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.
grannyboy
- 26 Feb 2017 09:24
- 76192 of 81564
"Would you want your vaccines produced by supporters of jihad"
gatestoneinstitute.org/9979/vaccines-saudi-arabia
mentor
- 26 Feb 2017 22:55
- 76193 of 81564
I am going nowhere, lets sweep all the bad news under the carpet >>>>>
mentor
- 28 Feb 2017 15:40
- 76194 of 81564
Finally - Green - is ready to cough some cash to pay for the BHS pensions he went Plundering earlier ( not paying ).......
Philip Green agrees 363 mln stg BHS pension deal with regulator
Tue, 28th Feb 2017 14:41
LONDON, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Britain's pensions regulator has agreed a cash settlement worth up to 363 million pounds ($451 million) with Philip Green, the former owner of collapsed department store BHS, it said on Tuesday.
The regulator said the arrangement has the support of the trustees of the two BHS pension schemes.
It will see Green provide funding for a new independent pension scheme to give pensioners the option of the same starting pension as they were originally promised by BHS, and higher benefits than they would get from the Pension Protection Fund (PPF).
Billionaire Green owned BHS for 15 years before he sold the loss-making 180-store chain to Dominic Chappell, a serial bankrupt with no retail experience, for one pound in 2015.
BHS went into administration in April 2016 and the last of its stores closed in August. Some 11,000 jobs were lost.
cynic
- 28 Feb 2017 21:02
- 76195 of 81564
i did not expect to come across Plaza Margaret Thatcher in the middle of Madrid!
required field
- 28 Feb 2017 22:00
- 76196 of 81564
Well....it was a lucky escape said Francois Hollande......ouf..PHEW.....it could have been the head chef and the train driver....that would HAVE BEEN DISASTROUS.....
banjomick
- 28 Feb 2017 22:55
- 76197 of 81564
Laurenrose
- 03 Mar 2017 11:44
- 76198 of 81564
please sign the petition to get rid of the lords
grannyboy
- 03 Mar 2017 13:48
- 76199 of 81564
After the response after that gymnast 'Lewis' was castigated and ridiculed
by the media for mocking islam by pretending to pray, lets see what the response
is to 'Sir' rod stewart doing a mock execution in a desert somewhere, which was
put up on instagram by his wife penny Lancaster, but has since been removed..
'Sir' Rod Stewart says mock execution was Game of Thrones prank.
The rock star says he was re-enacting TV series after video appears to show him
faking jihadi john style beheading in desert.
grannyboy
- 05 Mar 2017 09:59
- 76201 of 81564
As expected the 'mock execution' by 'sir' rod stewart has quickly been
forgotten, unlike the Lewis debacle that was carried on by the pc media
for days.....
grannyboy
- 05 Mar 2017 15:26
- 76202 of 81564
Ho dear..Has our attention being too focused on Sweden, when France is in
a far worse state...
"In 1984, a movement called SOS Racisme was created by Trotskyist militants,
and began to define any criticism of immigration as "racist". Major leftist parties supported SOS Racism.
They seemed to have thought that by accusing their political opponents of racism, they could attract the votes of "new citizens".
The presence of islamist agitators , alongside agitators in Arab and African
neighborhoods, plus the emergence of anti-western islamic discourse,
alarmed many observers SOS Racisme immediately designated those who
spoke of islamic danger as "Islamophobic racist."
gatestoneinstitute.org/10007/france-death-spiral
mentor
- 06 Mar 2017 15:34
- 76203 of 81564
Pakistani women in UK paid least compared to men, Irish women the most - study
Mon, 6th Mar 2017 14:47 - By Anna Pujol-Mazzini
LONDON, March 6 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Pakistani and Bangladeshi women in Britain are paid the least compared to men while white Irish women have overtaken male peers in terms of salaries, according to a study of the gender pay gap by ethnicity on Monday.
The study released by women's rights group Fawcett Society found women from almost every minority ethnic group experienced a pay gap with white British men.
Research by the University of Manchester found Pakistani and Bangladeshi women hardest hit, earning 26 percent less than white British male peers, while black African women had made little progress since the 1990s and earned 20 percent less.
Figures from the UK's Office of National Statistics show on average women earned about 18 percent less than men in Britain in 2016.
The women who had seen the most progress since the 1990s were white Irish women who are now paid 17.5 percent more than white Irish and British men.
"But this is largely due to generational factors as they are more likely to be older, working full-time or in senior or managerial roles," Sam Smethers, chief executive of the Fawcett Society, said in a statement.
Chinese women have also have managed to reverse the pay gap in the past 20 years and are now earning 5 percent more than white British men when working full-time. But they still earn less than Chinese men.
Indian women have seen the gender pay gap with white British men narrow to about 6 percent from 26 percent in the 1990s for those working full-time.
Smethers said the charity's breakdown of the gender pay gap by ethnicity - released ahead of International Women's Day on March 8 - tracked progress over a 25 year period with largely negative results but some positive.
Smethers said black African women have been largely left behind in terms of closing the pay gap and Pakistani and Bangladeshi women are today "only where white British women were in the 1990s".
"For these groups this is a story of low labour market participation and low pay when they are in work together with high levels of unpaid caring work," Smethers said.
"But it is important to consider how that gender inequality is experienced by different ethnic groups to ensure that all women in Britain see their gender pay gap closed."
grannyboy
- 06 Mar 2017 18:03
- 76204 of 81564
"A Study by womens right group Fawcett Society found women from almost
every minority ethnic group experienced a pay gap with white British men"
Yes another bashing for the white British men, but the system is certainly
working against white British men for future generations which will reverse
that anomaly due to the fact that white boys are now being discriminated against
in further education, and also by the lack of attention in main schools because
the teachers have to give more attention to foreign born children where English
is not their first language.
As to Pakistani and Bangladeshi women being paid the least, is down to those from
them regions are generally muslim, and muslim women stay home to look after their
large families.
And all those studies point to its that time of year when these organisation
put in for grants..
iturama
- 07 Mar 2017 12:19
- 76205 of 81564
If Theresa May needed confirmation that there has been too much dumbing down in our education system, it is a former (labour) education minister saying that she is 150% wrong to bring back grammar schools.
The wealthy always have choice while grammar schools at least allow some working class youngsters the chance to have a better education. At the same time cut down on the number of universities. We have enough graduates in Art working at Starbucks while Polish fitters are fixing our boilers.
cynic
- 07 Mar 2017 14:06
- 76206 of 81564
just for info, the country's top public schools are now starting to suffer a severe imbalance as more and more children from wealthy overseas families take up the places on offer
it's an interesting discussion in itself, but i won't bore you all
Fred1new
- 07 Mar 2017 18:51
- 76207 of 81564
Yes, it is simple, the working class can afford the coaching to prepare their offspring for the examination to get into the grammar school.
=-==
Simple again, don't make any more boilers.
Dil
- 08 Mar 2017 08:47
- 76208 of 81564
What you on about now Fred ? I went to a comprehensive but would have needed no coaching whatsoever to have gained a grammar school place and nor would my mates. Those better off who's fathers were doctors , accountants etc wouldn't have needed any either.
Fred1new
- 08 Mar 2017 12:16
- 76209 of 81564
Dil.
Are you sure that you wouldn’t have needed coaching could be improved by a little more coercion?
-=-===
The assumptions are that those achieving "grammar" school places is often based on inborn “traits”, “natural abilities” and “genetic propensities” or “predispositions” rather than family “cultural” and “social” factors.
Ie. the “most able intellectually” able float automatically to the “top” by their own “natural” inborn “qualities” rather than the “family “pressures” or “directives”.
As with “athletes” coaching generally if applied appropriately can develop the potentials of an athlete to increase their performances’.
Unfortunately, in present social-cultural structures, many will fail to achieve their potentials.
I thought the introduction of the Comprehensive system under Baroness Shirley Williams while ideologically correct, but was appallingly organised, when put into practice and responsible for the some of the present “school problems”.
Also, I did see the necessity for the demise of the grammar schools, but saw the real problems and the poverty of “teaching” and “training” in the “secondary” schools and some technical colleges.
Also, because the method of re-organising by the amalgamation of schools at a distance to one another and often with different ethoses to one another, made for difficulties.
However, the reintroduction of grammar schools and early zoning of society as 11 or 12 does not seem to be the right way to improve education.
Efforts to improving the “teaching” within the present structures should be the aims.
-=-=-==-=
Ps. I was a lucky grammar school “failure”, but my grand-children are in “top” London comprehensives and I think having a very good education.
Dil
- 09 Mar 2017 09:15
- 76210 of 81564
Glad to hear it Fred.
Our school was ok at the time but think it may have gone down hill a bit since I attended. Look at that Labour clown Owen Smith who went to the same school , hardly a bright spark is he :-)
Fred1new
- 09 Mar 2017 11:00
- 76211 of 81564
I didn't know they had schools in Barry when you were a boy.