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.
required field
- 03 Jan 2018 16:32
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I tell you what...driving you can't see a thing with a Burka turned sideways on.....
required field
- 03 Jan 2018 16:33
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..euhhh...please don't ask what I get up to......
iturama
- 03 Jan 2018 17:27
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You feeling ok rf? Best lie down for a while.
I am not a regretful Brexiteer Hilary, I would still vote out, but I recognise that the Commission has done some good work with standards and competition. Also that there are many politicians in the EU with more backbone than our spineless lot. Much of what we complain about is entirely within our own power to resolve, if we had the will, but the mass immigration encouraged by Blair and his ilk has made it politically a lot more difficult. That was the intent.
hilary
- 03 Jan 2018 17:54
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Life's too short for regrets, iturama. :o)
Fwiw, there are many in Europe who are unhappy with the EU. Our German neighbours fear that Germany has been wrecked by immigration. When we go down to Geneve, the locals complain about all of the mosques. And in our local town in the south of France last summer, there were hundreds of posters appearing on trees and lamposts questioning why immigration was such a taboo.
Equally, I don't think it's right that the UK, Germany and France contribute the vast majority of the EU's GDP, yet only get a 1/28 say each on what goes on.
So, whilst I don't necessarily agree that leaving the EU is the solution, and whilst I don't think Brexit will materially change anything in the way that Brexiters think it will, I do totally get why people voted to leave.
2517GEORGE
- 04 Jan 2018 11:25
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Have you always had this uncanny knack of cheering us up EL. lol
It's a bit obscene when you think they will get their mondiflous irrespective of whether they improve or trash the company
cynic
- 04 Jan 2018 11:28
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hils - i think there is also a strong move away from brussels in nl and quite a few other member states who contribute rather than take
hilary
- 04 Jan 2018 12:34
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I'm sure you're right, Cyners.
And whilst we're on the subject of ills within the EU, is it right that Luxembourg, Malta and Cyprus, with a combined population of just over 2 million, should each have a 1/28 say of what goes on in the EU?
cynic
- 04 Jan 2018 13:32
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no more than it is right that the great unwashed of both sexes should have a vote in anything :-)
but in more serious mode, there is just so much wrong with the way EU is currently structured, and with a massive increase in budget expenditure already telegraphed, i am now glad that i voted"out", albeit that it was with considerably misgivings at the time
Fred1new
- 04 Jan 2018 15:38
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Apparently, the UK has 0.88% of the World population.
How much respect should be given to their opinion in the United Nations?
Ummh?
How much does size. wealth, individual earning power, education and skill levels of population or country validate their "power" to be heard or vote in an organisation?
ummmmmmh.
cynic
- 04 Jan 2018 16:00
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a lot when they're contributing the funds to keep whichever organisation afloat ...... akin to being a serious shareholder
Fred1new
- 04 Jan 2018 16:08
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I see you respect Trump!
cynic
- 04 Jan 2018 16:11
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only when he makes a fine job of turnbury golf course
Haystack
- 04 Jan 2018 17:27
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iturama
- 04 Jan 2018 17:59
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It was her. No doubt about it. Or her sister.
ExecLine
- 05 Jan 2018 13:51
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'Fake News' or not? Hmmm? However, it does seem plausible. Hmmm? Anyway....
Trump aides planning to flee as Wolff book throws White House deeper into turmoil: reports
Travis Gettys
05 JAN 2018 AT 07:45 ET
As bad as thing have been so far in the White House under President Donald Trump, they soon could get even worse.
Michael Wolff’s new book Fire and Fury depicts a chaotic and dysfunctional White House where staffers fear and loathe the president, whom they regard as a vain and moody “idiot,” and those conditions have exacerbated the stress that comes with the job, reported Axios.
“More than half a dozen of the more skilled White House staff are contemplating imminent departures,” according to Axios co-founders Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei. “Many leaving are quite fearful about the next chapter of the Trump presidency.”
The website collected more than a dozen anecdotes from Wolff’s book, which has infuriated Trump so much that aides are simply avoiding him.
Trump has threatened to sue Wolff over his book, but Axios reported that his lawyers laughed at the president’s bluster.
Those anecdotes show how unprepared Trump is for the presidency, and how he ignores or disregards advice and follows his instincts wherever they lead — even when he contradicts himself.
“He seemed almost phobic about having formal demands on his attention,” Wolff wrote.
Wolff described a “wackadoo” moments whenever the president rambled off topic, and staffers were forced into “intense method-acting” to pretend not to notice “what everyone could see.”
“In the Trump White House, policy making … flowed up.” Wolff wrote. “It was a process of suggesting, in throw-it-against-the-wall style, what the president might want, and hoping he might then think that he had thought of this himself.”
Those conditions have many staffers considering a hasty exit, although it’s not clear how attractive those jobs will be once they’re open.
.........................................................................
Michael Wolff: Trump’s White House says president is ‘like a child’
By Yaron Steinbuch
January 5, 2018 8:44am
Michael Wolff, the author of an explosive new book about the White House, insisted Friday that he had spoken to President Trump on the record – and said everyone he interviewed said the president “is like a child,” according to a report.
Wolff told NBC’s “Today” show that everyone he spoke to for the book offered the same description of the commander-in-chief.
They all said “he is like a child,” Wolff said.
Wolff also said he “absolutely” spoke to the president during his reporting for the book, “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House.”
“It was certainly not off the record,” Wolff said, adding that he has recordings and notes of his interviews with the presdient’s aides.
The unflattering tell-all features shocking anecdotes, including claims from former top aide Steve Bannon that Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with Russians at Trump Tower in June 2016 was “treasonous” and “unpatriotic.”
Trump has lashed back at his former chief strategist and tweeted Thursday night that he “authorized Zero access to White House” for the author and “never spoke to him for book.”
The president also used the term “Sloppy Steve,” apparently referring to Bannon.
On Friday, Wolff said on “Today” that Trump isn’t one to talk when it comes to credibility.
“My credibility is being questioned by a man who has less credibility than, perhaps, anyone who has ever walked on Earth at this point,” Wolff said.
Wolff’s book was released early Friday by Henry Holt & Co., which announced a day earlier it was pushing up the publication date due to high demand.
Earlier Thursday, Trump personal attorney Charles Harder demanded in a letter sent to Wolff and his publisher, that the book not be published or disseminated.
The book reached No. 1 on the Amazon best-seller list on Wednesday.
Clocktower
- 05 Jan 2018 14:30
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Fred1 - your friend Tony Blair stated that the story that mentioned him in the book, was just false. So do you trust the man that mislead Parliament over weapons of mass destruction?
Fred1new
- 05 Jan 2018 15:04
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Clockwork,
Get back in your box.
Read posts on my opinion of Blair before he was elected PM. and also prior to the Iraq war.
Nevertheless, in comparisons with the present bunch of con artists led by the incompetent Theresa May, he and his government were more competent.
Iraq was murderous folly supported by the conservatives and their nincompoop of a leader Ian Duncan Smith who was shown prancing down Downing Street after consulting with Blair.
-=-=-=-
As far as quotes by Wolff are concerned I would prefer to believe Blair.
But you read into the book what suits you.
I hope you have bought it on Amazon, personally I will read it when it starts appearing on the bookshelves of Oxfam.
Fred1new
- 05 Jan 2018 15:10
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Clockwork,
Ps.
I believe one of your icons was overjoyed at Trump's success and invited him for a state visit, while another, who I would think is one of your glamour boys, Farage, was delighted to work for the possibly psychotic Trump.
MaxK
- 05 Jan 2018 15:38
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