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.
Fred1new
- 24 Apr 2015 14:46
- 59101 of 81564
(Reuters) - Prime Minister David Cameron has squandered Britain's global influence by forging an inward-looking approach to international affairs that has left the world's fifth-largest economy isolated, opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband said on Friday.
Less than two weeks before a May 7 election, Miliband dragged Cameron's foreign policy record to the heart of a campaign which has so far seen almost no debate of international affairs beyond references to immigration.
Citing Cameron's absence from Franco-German talks on Ukraine with Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin, the chaos in Libya and the Conservative promise of a vote on European Union membership, Miliband said the prime minister has torpedoed British clout.
"My case is that David Cameron has presided over the biggest loss of influence for our country in a generation," Miliband told an audience in London.
"It is time to reject the small-minded isolationism that I believe has characterised this government, because I believe it is an approach that has shrunk our influenced and weakened Britain."
In what opinion polls indicate is the closest British election in a generation, Miliband and Cameron are the only likely candidates to lead Britain's next government.
Miliband used the biggest foreign policy speech of his campaign to accuse Cameron of putting short-term party politics ahead of the national interest, especially over Europe.
Cameron, he said, promised a referendum on European Union membership by the end of 2017 to appease Eurosceptics in his party and to counter the rise of the UK Independence Party, which has poached Conservative voters.
=-=-=-=-=
Is he representing the tories or the Faragists?
MaxK
- 24 Apr 2015 15:25
- 59102 of 81564
£84.99 diy reversing kit, should be easy enough to fit, but not sure about the command system (whatever that is) Give maplin a call, they have plenty of tech/geeks who will probably be able to answer as to suitability.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/maplin-wireless-reversing-camera-kit-for-cars-a11lb
cynic
- 24 Apr 2015 15:30
- 59103 of 81564
EM says of course, but then he would wouldn't he
required field
- 24 Apr 2015 17:48
- 59104 of 81564
Very difficult to change anything in France at at all.....they are so entrenched in their ways.....their unions are stronger than ours....you have to have unions but theirs are just like nuts.....you just can't do a thing.....they just don't encourage business at all.....they say they do, but they don't...obstacle after obstacle....I know ; I've lived there....and now they are stuck in this euro debacle.....not their fault but along with the richer nations : they are subsidising the poorer ones....
Fred1new
- 24 Apr 2015 17:51
- 59105 of 81564
You are lucky.
To live. (there)
Which part?
required field
- 24 Apr 2015 17:54
- 59106 of 81564
Not now Fred....went to school from the age of nine until the age of 24....but I know southern France pretty well...and still retain many contacts there....
Fred1new
- 24 Apr 2015 18:08
- 59107 of 81564
I think it is a beautiful country and would liked to have lived there. Preferably, below Paris in the warmth.
Know the Dordogne area very well and a lot of the south, but too cold in the winter.
I am never sure if the French deserve their country!
8-)
cynic
- 24 Apr 2015 18:22
- 59108 of 81564
perhaps you think the libyans, algerians, moroccans and similar should inherit the earth, or at least france
Stan
- 24 Apr 2015 18:24
- 59109 of 81564
When you due to go abroad again?
Fred1new
- 24 Apr 2015 18:33
- 59110 of 81564
Why not?
cynic
- 24 Apr 2015 18:47
- 59111 of 81564
munich and budapest early/mid may
fred - why not? ask the locals around marseille .... they'ld probably even prefer to have you your your ilk
Stan
- 24 Apr 2015 18:56
- 59112 of 81564
How about tomorrow -):
Fred1new
- 24 Apr 2015 19:15
- 59113 of 81564
I always had a friendly reception in Marseilles when they saw my dragon!
Locals were very friendly.
Chris Carson
- 24 Apr 2015 19:30
- 59114 of 81564
That's not a very nice nickname for your wife Freddy Boyo, I would be happy to pay your fare on condition no internet connection where you settled in France.
cynic
- 24 Apr 2015 19:41
- 59115 of 81564
would do but have already bought a fresh crab for dinner :-)
Fred1new
- 25 Apr 2015 09:53
- 59116 of 81564
required field
- 25 Apr 2015 12:54
- 59117 of 81564
Just a little example of the difference between France and the UK.......when they had the Provence landings anniversary last year : the most important thing was the number of people that had dinner on their aircraft carrier !....800 people all sat down to a gourmet meal !.....that was the biggest thing !.....perhaps they are right.....what's the point of a war ?.....let's all tuck in.....
cynic
- 25 Apr 2015 13:16
- 59118 of 81564
the french had a very ambivalent attitude towards "their own" vichy gov't .... whereas parts of southern france had strong maquis (resistance) sympathies, around marseille was not so inclined, and so too lyon
thus, if you walk around nice, there are commemorative plaques on almost every street corner
however, if you go to salon-de-provence (just outside marseille), these plaques are conspicuous by their absence - i haven't visited marseille proper ..... indeed, the memorial to one of the great resistance leaders (jean moulin) is tucked away along a country road which you'll probably only find by chance
a good indication, i feel, of where the local population's sympathies lay
required field
- 25 Apr 2015 13:21
- 59119 of 81564
It also depends on the maire.....a maire has big influence in France within their communities, much more so than in the UK......they are like "petits rois" (little kings) so decisions to commemorate can be more in some places than others....Marseille suffered in WWII with the streets being blown up by the Nazis because they feared it turning into a Warsaw ghetto with resistance fighters....
Haystack
- 25 Apr 2015 14:03
- 59120 of 81564
https://yougov.co.uk/news/2015/04/24/ranking-coalitions/
Majority Conservative government the ‘least bad option’ – voters
All possible governments have net negative ratings among voters – but a Conservative majority is considered the least bad possibility for the country
Just two weeks before the general election, the race is too close to call. A hung parliament is the most likely outcome, and as the parties have come round to the fact the campaign has become a discussion of which combinations of parties may be able to govern, and which arrangement may be best for the UK. The Conservatives have focused on a ‘chaotic’ Labour-SNP pact, the SNP have been promised to lock out the Tories with Labour, and the Lib Dems want to steer either main party towards the centre.