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.
Dil
- 27 Sep 2017 01:59
- 79154 of 81564
You into Welsh porn then jimbo :-)
Dil
- 27 Sep 2017 02:25
- 79155 of 81564
Hils , after posting the tongue in cheek racist comment about the Severn Bridge it did get me thinking.
iIts definitely akin to putting a tariff on trade between say Wales and Bristol and Wales and the Midlands.
My daughter lives in Bristol and went to uni there , must have cost her/us at least 1.5k in toll fees compared to if she had gone to Cardiff uni and lived in Cardiff.
Dil
- 27 Sep 2017 02:27
- 79156 of 81564
iturama ... they all got shit football teams :-)
jimmy b
- 27 Sep 2017 08:05
- 79157 of 81564
I was cautious about putting those pictures up Dil in case one was an ex of yours .
hilary
- 27 Sep 2017 17:14
- 79158 of 81564
Unfortunately, Dil, I guess that's a downside of PFI for you.
In Switzerland, we need a vignette which sticks to the windscreen in order to use the motorways, but there are no tolls as such (except on a couple of tunnels). At the equivalent of around £30 a year it's excellent value for money imo. I guess that's a bit steep if you're only on vacation for a week, so the vignette effectively then becomes a tourist tax. However, you still have a choice, and if you don't use the motorways, you don't need a vignette.
In France, the autoroutes are very expensive imo, and you can easily spend in a day what it costs for a year in Switzerland. In my experience, the locals tend to avoid the autoroutes wherever possible, and we only use them ourselves if we're on a long journey. The autoroutes are also an effective way of taxing tourists. The Millau Viaduct toll actually increases by about 50% for the months of July and August when all the Brits, Dutch, Germans and Belgians are bombing down for their summer holiday.
That's what made me wonder whether people living locally to the Severn and Dartford crossings got any discount. I guess from your response that they don't?
Stan
- 28 Sep 2017 13:42
- 79159 of 81564
MaxK
- 28 Sep 2017 23:19
- 79160 of 81564
Here you are, something to cheer up you miserable old gits..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceYjg1dy-h0
Dil
- 29 Sep 2017 07:56
- 79161 of 81564
Hils , many of the locals this side of the bridge are campaigning to keep the tolls as they fear house prices will rise due to the lower cost of commuting to Bristol.
Fred1new
- 29 Sep 2017 08:26
- 79162 of 81564
Here is to-day's tory heroine or marionette?
Do I see Trump's hand pulling the controls?
Dil
- 29 Sep 2017 08:30
- 79163 of 81564
Every time that Labour loony opened his mouth on Question Time last night I felt as though I had been transported back in time to the 70's and was listening to Derrick Hatton. Kept waiting for Robin Day to shut him up.
As for his claim of a fully costed manifesto , go tell that to all the students you lied to.
hilary
- 29 Sep 2017 10:43
- 79164 of 81564
I don't get that, Dil.
I would've thought the locals would welcome the prospect of a bigger economy, and of owning houses that were worth more???
iturama
- 29 Sep 2017 10:58
- 79165 of 81564
If they are happy and prosperous Plaid Cymru would have nothing to complain about. Besides, they don't want a bunch of handsome englishmen wooing their sheep. As was said with the yanks, "over sexed and over here".
mentor
- 29 Sep 2017 14:27
- 79166 of 81564
Crooks at work cooking the books at Tesco finally at court.............
Former Tesco executives pressured staff "to cook books", court told
LONDON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Three former Tesco executives abused their positions of trust to encourage the manipulation of profit figures, lied to auditors and misled the stock market, prosecutors told a London court on Friday.
The senior executives were "cooking the books" to secure huge compensation packages, and bullying subordinates into compliance, lead prosecutor Sasha Wass told London's Southwark Crown Court.
Christopher Bush, who was managing director of Tesco UK, Carl Rogberg, who was UK finance director, and John Scouler, who was UK food commercial director, all deny charges of fraud and false accounting.
"The three defendants on trial are not the foot soldiers," she said.
Dil
- 30 Sep 2017 10:21
- 79167 of 81564
Hils , they worried that locals not yet on the property market will be priced out of it. Plus they mostly small inbred communities who don't want an influx of outsiders coming in.
Personally I think they are small minded selfish gits.
Gausie
- 30 Sep 2017 11:35
- 79168 of 81564
"Personally I think they are small minded selfish gits. "
You mean 'Welsh'?
MaxK
- 01 Oct 2017 09:33
- 79170 of 81564
Protesters stage London demo against plans for patient ID checks
Critics fear checks will destroy relationship NHS staff have with patients and create climate of fear that stops people accessing care
Damien Gayle
Saturday 30 September 2017 15.54 BST
Protesters gathered at St Thomas’ hospital in central London on Saturday to voice opposition to the introduction of ID checks at hospitals and up-front charges for patients not eligible for NHS care.
People from overseas are already liable for the cost of treatment, but new rules will require hospitals, community interest companies and charities receiving NHS funds to identify such patients before treatment in order to bill them.
At the same time, 20 hospitals across the UK are trialling ID checks that require patients to present two forms of ID before they are treated. The government says that the changes lower the burden from health tourism, which is blamed for costing the NHS millions every year.
quote:
Dr Timesh Pillay, a member of Docs Not Cops, said: “Eligibility checks directly and disproportionately burden individuals who are ill, from lower socio-economic backgrounds and identify as BME, whether they be legally eligible to NHS care or not.
“This surmounts to no less than structural violence. This policy is a barrier to me providing empathic mutualistic healthcare as it often overshadows the consultation. I believe in a healthcare system independent from the policies of the Home Office and UK Border Agency that is freely accessible to all.”
Full story here:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/sep/30/protesters-stage-london-demo-against-plans-for-patient-id-checks
2517GEORGE
- 01 Oct 2017 09:52
- 79171 of 81564
''I believe in a healthcare system independent from the policies of the Home Office and UK Border Agency that is freely accessible to all.”
Therein lies the problem
Dil
- 01 Oct 2017 10:29
- 79172 of 81564
Lol Gausie.
In fact in most of those communities on the border the majority consider themselves English. Ask Mike , he used to watch the rugby somewhere round there with them.
Chris Carson
- 01 Oct 2017 11:54
- 79173 of 81564
Might add to PHTM on Monday :0)