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.
bosley
- 01 Feb 2008 09:58
- 6485 of 81564
i'm a bit baffled by all the fuss about beckham not being included in capello's first engaland squad. beckham hasn't played a match since november. how on earth could he be match fit? it beggars belief that those lobbying for beckham thought they could influence capello's team selection. the man is only interested in winning.
greekman
- 01 Feb 2008 10:01
- 6486 of 81564
I also went to the bookies yesterday but for a different bet.
I wanted to put 1 on at best oddds that if all MP's expence accounts are ever scrutenised by audit, there would not be one that was found to be 100% on the level. Strange not 1 bookie would except the bet. They said they don't except bets on sure things.
maddoctor
- 01 Feb 2008 10:31
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.
jimmy b
- 01 Feb 2008 10:32
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Well Al who won the cartoon babe competittion ??
hewittalan6
- 01 Feb 2008 11:21
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Sorry Jimmy,
Forgot to finish it all off.
The first place woman was Wilma, for no other reason than I am the sole judge.
The first place man was me, based on all the fan mail I got from the MAM wimmin, and that the only other nomination was John Noakes.
I won after a recount.
So its official.
Wilma Flintstone is a sex Goddess of the highest order, and I am sex-on-a-stick.
Alan
greekman
- 01 Feb 2008 11:33
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I have been so touched recent by the popular idea that we should all apologies for our past morally ambiguous history, that I went round to a neighbor yesterday to apologize personally. Through research I have found out that I am a decedent from a Viking Family that came over to rape and pillage in the 10th century. This was a shock as on previously speaking to my neighbor about descendancy he informed me that he had traced his family tree back to 974 AD and at that time his family were Anglo Saxons living in York.
I felt very bad at the possibility that my great great great and so on grandfather Eric the beautiful (It is believed he was the first viking to come out) possibly raped the great great (ok you get the idea) grandmother and perhaps because he was a bit that way inclined (can we still say that) great great grandfather of my neighbor.
Also their house was probably pillaged before it was burned to the ground.
I now have difficulty sleeping at nights and have decided to make financial retribution as I'm sure that will satisfy my conscience, as it appears to for most of the worlds political leaders.
I suggest we all look to our past, I believe it's good for the soul.
Note.... Any others out there who can send me evidence of their family being persecuted by the Vikings (especially Eric the beautiful) please contact me via the, 'weshouldapologizeforabsolutelybloodyeverything.com' and I will bear my sole in our local social prayer and absolution building (church) and ask Freya the Viking god of forgiveness for absolution.
jimmy b
- 01 Feb 2008 12:15
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Al thats just so out of order ,(i think iv'e caught the teenage lingo disease)
And greekman i have Swedish ancestry way back ,so i think i may have a lot to feel guilty about ,i might now have to go for counselling ..
kimoldfield
- 01 Feb 2008 13:13
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I'm Welsh.....................so I only have the sheep to apologize to :o)
bosley
- 01 Feb 2008 13:36
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love the last paragraph :))
saw this this morning and thought i would share it with you. no wonder woollies are sinking.
kimoldfield
- 01 Feb 2008 13:43
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Thanks for sharing that Bosley :o)
I'll bet Alan's bed is named Wilma.
hewittalan6
- 01 Feb 2008 13:47
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Pole dancing is one of my favourite games.
Whats wrong with Tesco????
What are you talking about? Dumbing down.
Note for Woolworths.......the definition of dumbing down can be found at janetandjohn.com
oblomov
- 02 Feb 2008 08:51
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From my post 6416 28th. Jan:-
'Todays figures are 1,000,000 unemployed and 2,640,000 on incapacity benefits (they do not work). If you also add in the fact that kids at Uni aren't included in unemployment figures (in Thatchers time they had to be found jobs - now they just get sent off for a wasted 4 or 5 years at so called universities in my opinion just to keep them out of the unemployment figures) you come up with a far higher real jobless total than ever there was under Thatch.'
News today:-
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/02/02/nbenefit102.xml&CMP=ILC-mostviewedbox
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7223687.stm
Do the journalists read this thread for the pearls of wisdom we produce, do you think?
Anyway, I rest my case!
hewittalan6
- 02 Feb 2008 16:23
- 6499 of 81564
Woah there, ST.
Starting to get a couple of serious posts!!!!
In that vein, I have a brother and his girlfriend who claim incapacity benefit, and many other acquaintances who also claim.
While I do not grudge a single farthing to those who are genuinely incapacitated, I struggle with the wisdom of what is deemed incapacitated for work.
I think the government are doing the right thing in addressing the nature of the tests. I look at many, who may not be in any condition to swing a pickaxe for 8 hours a day, but there is very little excuse for not been able to answer a phone or use a computer, or many other tasks. Stephen Hawking solves the mysteries of the universe on the back of a fag packet and they don't get much more incapacitated than that!! The guys down to about the use of a single eyebrow!!
No. Its about time we asked the woman who claims due to her obesity if she can use a phone. If she can, she can do some work, even if it is only token.
My brother and his missus can both drive and are mobile, but they claim incapacity benefit quite happily, and legally, because they are little worse off than working at the kind of jobs available to them. Something wrong there. Sorry to sound all right wing, but there is.
The genuinly incapacitated should be up in arms, because if those kinds of claimants give the whole thing a bad name and take resources away from the genuine and deserving cases.
oblomov
- 02 Feb 2008 17:37
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You don't sound right wing. Alan, just sensible. My original point on this was merely to point out that the unemployment figures have 'fallen' since Thatcher's time purely because they now put the numbers elsewhere - i.e. incapacity benefits!
soul traders
- 02 Feb 2008 20:20
- 6501 of 81564
:o)
Alan, I agree entirely that those who are able to work in some capacity should not be enabled to live off the state - or should at least engage in a reasonable proportion of contributive employment. If I was in a position to work I would do so happily. Sadly with chronic fatigue, I am able to do a little at home (such as a couple of hours on the computer, in total, each day), but if I push past this I quickly get into a vicious circle of increasing exhaustion which does then lead to total incapacity. (Ideally, when I re-establish a certain level of fitness, I'd like to go back to some kind of paid work for 3 days per week and spend the rest of the time writing my first blockbuster movie/novel/whatever!). I think it's a great pity that some people claim an inability to work due to conditions such as obesity - then again, I have met people who are extremely obese and need at times to be lifted (with a mechanical hoist) out of bed or cannot walk more than a few yards without getting completely out of breath. Compulsive eating and the like can be as disruptive to normal living as depression, severe pain, etc.
It is a pity that your brother and his wife apparently can't find the kind of work to which they would be suited if they were fully fit. I guess they are intelligent and capable people, but can only find the kind of work that is increasingly being farmed out to children in the Philippines or illegal immigrants in this country. I feel sorry for them as individuals, but would think it would be far better if people in such positions worked, even if it was on a part-time basis as a concession to the fact that the work is not what they are suited to.
I'll save the rights and wrongs of pole-dancing seven-year-olds for another time! ;o)
hewittalan6
- 02 Feb 2008 22:00
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At least now she can get a McA level with fries, so all is not lost.
I believe the government have it about right if they follow the idea of assessing not ones incapacity for work, but what one can do, if anything.
The downward spiral you refer to is not related to IB. It is a sad state common to many areas, rural and inner city, but is the answer to support these actions and try to understand them as some kind of social disease, or is it better to think of it as requiring "tough love". Making it increasingly financailly difficult to exist in this state, so the more able, and therfore more lazy, get out of the spiral and teach their children of the moral satisfaction of earning a crust, and dare I say it, getting a bit more from life.
You see, I always think there is a danger that too many kids are brought up, seeing mum & dad do almost nothing, finding another way to play the state, and still having a relatively comfortable life. You just know the kids will grow up to expect no more, and that is tragic and needs halting. Fast.
In short, is it worth some casualties to restore a long lost work ethic, or shall we start writing the epitaph for that ethic, as the cost of restoring it is too high.
hewittalan6
- 02 Feb 2008 22:12
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Anyway, enough of the serious stuff.
On a lighter note, what about the Bishop who got death threats from a load of muslims who he ticked off a bit.
Gotta admire either his balls or his stupidity when he decides to try and pacify them by saying he just meant they should be welcomed in a Christian way.
Would that be the Christian way of raiding their home countries to convert them as King Richard did?
Note to Bishop; I think what they didn't really like was the Christian way, and thats one of the reasons they are a bit tetchy toward you.
Anyway, give my regards to Salman Rushdie, cos I think you're likely to be moving next door to him soon.