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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.

aldwickk - 27 Nov 2011 15:45 - 13411 of 81564

So had you paid for them ? and was that THE contractor or a scam caller.

Haystack - 27 Nov 2011 16:36 - 13412 of 81564

Difficult to imagine Fred as a dumb blonde! (at least the blonde bit)

aldwickk - 27 Nov 2011 17:59 - 13413 of 81564

lol ,Hay it's taken him a year to post that , must be a copy & paste from somewere

Fred1new - 27 Nov 2011 18:19 - 13414 of 81564

Aids.

Nio,

She gave your address.

TANKER - 27 Nov 2011 18:40 - 13415 of 81564

new 1 fred. civil war looms in egypt the M/B have played there ace card
and the rioters have done there work for them. they will live to regret
the futurethey are going to have under the M/B

aldwickk - 27 Nov 2011 20:29 - 13416 of 81564

Fred1new - 27 Nov 2011 18:19 - 13416 of 13417

Aids.

Nio,

She gave your address.


That reply doesn't make sense

This_is_me - 28 Nov 2011 07:30 - 13417 of 81564

Fred never makes sense, life is too short to get annoyed by him, if he was funny it wouldn't be so bad. The squelch button will help you.

This_is_me - 28 Nov 2011 07:30 - 13418 of 81564

and in another move, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy were revealed to be plotting a new pact on economic union without consulting Britain or other countries outside of the EU.
They are determined not to give Britain the chance of insisting on powers being handed back from Brussels by negotiating a major new EU treaty.
More...Osborne warns Britain faces six more years of misery but will cap new year rail fare rises
Think we've got it bad? Read about the British expats whose lives have become a nightmare in a violent, chaotic land

Germany's original plan was to try to secure agreement among all 27 EU countries for a limited change to the Lisbon Treaty by the end of 2012, making it possible to impose much tighter budget controls over the 17-member Eurozone.
Countries will be forced to submit their budgets for EU approval before they go to national parliaments, will have to sign up to strict new rules on the size of debts and deficits and will be sued for any breach in the European Court of Justice


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2066862/Britain-draws-emergency-plans-collapse-Euro-warnings-Italy-needs-500bn-bailout.html#ixzz1eywuWy69

TANKER - 28 Nov 2011 08:14 - 13419 of 81564

avoid the caribbean it is full of rapists and crooks and murders.

greekman - 28 Nov 2011 08:20 - 13420 of 81564

Hi Tanker,

I understand re the rapist and murderers comments, but what have you got against 'Caribbean Cooks'.

skinny - 28 Nov 2011 08:28 - 13421 of 81564

I wish this had been around years ago :-)

New forced marriage law comes into effect in Scotland

A new law protecting people from being married against their will has come into effect in Scotland.

This_is_me - 28 Nov 2011 08:29 - 13422 of 81564

How daft is this?


Hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers cash is to be poured into Africa to help it cope with the impact of climate change.
The 330million handout will be spent over the next four years on schemes to install solar power plants and encouraging investment in low-carbon transport.
One of the main beneficiaries will be South Africa, a country which is prosperous enough to have its own space agency

TANKER - 28 Nov 2011 09:21 - 13423 of 81564

greek .was a bit removed from what i was doing .
i am buying and putting place loads of trades to get a lot of TCG they will be back up to there normal SP by xmas .and do not like to miss the gift .
that is why i am rich and idle

skinny - 28 Nov 2011 09:22 - 13424 of 81564

And modest!

greekman - 28 Nov 2011 09:23 - 13425 of 81564

Its just the same as all the millions we pump into India, another country that has its own space programme (proposed next launch programme approx 4 billion) and nuclear industry.
We are still trying to play the 'rich uncle' to the old colonial world.
Cameron is getting just as bad as the last lot, in spending Our Money.

Did you also see the Taliban receive 100 a month for not fighting.

What a great idea. Perhaps we could expand this idea to nearer home.
How about having a tariff for known UK criminals.
Perhaps 100 per week for low level crime thefts and the like, 200 per week for burglaries and assaults, with say 300 to armed robers, rapists, with a top rate of 500 per week to terrorists. All the above of course would be on condition that they did not re-offend (means don't get caught).
They would have to give their word, cross their fingers and hope to die etc.
Just think of the grief this would save, would be victims.

I appreciate the above paragraph is diabolically ridiculous, but where in truth is the difference.

Who says, Crime don't pay!

This_is_me - 28 Nov 2011 10:57 - 13426 of 81564

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/11/28/uk-eurozone-abyss-idUKTRE7AR0AU20111128?feedType=nl&feedName=ukdailyinvestor



Nov 28 (Reuters) - The euro zone is staring into the abyss.

Unless European leaders agree on a political remedy for their sovereign debt crisis at a Dec. 9 summit, and the European Central Bank then intervenes massively to support government bonds and European banks, the euro may start to unravel.

Foreign investors are already shunning euro area sovereign bonds, European banks are desperately trying to sell assets including bonds, depositors are withdrawing growing amounts from southern European banks, and interbank lending is freezing up, forcing ever more lenders to turn to the ECB for funds.

Italy, the third largest and most vulnerable euro zone state, has a mountain of debt to refinance from January, and its short-term borrowing rate hit an alarming 8 percent on Friday.

Josef Ackermann, chief executive of Deutsche Bank and chairman of the Institute of International Finance (IIF), the world banking lobby, delivered a stark message to European Council President Herman van Rompuy last week, according to a source familiar with the conversation.

Allowing political indecision to continue into the new year risks a dramatic worsening of the crisis on financial markets, Ackermann warned Van Rompuy and other EU officials.

Major banks such as BNP Paribas and ING announced disposals of sovereign debt this month. The French lender disclosed it had dumped 12.6 billion euros in Italian, Spanish, French and German bonds over four months. The Dutch bank said it had cut Greek, Italian, Irish Portuguese and Spanish sovereign holdings by 5.4 billion euros.

Germany, Europe's creditor-in-chief, has seemed oblivious to distress calls for emergency action and is pursuing a single-minded strategy of changing the European Union's treaty to entrench tougher fiscal discipline.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, determined to prevent countries living beyond their means at German taxpayers' expense, has decided the answer to the crisis is closer fiscal union of the 17 states sharing the euro.

She and her aides are using the raging market turmoil to persuade Berlin's partners into accepting new powers to override the national budgets of euro zone states that go off the rails and if necessary take them to court and punish them.

Under the German plan, European authorities would exercise ultimate control over national debts and deficits, with the right to make parliaments revise budgets that breach EU rules.
The Germans are playing the hardest of hardball," said a French official involved in the negotiations.

HARDBALL

Countries like France, traditionally attached to national sovereignty, have little alternative but to swallow the German demands for treaty change since their own borrowing costs are rising and Paris' top-notch AAA credit rating is under threat.

President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose hopes of re-election next year effectively hinge on the euro zone crisis, has little to show so far in return for his concessions to Berlin.

Merkel last week publicly doused French hopes of a trade-off in which Germany would give a green light for much bigger ECB bond-buying or agrees to issue common euro zone bonds.

"This is not about give and take," she said after they met in Strasbourg last week, insisting she had not changed her position on the central bank, which is that the EU treaty bars it from funding states, or on joint debt issuance.

Germany, haunted by the experience of hyperinflation in 1923 and after World War Two, is deeply fearful of debauching the central bank by printing money to lend to governments.

Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, a powerful influence on the ECB governing council who speaks for Germany's conservative financial establishment, keeps warning against overstretching the bank's mandate and compromising its independence.

Weidmann, like Merkel, now accepts the principle of jointly issued euro zone bonds as a long-term goal of a fiscal union but "only at the end of an integration process" that entrenches central control over member states' budgets.

Senior EU and ECB sources, who spoke privately because of the sensitivity of the issue, said there was an understanding that if Europe's political leaders take a big step towards such a fiscal union on Dec. 9, that would give the ECB grounds to intervene more decisively.

Some saw the agreement between Sarkozy and Merkel to refrain from making "either positive or negative demands" on the ECB as an attempt to clear the way by stifling political pressure.

RATIFICATION ROULETTE

A deal on moving towards fiscal union is not yet certain, and markets, which hate uncertainty, may well feel the tortuous process of treaty change creates more political risk than it removes.

However, if it gives the ECB a pretext for unleashing its massive financial firepower to defend euro zone government bonds, Europe's desperate politicians may have to embrace it.

One key unknown is whether all 27 EU states will agree to amend the treaty, or whether a separate accord will have to be struck among the 17 euro zone members, or a smaller inner core, cementing an awkward two-speed Europe.

Non-euro Britain may seek to impose its own demands to repatriate control over some social and legal policies, or a veto right on EU financial services legislation, as its price for letting a euro area fiscal union advance.

Several governments are deeply reluctant to start down the avenue of treaty change, either because they oppose ceding more national sovereignty, or because they fear losing parliamentary votes or referendums on the outcome.

Many dread the prospect of long months of ratification roulette, with markets in a frenzy as Europe's fate hinges again on a vote in a small country such as Ireland or Slovakia. The mere announcement of a possible referendum in Greece on its EU/IMF bailout deal caused investor panic and led to the fall of the government.

There is also widespread resentment of increasingly visible German political hegemony in the EU,
even in countries such as the Netherlands that share Berlin's priority for fiscal rigour.

Grumbling about a "German Europe" is growing louder in France, Ireland and across southern Europe. This may fuel popular opposition to painful economic reforms and drain already feeble public support for closer European integration.

But if a promise of fiscal union is the only way to trigger ECB action to pull the euro zone back from the abyss, Europe's political leaders are likely to swallow their misgivings and take the pledge.

Fred1new - 28 Nov 2011 15:37 - 13427 of 81564

Seems sensible.

greekman - 28 Nov 2011 16:18 - 13428 of 81564

I just can't see the population of several EU countries standing for the principal of being governed in many monetary and political areas by Germany. That of course would only be the start, with mission creep similar to what occurred in the EU.
I for one would definitely take to the streets.
As I have advocated previously, I am all for none violent protest, but there does come a time when push really comes to shove, and I feel that such a line would be crossed, if Germany achieved in peacetime what they failed to achieve in 2 world wars.

Fred1new - 28 Nov 2011 17:13 - 13429 of 81564

I think, I would prefer Merkel to be running the UK economy than the incompetent tory bunch we have in charge at the moment,

Mind its not the fault or responsibility. It is everybody's parents who are to blame.


No U-Turn. Wait until to-morrow.

Recession more than likely.

Cameron lost and Osborne in denial.

Greek riot now.

Tim, get your banners out.

This_is_me - 28 Nov 2011 17:18 - 13430 of 81564

Yes, my father was forced to shoot Germans out of the sky to stop them.
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