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.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:26
- 47681 of 81564
No good for the short term stock player though, ok for intraday trading done a bit on EZJ today. Nicely up and down.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:30
- 47682 of 81564
Suppose I could do some shorting but to be honest cant be assed and you get others who are long wound up.
Nice to have rest really in fact longest rest Ive had in years.
Shortie
- 15 Oct 2014 16:31
- 47683 of 81564
Good for us spread betters, I love a short market as you well know... Bounce tomorrow maybe if 6240ish doesn't hold I think..
Shortie
- 15 Oct 2014 16:33
- 47684 of 81564
I'm debating a long play in gold also
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:35
- 47685 of 81564
POLL: Lord Freud has apologised – should he keep his job? 15/10/2014

Lord Freud has apologised for suggesting that disabled people were not ‘worth’ the minimum wage.
According to The Spectator, he has said:
“I would like to offer a full and unreserved apology. I was foolish to accept the premise of the question. To be clear, all disabled people should be paid at least the minimum wage, without exception, and I accept that it is offensive to suggest anything else.
“I care passionately about disabled people. I am proud to have played a full part in a government that is fully committed to helping disabled people overcome the many barriers they face in finding employment. That is why through Universal Credit – which I referred to in my response – we have increased overall spending on disabled households by £250m, offered the most generous work allowance ever, and increased the disability addition to £360 per month.
“I am profoundly sorry for any offence I have caused to any disabled people.”
Those of you who are disabled will no doubt be extremely interested – if not entertained – by the second paragraph of the above, in which Lord Freud fantasizes about his role in the Conservative-led Coalition’s policies of impoverishing them and forcing them towards death in the gutter or suicide before they get that far.
It is easy to see how ‘Lord Fraud’ got his nickname.
Fred1new
- 15 Oct 2014 16:39
- 47686 of 81564
GF.
Can you ask Haze whether Lord Freud is one of the senior tories he is pally with?
I was thinking birds of a feather!
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:39
- 47687 of 81564
Fraud by name Fraud by nature.
I actualy dont want him to be sacked, I want that to happen when IDS and his poison dwarf Ester get pulled up on the DEATH STATISTICS due before Xmas.
Full disclosure.
Another thing Lord Fraud seems to have overlooked, Universal Credit is only payable to single people at the moment on the pilot scheme.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:42
- 47688 of 81564
HAYS.......Can I ask you whether Lord Freud is one of the senior tories you are pally with?
I was thinking birds of a feather!
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:43
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Well Call Me Dave is taking it seriously, hes thinking over Frauds position.
Another Hunt then.
doodlebug4
- 15 Oct 2014 16:45
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Fred, my wine bill varies each month. I've stopped drinking really expensive wine now as some of the prices are just silly. I found a lovely Bergerac when I visited France in August which was the equivalent of around £6, but couldn' t find a cheap way of shipping over a lorry load!
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:46
- 47691 of 81564
Shortie yep Gold is looking to be the real deal at last. Might be tempted myself.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:50
- 47692 of 81564
IDS playing tricks again...............whats new.
400,000 ESA Claims Disappear due to DWP trickery
ESA on the rise: Figures from NIESR’s Jonathan Portes show the number of people receiving ESA is increasing – but there are none for those in the ‘mandatory reconsideration’ queue and it seems 400,000 claims awaiting assessment have gone unrecorded.
Vox Political is grateful to Same Difference for bringing this article by Work Test Whistleblower to our attention:
The old men of Caxton House might seem unworldly, but they know how to pull off a conjuring trick: they’ve made 400,000 claims vanish into thin air.
The Atos bottleneck has led to a huge number of jobless people getting stuck in welfare limbo (or “limboland” as IDS said in the House the other day). They wait…and wait…and wait for their ESA claims to be assessed.
In the meantime, how does the DWP classify them, in its official stats?
JSA claimants?
Unemployed?
ESA recipients?
Employees?
Answer: none of the above.
They aren’t recorded anywhere in the data fed to the press.
Read the rest of the article on the Work Test Whistleblower site.
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 16:53
- 47693 of 81564
FRED how do they manage to keep lying to the press?????????????
The DWP is corrupt from top to bottom.
Cant see how even manuel can argue with this and the above post.
Fred1new
- 15 Oct 2014 16:57
- 47694 of 81564
I am not sure why, but I cringed with a little shudder when I hear or see Ester!
Normally I have a strong stomach.
Mind Cruella (Theresa) has the same effect.
Perhaps, I am deep down frighten of women or what they can do to you!
8-)
doodlebug4
- 15 Oct 2014 17:04
- 47695 of 81564
Latest figures from Children in Need show that even before this year's appeal it has an £87,705,000 cash pile
The BBC will soon be getting out the begging bowl again for Children in Need, but the charity is at the moment flush with cash. In the small print of its latest figures, it discloses that it has an astonishing £87,705,000 stashed away in bank accounts and other investments.
A spokesman for the corporation sees nothing wrong in sitting on quite such a huge sum. “BBC Children in Need typically awards grants over a three year period. Money is released on a quarterly basis as projects demonstrate the impact they are having on young lives,” he says.
“The level of our investments reflects the record amounts raised in the charity’s appeals over the last two years and thus our ability to award record amounts to change young lives.”
Daily Telegraph
Fred1new
- 15 Oct 2014 17:10
- 47696 of 81564
GF.
I agree with your reading of the figures.
DB4.
There are some very drinkable wines at low prices.
Unfortunately there is junk at high and low prices.
I tend to drink plonk and in an attempt to not routinely finish the bottle, Recently I bough some boxes, hoping to have just one two or three glasses a night. Some have been very enjoyable, others almost put me off drinking, after 55 years of steadily imbibing.
Some of these boxes are said to have an "open life" of up to 2 months.
Don't think that is accurate as I have made Beef Bourguignon to-day to use up some I had open for 3weeks.
Hope it hasn't spoilt the meat.
The attraction of the boxes is that when I return from France the boxes are easy to store in the van when I am travelling!
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 17:12
- 47697 of 81564
Freud should be sacked for saying disabled workers are “not worth the full wage” 15/10/2014
Freud – made a disastrous comment at the Conservative Party conference.
At Prime Minister’s Questions today (October 15), he was revealed to have said on September 30: “There is a group… where actually… they’re not worth the full wage and actually I’m going to go and think about that particular issue, whether there is something we can do nationally, and without distorting the whole thing, which actually if someone wants to work for £2 an hour, and it’s working can we actually” [make it possible for them to do so].
Labour leader Ed Miliband, challenging David Cameron to act on the remarks, said they represented the Tories’ “worst instincts”.
Cameron’s response – that these “were not the views of anyone in government” – was appallingly weak. Clearly they were: Lord Freud is, after all, a member of the government.
Commentators across the UK, watching the exchange on TV or the Internet, were quick to comment on the fact that Iain Duncan Smith, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and Freud’s boss, was seen scuttling out of the House of Commons before PMQs ended.
Fred1new
- 15 Oct 2014 18:04
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Do you think Cameron has made another Freudian slip and exposed himself for what he really stands for?
Fred1new
- 15 Oct 2014 18:06
- 47699 of 81564
GF,
Didn't this government cut back on REMPLOY?
goldfinger
- 15 Oct 2014 18:26
- 47700 of 81564
Most certainly not just cut back but have binned it all together. Small pockets are being left to run down.
Shame on them, Shame on Camoron.