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.
2517GEORGE
- 09 Mar 2010 10:55
- 8447 of 81564
mnamreh------Does the word 'Scapegoat' mean anything to anyone? In relation to what?
2517
greekman
- 09 Mar 2010 18:55
- 8448 of 81564
Hi George,
Agree it's tricky, but not I feel in the way of needing more youngsters to help sustain the pensioners. My reasoning is that ,it would be a self inflicting damage scenario. If you encourage more births, to sustain said pensioners, then when those youngsters become pensioners, you would need even more youngsters to sustain, etc, etc into ad infinitum. This would be only delaying the problem, whilst also increasing the future populous dependability. A bit like increasing a loan to pay off a debt, then increasing a further loan to pay off a, OK you get the idea.
A bit like the way our very clever government is dealing with our national debt whilst telling the populous to keep debt under control.
The only answer I have is as previously said by myself and others, more than 2 children, you look after them without any government aid.
kuzemko
- 10 Mar 2010 08:29
- 8449 of 81564
please advice.
i placed my order this morning9/03/10 with barclays stockbrs. "quote and deal". message from brokers " problem occured please contact us or our brokers can only execute this order"at best"at 5.75p. i ignored it and place my order again" quote and deal" the same message came up. at the same time i was looking at live streaming. and the price was 5.75p with 0%spread, so i clicked buy and my order was executed that moment at 7p. was i a victim to high frequency trading or some thing else. it seems very odd. surely not MIFID!!! what do you think???
i have contacted bstock and still waiting for a reply
greekman
- 10 Mar 2010 09:22
- 8450 of 81564
Does appear strange. It does not look like volatile trading due to the message,
" problem occurred please contact us or our brokers can only execute this order"at best". It's the problem occurred bit that makes me think their site was having problems.
Presumably the site comes up with a confirm trade time tick down, (mine has a 15 second time limit to confirm trade or cancel).
Can't think of anything else except have you checked your buy with the trade page, appreciate they don't always show.
Out in 15 mins but best of luck sorting it.
Fred1new
- 10 Mar 2010 10:58
- 8451 of 81564
Greek,
Referring to earlier posting.
==================================
I think all those UK emigrants from Britain to Europe and elsewhere should be repatriated and prevented from venturing abroad to stop them from polluting the economies of other countries.
Non-Dom status should not be allowed!
===================
Strange how attitudes re-emerge when economic environment changes.
I thought it interesting for me was reading an article regarding Irish (Catholic Immigration.)
At the time and later the Catholics were breeding like rabbits.
Strange nearly all the Catholic families I knew in the 70s 60s and 90s and later seemed to have smaller and smaller families.
As their economic status and educational status compared to that indigenous population improve the breeding rates seemed to reduce.
======================
My belief is that the descendants of recent Pakistani and other groups of immigrants are already showing the same changes.
===============================
The Irish invariably herd together' claimed the Morning Chronicle in 1849 and the 'Irish quarters' that developed in many 19th century English towns have been taken as visible proof of this. Go to Settling. This, however, has been exaggerated, both by contemporary observers and some later historians. Irish immigrants did cluster in particular streets but this was more a consequence of poverty, the 'chain migration' settlement of friends and relations, and the existence of rooms sub-let by Irish tenants.
David Fitzpatrick has pointed out that 'Irish householders in Liverpool were only slightly more "segregated" in 1871 than other migrants from England, Wales or Scotland, and their residential patterns were actually more like those of native Liverpudlians than was the case for either Scottish or Welsh settlers'. Census returns show how mixed these areas were, and also tracks the gradual spread of individuals away from city centres into the suburbs. And by the late 19th century, there was a new target for those who resented the immigrant and the refugee - Jews from central and eastern Europe.
Some witnesses who gave evidence to the 1836 report on the Irish poor in Britain saw the Irish as 'a distinct community in the midst of the English, and compared them in this respect with the Jews'. There were some Irish migrants who tried to re-create the conditions they had left behind at home, keeping pigs; sticking to a traditional diet of potatoes, milk and herrings rather than meat; speaking in Irish and holding wakes for their dead. This, however, was not the way forward for the development of a separate self-sustaining community. David Fitzpatrick concludes of the 19th century Irish immigrants to Britain that they 'generally retained their national identity without forming strong communal bonds away from home. Alienation from British customs and celebration of Irishness gradually became immaterial to the lives of those long settled in Britain'. As John O'Connor Power pointed out in an essay on the Irish in Britain in the Fortnightly Review in 1880: 'the great mass of the Irish who have settled in England are destined to remain in the land of their adoption. They have children born to them on English soil, all their worldly interests are centred in England, and their prospects in life are practically bounded by the English shore'.
By the early 20th century, there was, in some households, a fresh interest in Irish heritage as a result of the Gaelic revival but the significance of this should not be exaggerated. One pamphlet of 1907, The Liverpool Irishman, pointed out that: '90% of the Liverpool Irishmen are at present not connected with any Irish society in the city, There is no social bond of brotherhood uniting the people'.
To some extent, this pattern has been repeated in the 20th century. Irish migrants of the 1950s and 1960s have often focused their social lives around the local catholic church and Irish community but their children and grandchildren are less likely to do so. Read more about Segregation and Assimilation in Trafford Park, Manchester.
==============================
If you find some of the my first few lines of this posting offensive, they are not my views but those covertly held by some individuals. Education and economical advancements tend to moderate views and actions, unless the populace is falsely motivated by corrupt propaganda.
Interesting world.
mnamreh
- 10 Mar 2010 11:07
- 8452 of 81564
.
Fred1new
- 10 Mar 2010 12:55
- 8453 of 81564
NM.
The Title in itself is propaganda!
Unlikely to be reliable opinion 8-)
I may try and have a look.
Fred1new
- 10 Mar 2010 12:56
- 8454 of 81564
NM.
The Title in itself is propaganda!
Unlikely to be reliable opinion 8-)
I may try and have a look.
Fred1new
- 10 Mar 2010 12:57
- 8455 of 81564
So is two presses of the button!
mnamreh
- 10 Mar 2010 13:12
- 8456 of 81564
.
greekman
- 10 Mar 2010 16:03
- 8457 of 81564
Fred,
Don't find you posts offencive at all. As for 'UK emigrants from Britain to Europe and elsewhere should be repatriated', I feel it is extremely difficult once a country has excepted those immigrants. As to myself, I have been in love with the Greek way of live for many years, and would not hesitate to move there (until their financial mess that is) if family circumstances were different. But I would expect to be able to keep myself without any financial assistance, if they accepted me. Also if I did apply to live in Greece and they refused my domicile entry due to either not being able to support myself or/and if they were already over populated (as we are) then I would accept that. I would except that the Greek people should come first, (not last like our own citizens).
So I do agree restrictions should work both ways. The trouble the UK has is that we still have a boarder with more holes in it than any sieve, and let just about anyone in, no matter what status.
2517GEORGE
- 11 Mar 2010 15:57
- 8458 of 81564
Something else I would like to see introduced concerns criminals, ie when sentenced, whatever length of time they are sent down for, they should be told if you behave then that's what you'll serve, if you mis-behave then you will have time added on, I get sick to death of a seven year sentence reduced to three because they were well behaved. Also on a similar note, supposing someone is found guilty of say criminal damage, whatever the cost of the damage, that's the starting point, any fine or community service is on top of the damage costs. Why should the vast majority of law abiding citizens have to pay for this through higher insurance premiums.
2517
Fred1new
- 11 Mar 2010 16:08
- 8459 of 81564
Oh, if life was so simple!
2517GEORGE
- 11 Mar 2010 16:13
- 8460 of 81564
It could be Fred, if the powers that be (of any persuasion) wanted it to be, just as the tax system, it's been made so complicated even the chancellor doesn't understand it.
2517
Fred1new
- 11 Mar 2010 16:22
- 8461 of 81564
I wonder why the imprisonment of offenders became so complicated.
Also, why reparation orders and actions are so difficult to enforce.
Must be those lazy police again. I would fine them all as one body for dereliction of duties.
(Sorry Greek.)
Fred1new
- 11 Mar 2010 16:30
- 8462 of 81564
While we are at it, I also think all the MPs should be fined and their tax doubled and we know all are fiddling from the top down (sorry Wisteria).
If they didn't, then they knew somebody else who was. Guilty by association.
I think we need a few vigilantes standing outside the House of Commons and those corrupt Lords.
Also told some traders fiddle their taxes and business leaders seem to extend their expenses.
I call for blood on the streets.
That will sort it out.
8-)
2517GEORGE
- 11 Mar 2010 16:41
- 8463 of 81564
Crikey Fred my typing's not that speedy, 'I wonder why the imprisonment of offenders became so complicated.' Because so many are trying to get in, the gov has to select them carefully because there's not enough room for them all, so priority is given to TV licence fee dodgers, little old ladies not paying council tax, etc etc, so no room for rapists, murderers etc etc.
2517
2517GEORGE
- 11 Mar 2010 16:54
- 8464 of 81564
On the cop side of things, instead of requiring each arresting officer to complete the entire lengthy process of the court file etc, why not have a dedicated team who complete the file for the arresting officer, all he need do is book the crim in with the custody officer, complete his statement and hand it over to the team, and back out again.
2517
greekman
- 11 Mar 2010 17:33
- 8465 of 81564
George,
Re prison sentences, well said, couldn't agree more.
As to dedicated teams dealing with prisoner processing, it is a great idea that was tried and dropped in our force. The reason was, a few officers (the lazy ones that I would not pay in washers) used the system by putting in the paperwork/arrest statements, witness statements (which you require to a minimum in order to authorise detention) required on arrest with so many omissions or/and of such poor quality, they had to be re-done by the File Team. The answer you would think was a good swift kick up the a**se with discipline following if such shoddy work continued.
Well believe me I tried it, but with no backing by more senior officers, you get nowhere. So the idea was dropped as these officers would then have no way to put in shoddy paperwork as supervision would send it back.
There are 2 main reasons why crime etc is not being tackled correctly.
Political interference (too many laws, too many forms) and old fashion discipline within the force being almost none existent. It is almost impossible to get rid of an incompetent officer.
Fred,
Whilst I agree that the Policing methods leave a lot to be desired, they are in no way responsible for the imprisonment of offenders or reparation orders and actions are so difficult to enforce. The restrains put on Police was yet another political restriction that wound me up. My brother watched police type fly on the wall programmes (I don't) and he is often moaning about the punishments offenders get. How do you think Police Officers feel when all their work comes to nothing more than a slap on the wrist.
As for vigilantes, on the whole dangerous as many innocent people would suffer, but and thats a big but, there are many times when the best deterrent in a really bad trouble spot is when either an individual or a group have had enough and dealt out their own punishment. The times I have listened to complaints from low lifes, that they had been beaten up by often reasonable people and they want something doing about it.
Of course we put just as much effort finding the culprits as we would someone who beats up an old lady. Well thats the official line anyway.
tabasco
- 11 Mar 2010 17:34
- 8466 of 81564
The problem I have is there is only one deterrent for crime.frightening punishment!.Britain has massive scale petty crimeshopliftingcar theftsmall fraud.as well as street-freak booze and drug pestsand so onover the years our jails have been used as a short sharp shock for such crimeunfortunately todaythere is now only room for serious offendersmurderarmed robberyterrorism.rapeand severe drug and human trafficking it is common knowledge that judges will no longer give custodial sentences for petty crimemaking Britain an International haven for non violent small organised crimeyes the whole World of scumbags loves our Countryeven corner shops can sell counterfeit goodsincluding fags and boozeand then only receive a few months ban on sellingwe are also getting vast amounts of counterfeited medical drugs entering the country credit cards are being cloned by two or three member gangswith the knowledge that they will most likely get deportedor at worst18 months down to a year insidewhere they will be looked after in their own Country there would be a good beating for surefollowed by a good stretch or worse?then our Government wonder why so many foreign Gypsies Tramps and Opportunist come to Britainwhere there is a bail-out plan in place if the worst should happen with free deportation if caughtand for 500 poundsyou can be back in Britain within a week on false papers and passportand continue to make your 10,000 a weekgetting caught is just a miner irritant to those involvedthere is only one answer as I see itmore Policemore Jailsno deportation until the sentence has been served much long sentencesand all wealth confiscated from these scumbagsany do-gooders choose to step inmake them their social workers and deport them as well
Off for a large drink nowas I have wound myself up.toddle pip