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Notice I've left out the "Sir"?. So he's the business man who's tried to buy silence after being accused of racist abuse and sexual harassment; surprise surprise.What on earth does this creep have to do to lose his knighthood?.All I say is "well done Lord Hain", for blowing the whistle on him.
Green tried to get away with screwing over the BHS pension scheme, I'm still unsure if he paid the full amount back in. Maybe it's time that private pension schemes were centralised and everyone paid into a government backed and regulated fund, where companies are dealt with if they do not pay in on time.
Forget the accusations, it's an intriguing debate on parliamentary privilege, one which I can't quite make my mind up on.
Quote from: SydneyRover on October 25, 2018, 10:29:00 pmGreen tried to get away with screwing over the BHS pension scheme, I'm still unsure if he paid the full amount back in. Maybe it's time that private pension schemes were centralised and everyone paid into a government backed and regulated fund, where companies are dealt with if they do not pay in on time.No he didn't pay the full amount back SR; from the £571 million he took out , I believe he paid back around £320 million.
Quote from: scawsby steve on October 25, 2018, 11:36:34 pmQuote from: SydneyRover on October 25, 2018, 10:29:00 pmGreen tried to get away with screwing over the BHS pension scheme, I'm still unsure if he paid the full amount back in. Maybe it's time that private pension schemes were centralised and everyone paid into a government backed and regulated fund, where companies are dealt with if they do not pay in on time.No he didn't pay the full amount back SR; from the £571 million he took out , I believe he paid back around £320 million.He paid back £363m.
It’s not defrauding anyone. Do you understand how defined pension schemes work? Do you know how many there are in the country that failed or are failing?He didn’t have to pay anything, but he paid £363m. There are plenty of schemes that have fallen down and the company owners haven’t made any kind of contribution.
He also has a very good legal team mate.
It was only banter, he now saysAh, that's OK then!
At the moment he is innocent so no at the minute he shouldn't lose his knighthood,him getting it in the first place is a different thing
Quote from: bpoolrover on October 28, 2018, 02:14:35 pmAt the moment he is innocent so no at the minute he shouldn't lose his knighthood,him getting it in the first place is a different thingSurely you mean not proven guilty.
NDAs have their uses, such as commercial confidentiality. But it they should not be allowed to apply in cases where there is any potentially illegal activity being hidden.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 31, 2018, 08:21:17 amNDAs have their uses, such as commercial confidentiality. But it they should not be allowed to apply in cases where there is any potentially illegal activity being hidden.Unsure about this but don't confidentiality agreement/contracts cover this?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 31, 2018, 08:21:17 amNDAs have their uses, such as commercial confidentiality. But it they should not be allowed to apply in cases where there is any potentially illegal activity being hidden.It is an agreement between persons though - the other person doesn't have to sign it they choose to (no doubt with substantial financial settlement). Also the possibility that they aren't actually true allegations - often better to cover up an allegation as the publicity of an allegation that is false is the same as it being true. Let's say Green did nothing wrong (I doubt it), would anyone give him that chance given the witch-hunt against him?NDA's are used very widely though particularly in large organisations.