education and a generous benefits system.
cynic
- 29 Feb 2016 12:06
- 68422 of 81564
result of brexit
i assume the following is correct ..... it's just the opening para a something rather longer
:: If the UK votes to leave the EU, what happens next?
Nothing … at first.
There would be a minimum of two years of negotiations to work out what the UK's future relationship with the EU would look like.
Haystack
- 29 Feb 2016 12:07
- 68423 of 81564
Immigration is of concern, but not the problem that UKIP and followers would have you believe. We take very few compared to the other EU countries. Furthermore, we may have to allow free movement of people to get a trade deal.
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:07
- 68424 of 81564
cynic read the real facts not reports by immigrants
you can read more about the crime by migrants
the social cost and the problems their are coursing in education
when they children do not speak English then they go home and do not speak English
this issue is destroying the british childrens education the teachers spend all their time trying to learn these kids English
all facts ask any teacher for facts I do and drink with some that is why teachers are leaving soul destroying
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:09
- 68425 of 81564
hay I used to give hundreds ever year to certain charities now I would sooner burn the cash
never give to the criminals running save the children they are doing more damage than the war criminals
Haystack
- 29 Feb 2016 12:11
- 68426 of 81564
cynic
I would think that it would take longer than 2 years. That could be very important. There is a good chance that the EU might use the 2 to 5 years to offer us a better deal, prompting a further referendum. Ireland did the same thing when it rejected a new treaty and then had a second referendum and accepted it.
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:12
- 68427 of 81564
cynic a few facts polish people are setting up their own communities they
they do not want to be apart of the local community they are the same in muslim community the uk as more no go areas than ever
and one day all hell will break out
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:15
- 68428 of 81564
on the vote my family and friends have decided nothing will change our views
out out out
when your pm tells lies and is not interested in the truth
you no its time to get out
and will not allow civil servant to give out information on the benefit cost
it tells you alll
MaxK
- 29 Feb 2016 12:18
- 68429 of 81564
Does America trade with the €U?
Does America have an open door policy with the €U??
TANKER
- 29 Feb 2016 12:18
- 68430 of 81564
under freedom of information you are not allowed to get the info on the benefits to migrants
fact if I am telling lies then go and get me the gov report on the cost gov figures
not some person who makes it up
gov figures you will not get them
jimmy b
- 29 Feb 2016 12:37
- 68431 of 81564
Hays
Immigration is of concern, but not the problem that UKIP and followers would have you believe. We take very few compared to the other EU countries.
----------------
Hays you don't think we have a problem with too much immigration ?
--------------------
The UK just recorded a massive year for migration. People are streaming into the UK, mostly from Europe, at the fastest pace on record, according to figures released Thursday.
Most headlines will broadcast the net migration figure, which rose by 318,000 in 2014 — the biggest rise since statistics began in 1970. The net figure subtracts the number of migrants who left the country in 2014 from the total number of people who migrated to the UK in the same year. A total of 641,000 people immigrated to the UK in 2014.
jimmy b
- 29 Feb 2016 12:39
- 68432 of 81564
That overwhelming figure actually understates the huge number of people who registered for National Insurance numbers (used in the UK to prove you're properly registered to work for tax purposes): A whopping 824,154 more people got NI cards in the year to March 2015, figures released Thursday morning show. That number is equivalent to about 1.2% of the UK's population, with 629,410 NI numbers issued to people from other EU countries. Of those, most are from just four countries:
Poland: 115,606
Romania: 152,363
Italy: 57,635
Spain: 54,203
This is a seriously massive year. There were about 120,000 more NI numbers issued over the last year than in the next-highest year since the financial crisis. (In the year to March 2011 just over 700,000 numbers were issued.)
It's not clear why the NI registration figure is considerably larger than the registered migration figure. The periods are slightly different (the net migration figures are for 2014 as a whole, while the NI number figures are for the year to March 2015), but that doesn't really account for another 180,000 or so people coming to the UK.
It's clear to see from a map of registrations that while there are urban hubs of migration in places like Manchester and Birmingham, the applications are located primarily in the southeast of the country and London. (In fact, those two areas combined make up more than half the total.
Fred1new
- 29 Feb 2016 14:26
- 68433 of 81564
Who would you back JB and few cronies.
Perhaps it is because the are insular little englanders.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-funds-uk-idUKKCN0W21G5?feedType=nl&feedName=ukdailyinvestor
With eye on possible Brexit, British funds cut UK exposure
British investors have sharply cut their exposure to domestic stocks and bonds in February in favour of euro zone assets, suggesting nerves are jangling over the country's potential exit from the European Union.
Britain is due to hold a referendum on its EU membership on June 23 and as the odds on 'Brexit' have steadily shortened in recent weeks, economists and world leaders have lined up to warn of the political and economic implications of such a split.
The debate sent sterling plunging to seven-year lows GBP= after London's influential mayor Boris Johnson backed the campaign to leave.
But a commodity rout and policymakers' apparent helplessness in the face of sluggish world growth is also weighing on sentiment, with London's FTSE 100 equity index set for its fourth straight monthly fall.
"Investors have been under a cloud of investment risk ... Unfortunately, throw in a bit of geo-political risk and the investment environment becomes very volatile," said Peter Lowman, chief investment officer at Investment Quorum.
"Sterling has taken the full force of the recent uncertainty. With some large institutions predicting it could fall as much as another 20 percent on a 'No' vote, that has huge ramifications ... you could make money on the stock market and lose it on the currency," he added.
British funds' allocation to UK equities fell to 26.7 percent this month, down six percentage points from last month, while the weight of euro zone and U.S. stocks each rose more than one percentage point to 16.5 and 27.8 percent respectively.
2517GEORGE
- 29 Feb 2016 14:36
- 68434 of 81564
''British funds' allocation to UK equities fell to 26.7 percent this month, down six percentage points from last month''
Despite this the FTSE index is up 30 odd pts.
2517
jimmy b
- 29 Feb 2016 14:39
- 68435 of 81564
Neil Woodford: Investors should not fear Brexit
This is a guy who knows a bit about the stock market..
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/db390a7c-db1a-11e5-a72f-1e7744c66818.html#axzz41ZGOqnuk