Proselenes
- 13 Jan 2011 23:54
.
Proselenes
- 17 Aug 2011 00:53
- 582 of 729
cynic - who is throwing toys ?
I see a number of missing post numbers, which means someone on my squelched list is posting here - one of the muppets.
But which muppet is it ?
cynic - 16 Aug 2011 15:53 - 581 of 581
come on children - enough throwing of toys
Proselenes
- 17 Aug 2011 05:07
- 583 of 729
ptholden
- 17 Aug 2011 07:17
- 584 of 729
Ah, the great Proselenes squelch list, which I believe is at least as important as the Magna Carta or perhaps Treaty of Versailles! Not much good though when you forget who is on the list lol!
Proselenes
- 17 Aug 2011 15:13
- 585 of 729
Proselenes
- 18 Aug 2011 04:15
- 586 of 729
RKH for me is now in the "disinteresting" phase as they appraise more and then raise money in Q1 next year.
.
aldwickk
- 18 Aug 2011 08:33
- 587 of 729
RKH isn't a mining company
Sequestor
- 18 Aug 2011 08:36
- 588 of 729
OOPS
LOL
Proselenes
- 18 Aug 2011 08:58
- 589 of 729
Mining, Oil - all the same principle.
Discovery boom, then the disinterest and the value coming out later when production nears and then starts.
Proselenes
- 18 Aug 2011 09:00
- 590 of 729
XEL is a classic chart as above.......... RKH as well now its in the disinterest zone.......
avsec
- 18 Aug 2011 12:45
- 591 of 729
Great - does 'disinterest' mean you will be no longer posting?
Proselenes
- 18 Aug 2011 12:54
- 592 of 729
No, does not.
Simply means no interest in holding any RKH. Thats all.
Proselenes
- 19 Aug 2011 08:57
- 593 of 729
Back below 210p levels - how unsurprising.
Up through 220p levels - unsurprising.
Volatile - too much short term hot money in it still.
Proselenes
- 20 Aug 2011 02:41
- 594 of 729
gibby
- 20 Aug 2011 13:46
- 595 of 729
whoops wish i had in the past more time to post
i see rkh massive risk now
do you know the operating costs of setting up out there? MASSIVE
even if more gushers found which is on a wing and a prayer
gl you will need it - this is a players laugh imo
gibby
- 20 Aug 2011 13:48
- 596 of 729
btw iis dumping gradually - gl
gibby
- 20 Aug 2011 13:56
- 597 of 729
then naturally no demands from the argies - as uk so miltary strong NOT 2 falkland based typoons v argie air arm circa 300 fighters - gl too any in but fleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee imo
gibby
- 20 Aug 2011 14:00
- 598 of 729
Falklands
Click to play
John Nott faces resignation calls
In a highly unusual move, the Speaker recalled the Commons on a Saturday during parliamentary term time to debate the Argentinian invasion of the Falkland islands.
Defence Secretary John Nott was blamed for leaving the Falklands vulnerable to the Argentine invasion, and faced vociferous calls in the Commons for his resignation.
Parliament was again recalled 11 days later, during recess, as Royal Navy ships were "proceeding with all speed" towards the islands, according to then PM Margaret Thatcher.
gibby
- 20 Aug 2011 14:06
- 599 of 729
bit late now:
Admirals urge rethink on Harrier and Ark Royal cuts
The admirals say the Harrier is more versatile and will be cheaper to maintain than the Tornado. Continue reading the main story
Related stories
Q&A: strategic defence and security review
Defence review at-a-glance
Profile: HMS Ark Royal
A group of former Royal Navy admirals has called for the decision to scrap the aircraft carrier Ark Royal and the fleet of Harrier jets to be reversed.
In a letter to the Times the group says defence cuts will leave the "newly valuable" Falkland Islands open to attack and calls the plan to axe the Harrier fleet "financially perverse".
But ministers insist the UK will still be able to defend the Falklands.
And the Falklands government said it was "satisfied" with its protection.
BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Beale said the strongly worded letter from a group which includes two former heads of the Royal Navy - Lord West and Sir Julian Oswald - confirmed the deep anger felt in the navy over the cuts announced in the government's Spending Review.
The letter is also signed by Vice-Admiral Sir Jeremy Blackham, Vice-Admiral John Mcanally and Maj Gen Julian Thompson.
'National humiliation'
The admirals warn the decision to scrap the Harrier force and aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, and to rely entirely upon Tornados, will leave the Falklands open to attack.
They write: "In respect of the newly valuable Falklands and their oilfields, because of these and other cuts, for the next 10 years at least, Argentina is practically invited to attempt to inflict on us a national humiliation on the scale of the loss of Singapore.
Lord West, who served as security minister under former prime minister Gordon Brown, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "If the islands were captured we have absolutely no way whatsoever of recovering them unless we have carrier air."
But Armed Forces Minister Nick Harvey insisted that the Falklands could still be protected - and if necessary, retaken - without an aircraft carrier.
Continue reading the main story
Start Quote
We took the decision on the basis of the balance of military advice coming from the current military leadership
End Quote
Nick Harvey
Armed Forces Minister
"The Falklands is a very different situation now from what it was in 1982. We're far more alert to the threat now, we've got a well-defended airfield, we've got a company of troops there, we've got submarines," he told the BBC.
"You can launch fighter jets from the land. We have basing rights, we have overflight rights. Carrier strike is just one way of launching a fighter jet, it's not the only way."
In a statement, the government of the Falkland Islands said it was "satisfied by, and grateful for, the level of defence on the islands which the British government has assured us is suitable to maintain an effective deterrent".
The admirals say the prime minister was badly advised over the decision to scrap the Harrier force because it is more versatile and will be cheaper to maintain.
The letter says: "The existing Tornado force will cost, over 10 years, seven times as much to keep in service as Harrier. Was the recent exercise not supposed to save money?
"The decision to axe the entire Harrier force is strategically and financially perverse."
'10-year rule'
But Mr Harvey insisted that the Tornado was the right aircraft for the current conflict in Afghanistan and for the next decade or so.
"This was a very difficult decision. It was looked at in immense detail. In the end a decision had to be made and we took the decision on the basis of the balance of military advice coming from the current military leadership.
"When you look at the full range of threats we might face over the next 10 years we get far more capability out of the Tornado than we would out of the Harrier."
The cuts mean no planes will be able to fly from British aircraft carriers until 2019.
On this capability gap, the admirals wrote: "The government has, in effect, declared a new '10-year rule' that assumes Britain will have warning time to rebuild to face a threat.
"The last Treasury-driven '10-year rule' in the 1930s nearly cost us our freedom, faced with Hitler."
mnamreh
- 21 Aug 2011 11:00
- 600 of 729
.
gibby
- 21 Aug 2011 12:23
- 601 of 729
shows nothing to me to invest in vgl