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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

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.

ExecLine - 01 Oct 2017 14:13 - 79177 of 81564

We are frequently asked for a 'Photo ID' in the UK.

The last time for me was at my local Screwfix . I'd paid for the items which I'd bought online with 'PayPal' and proof with Photo ID was required for collection.

The order value was about £20 or so. I'd bought this way so as to cut down the waiting time at the counter.

In the USA they are continually asking tourists for photo ID. A Passport isn't any use for us Brits because it doesn't show your address. If you don't drive and thus have a Photo DL, then you're a bit stuffed. A decade or so ago, the DLs weren't necessarily 'up to date' and so you also had to carry the paper one around with you to support it.

Yes, I believe everyone should have some form of PhotoID. It should be able to prove who you are and where you live.

I dare bet, that eventually, it will be an offence to be without one.

cynic - 01 Oct 2017 16:12 - 79178 of 81564

i never get asked for photo i/d but that may be because i am so very old
mind you, i was asked at Boston airport if I was over 75 as if not I had to remove my shoes
odd or what???????

Fred1new - 01 Oct 2017 16:34 - 79179 of 81564

EL>
From Wiki

"Abandoned plans for "next generation" biometric passports and national identity registration[edit]
There had been plans, under the Identity Cards Act 2006, to link passports to the Identity Cards scheme. However, in the Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Agreement that followed the 2010 General Election, the new government announced that they planned to scrap the ID card scheme, the National Identity Register, and the next generation of biometric passports, as part of their measures 'to reverse the substantial erosion of civil liberties under the Labour Government and roll back state intrusion.'[51][52]
The Identity Cards Act 2006 would have required any person applying for a passport to have their details entered into a centralised computer database, the National Identity Register, part of the National Identity Scheme associated with identity cards and passports. Once registered, they would also have been obliged to update any change to their address and personal details. The identity card was expected to cost up to £60 (with £30 going to the Government, and the remainder charged as processing fees by the companies that would be collecting the fingerprints and photographs).[53] In May 2005 the Government said that the cost for a combined identity card and passport would be £93 plus processing fees.[54]"


From memory on there were a lot of postings on one of the threads on this board.

The majority of those postings were against introduction by a certain fraction.

I thought the introduction may cut out a lot multiple bank accounts, fraudulent welfare claims, various forms of tax evasion and other criminal activity.

iturama - 01 Oct 2017 16:47 - 79180 of 81564

Profiling C. Either nobody over 75 has bombed a plane or they are known to have smelly feet. Probably both.
Some proof of ID is required when collecting at the post office. A drivers licence is best but a utility letter with address is normally sufficient. In the US, I carry my Texas driving licence but I suspect a UK licence is just as good.

ExecLine - 01 Oct 2017 18:33 - 79181 of 81564

For a while in the USA I was able to show off and use a gold plated 6-star badge with 'Honary Deputy Sheriff of Indianapolis' engraved/printed on it and also an 'Honary Deputy Sheriff of Indianapolis' ID to go with it.

An Honary Sheriff deputised me whilst on vacation one year. He got his for financially supporting the Sheriff who got elected one time and, in turn, he deputised me as a bit of a special favour, seeing as how we were a bit matey with each other. Of course, when the Sheriff got changed at the next election, all the 'honary' positions got revoked.

Naturally. That's how things work over there. Sheriff's jobs are an elected position.

MaxK - 01 Oct 2017 19:36 - 79182 of 81564

Jeremy, Fred and Stan race to see who makes the bestest €U appeasers...


TELEMMGLPICT000072050565_trans_NvBQzQNjv

Stan - 01 Oct 2017 23:49 - 79183 of 81564

Wrong thread Max.. your getting as bad as Tanker 😊

MaxK - 01 Oct 2017 23:57 - 79184 of 81564

Apt tho eh Stan?

in anycase, it attracted your attension, which was the whole point :-)

Stan - 02 Oct 2017 00:00 - 79185 of 81564

...stupid boy Max, now go and stand in the corner.

jimmy b - 02 Oct 2017 08:23 - 79186 of 81564

They would be too pretty for Fred and Stan . Try this one.


Fred1new - 02 Oct 2017 09:57 - 79187 of 81564

Dumbo.

Your dementia is progressing rapidly.

You are repeating yourself more and more frequently unless you are posting because the image satisfies one of your obvious needs.

Chris Carson - 02 Oct 2017 10:03 - 79188 of 81564

Freda doth protest too much methinks :0)

mentor - 02 Oct 2017 10:20 - 79189 of 81564

If they keep repeating it, eventually the ( hard left of the Labour Party ) will believe its true....

Green says Labour is 'a nasty party' and 'a front operation for the hard left'

Damian Green, the first secretary of state, spoke after Sir Patrick McLoughlin. His speech was a broad and general defence of the government’s record, most notable for what he said about Labour.

Green claimed that the Labour party was a “nasty party’ and “a front operation for the hard left”.
[Labour] is a front operation for the hard left. A Labour party with MPs that abuse Prince Harry for his service in Afghanistan, and that tolerates an under-current of antisemitism. There was a time when we needed to be warned about sounding nasty. I tell you there is still a nasty party in Britain in 2017 and it’s called the Labour party.

Fred1new - 02 Oct 2017 12:31 - 79190 of 81564

I find it hard to believe anything stated by the present torrid tory party or its adherents, where some of its more fervent members, with their retrogressive policies and values, could have fitted easily into a 1930's "National Socialist Party".

jimmy b - 02 Oct 2017 13:38 - 79191 of 81564

Fred your obsessed ,stop stalking me .

Stan - 02 Oct 2017 23:21 - 79192 of 81564

Gun nutter land at it again http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-41466116

Fred1new - 03 Oct 2017 08:24 - 79193 of 81564

The party for con artists where the slap on the back is a knife!

required field - 03 Oct 2017 08:42 - 79194 of 81564

I'm starting to lose my faith in humanity when you see what happened in Las Vegas.....why?....just unbelievable that innocent lives can be shattered like this.....if the USA cannot clamp down on madmen acquiring automatic weapons like this (gun owners should have a mental assessment once a year)...then : they have a very sick society !....

ExecLine - 03 Oct 2017 10:00 - 79195 of 81564

The shooter was sensible enough to have made a sizeable amount from his property deals and mentally clever enough to be gambling away $30k per day online.

I cannot understand why he kept stacking up and building up his arsenal of weapons and ammunition and how he was able to take so much of it up to his hotel room. It's almost as though he was planning it all because something or someone had pissed him off big time.

1. The hotel security does stink but it's hard to imagine as to how they might beef it up without searching everyone's luggage very frequently.
2. And it's also a 'Yes' to the fact that American society is quite sick.

ExecLine - 03 Oct 2017 12:50 - 79196 of 81564

Someone else asking the same question as me:

How was Paddock able to not only amass such an armoury but get half of it into a Las Vegas hotel room?

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