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
- 30 Jun 2017 09:22
- 78279 of 81564
Sorry Stan. That is from the Guardian, the lefts favourite rag. My fault, I should have realised that coming from the graun it would be fake news.
Laurenrose
- 30 Jun 2017 09:24
- 78280 of 81564
thats ok stan loves fake news its is trait
Fred1new
- 30 Jun 2017 09:39
- 78281 of 81564
2517GEORGE
- 30 Jun 2017 14:15
- 78284 of 81564
Residents of these tower blocks are also being refused home insurance
iturama
- 30 Jun 2017 14:32
- 78285 of 81564
No mention of Burnley, Stan. Must be improving.
It is often said that home is where the heart is - and that there's no place like it.
But a new league table of the worst places to live in England reveals the areas branded 'scummy' and 'run-down' by their not-so-proud inhabitants.
Here is what they have to say about the towns voted England's worst...
In reverse order:
10. Blackpool
'Go back a few streets from the prom and you will see the deprivation, the ghettos and the scummy pubs that make up the REAL Blackpool.'
9. Oldham
'I think Oldham was best summed up by a friend of mine who remarked the people look as though the government has been performing nuclear testing in the area.'
8. Sunderland
'It's a pretty sad place, to be honest. Find somewhere with easy access to Newcastle city centre and you'll be happy.'
7. Gravesend
'If you must come to Gravesend, please stop by the estate agents and buy my house, because it's far to close to chavs for comfort.'
6. Bradford
'Bradford is literally hell on earth. The city centre resembles a squalid cess pit, full of monstrous partially demolished 60s concrete office blocks.'
5. Rochdale
'Rochdale, once described by Monty Python as a quaint Northern village, I am sure you already recognise this as a misnomer of the greatest degree.'
4. Scunthorpe
'If Maccy Ds is the chav's staple diet, what does that tell you about a town that boasts not one, not two but THREE of these gourmet eateries?'
3. Luton
'One of the most shocking moments in Luton was on Christmas day. My friend pointed out the local McDonalds, saying "it gets busier every year".'
2. Hull
'I lived in Hull until I was ten but my parents moved when local gangs started to have pitched battles using such weapons as garden shears.'
1. Dover
'Let us for a moment imagine that the British Isles are the silhouette of an old man.
'Scotland is his cap, Cornwall his toes, Anglia his curved spine, making Dover his herpes infested s***hole.'
MaxK
- 30 Jun 2017 15:16
- 78286 of 81564
Hold on a sec.
We keep reading about the council/gov having to cough up millions to put the tower blocks right.
But where are the suppliers/installers and their insurers?
Haystack
- 30 Jun 2017 15:38
- 78287 of 81564
That would only be appropriate once someone or a company found to be to blame
Haystack
- 30 Jun 2017 15:40
- 78288 of 81564
Laurenrose
- 30 Jun 2017 15:58
- 78289 of 81564
put up the rents to pay for the work to e done if you own your home does the gov and tax payers pey . answer NO NO NO .
PUT UP THE RENTS AN PUT THEM UP NOW MAKE THOSE THAT USE THEM PAY FOR THEM
Laurenrose
- 30 Jun 2017 16:04
- 78290 of 81564
council rents are far to cheap and most should not be in council homes ,
put up the rents
Stan
- 30 Jun 2017 16:10
- 78291 of 81564
"iturama - 30 Jun 2017 09:22 - 78279 of 78289
Sorry Stan. That is from the Guardian, the lefts favourite rag. My fault, I should have realised that coming from the graun it would be fake news."
Reading the Guardian eh these days..may I be the first to congratulate you on your choice of Newspaper );-
Stan
- 30 Jun 2017 16:25
- 78292 of 81564
iturama - 30 Jun 2017 14:32 - 78285 of 78291
No mention of Burnley, Stan. Must be improving.
Burnley like a lot of Penine towns never recovered from the loss of Cotton, Coal Mining, The Shoe industry and of course the dreadful Thatcher years on top, but the area around the Town is an attractive area with many settling down there and commuting to Manchester each day.
Further more with the recent resurrection of the Todmenden Link commuting into Manchester is even quicker then it is by road.
cynic
- 30 Jun 2017 16:34
- 78293 of 81564
all MT's fault that the cotton industry went down the pan - stan will confirm and ditto coal . .... as for shoes, blame it all on these developing economies
Haystack
- 30 Jun 2017 16:51
- 78294 of 81564
All tower blocks tested have failed. At least 600 blocks to be tested.
Haystack
- 30 Jun 2017 16:52
- 78295 of 81564
Twice as many mines closed under Harold Wilson than under Thatcher.
2517GEORGE
- 30 Jun 2017 16:53
- 78296 of 81564
Sounds like since the Todmorden Curve opened folk can't get out of Burnley quick enough.
cynic
- 30 Jun 2017 16:54
- 78297 of 81564
probably so, though MT was seriously tough on the unions - as was fully deserved by the more militant - and that caused massive collateral damage
iturama
- 30 Jun 2017 17:28
- 78298 of 81564
The underground coal industry died in this country for one major reason - it was too expensive compared with the open pit coal from the likes of South Africa and Australia. The 60s was a time of major changes in open pit mining with the introduction of very large excavators and off road haulage trucks as well as bulk tonnage handling systems at ports. Coupled with the move away from heating homes with coal and the cheap oil and gas from the North Sea, the death of most small tonnage underground coal mines was predictable. Nothing to do with the politicians of the day. You can prop up industries for only so long before the inevitable happens.
Glad to see that Burnley is going ok Stan. Just ragging you. I really like Northerners, salt of the earth IMO.