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Just as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.
Quote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:01:58 pmJust as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.Isn’t that what the LP are doing right now though RD.Second half of RDs post above:This Tory government is riding into a storm. I expect they will try and find an excuse why it's not their fault. They are pretty good at doing this.I seem to recall Browns government doing just the same.It is just the way politics goes, the two biggest Party’s slagging each other off and their newspaper friends digging for dirt.
Just as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.Isn’t that what the LP are doing right now though RD.Second half of RDs post above:This Tory government is riding into a storm. I expect they will try and find an excuse why it's not their fault. They are pretty good at doing this.
Quote from: drfchound on May 22, 2022, 10:13:46 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:01:58 pmJust as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.Isn’t that what the LP are doing right now though RD.Second half of RDs post above:This Tory government is riding into a storm. I expect they will try and find an excuse why it's not their fault. They are pretty good at doing this.I seem to recall Browns government doing just the same.It is just the way politics goes, the two biggest Party’s slagging each other off and their newspaper friends digging for dirt.The UK is no longer a significant enough economy. Our governments no longer apply significant pressure on world markets.we just get battered in the storms.
Quote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:18:33 pmQuote from: drfchound on May 22, 2022, 10:13:46 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:01:58 pmJust as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.Isn’t that what the LP are doing right now though RD.Second half of RDs post above:This Tory government is riding into a storm. I expect they will try and find an excuse why it's not their fault. They are pretty good at doing this.I seem to recall Browns government doing just the same.It is just the way politics goes, the two biggest Party’s slagging each other off and their newspaper friends digging for dirt.The UK is no longer a significant enough economy. Our governments no longer apply significant pressure on world markets.we just get battered in the storms.If that is true RD do you think the decline has been wholly over the last twelve years?
Quote from: drfchound on May 22, 2022, 10:21:54 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:18:33 pmQuote from: drfchound on May 22, 2022, 10:13:46 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 10:01:58 pmJust as now the financial mess the government was in with Brown as leader was really international. The Tories hammered Labour hard but now they find themselves in exactly the same sort of position.Isn’t that what the LP are doing right now though RD.Second half of RDs post above:This Tory government is riding into a storm. I expect they will try and find an excuse why it's not their fault. They are pretty good at doing this.I seem to recall Browns government doing just the same.It is just the way politics goes, the two biggest Party’s slagging each other off and their newspaper friends digging for dirt.The UK is no longer a significant enough economy. Our governments no longer apply significant pressure on world markets.we just get battered in the storms.If that is true RD do you think the decline has been wholly over the last twelve years?Much longer.I guess since about 1914.That was when we reached peak coal.
Quote from: ravenrover on May 22, 2022, 06:02:41 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 05:04:51 pmEon say 20% of their customers are currently in fuel poverty. 20%!Let that sink in and then understand, they are expecting that figure to go up to 40% in the winter.20% of 8 million customers Well yes but isn't that likely to be a similar percentage across the board?
Quote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 05:04:51 pmEon say 20% of their customers are currently in fuel poverty. 20%!Let that sink in and then understand, they are expecting that figure to go up to 40% in the winter.20% of 8 million customers
Eon say 20% of their customers are currently in fuel poverty. 20%!Let that sink in and then understand, they are expecting that figure to go up to 40% in the winter.
Quote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 07:52:02 pmQuote from: ravenrover on May 22, 2022, 06:02:41 pmQuote from: River Don on May 22, 2022, 05:04:51 pmEon say 20% of their customers are currently in fuel poverty. 20%!Let that sink in and then understand, they are expecting that figure to go up to 40% in the winter.20% of 8 million customers Well yes but isn't that likely to be a similar percentage across the board?Not meant as a criticism just adding another figure to clarify what the 20% of customers is. Far too many.
The ability of renewables to develop in the energy crisis is being artificially restricted by government;https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/may/24/limits-on-renewables-will-keep-uk-energy-bills-higher-this-winterLet's hope that the emergency budget removes these restrictions.The only reason that you would keep them in place is to try to make a case for unaffordable nuclear, 15 years away from coming into production.
IF i remember rightly i believe enterprise zones were setup in many of the old mining areas and villages, The vast majority of the displaced miners were given quire large payouts with the authorities hope to steer the redundant miners towards the enterprise zones and to set up business on a self employed basis with their payouts.I think a great many of the displaced miners never took up the offers of training and business help and spurned away their payments in the pubs. Some did and made a very good fist of it, most were never really going to become self employed business minded people, its probably the reason why they went to work at the pit in the first place.When the money was handed over it should of come with stipulations to having to cover a certain amount of additional training to enable them to have the best opportunities to succeed. Never happened.
Quote from: danumdon on May 22, 2022, 11:37:36 pmIF i remember rightly i believe enterprise zones were setup in many of the old mining areas and villages, The vast majority of the displaced miners were given quire large payouts with the authorities hope to steer the redundant miners towards the enterprise zones and to set up business on a self employed basis with their payouts.I think a great many of the displaced miners never took up the offers of training and business help and spurned away their payments in the pubs. Some did and made a very good fist of it, most were never really going to become self employed business minded people, its probably the reason why they went to work at the pit in the first place.When the money was handed over it should of come with stipulations to having to cover a certain amount of additional training to enable them to have the best opportunities to succeed. Never happened.What a condescending post - you obviously know very little about what happened. The enterprise zones employed a handful of people on a site where formerly a couple of thousand were employed. Not to mention all the support industries that collapsed.Yes redundancy payments were given but they don’t last forever.
Quote from: roversdude on May 25, 2022, 07:54:45 pmQuote from: danumdon on May 22, 2022, 11:37:36 pmIF i remember rightly i believe enterprise zones were setup in many of the old mining areas and villages, The vast majority of the displaced miners were given quire large payouts with the authorities hope to steer the redundant miners towards the enterprise zones and to set up business on a self employed basis with their payouts.I think a great many of the displaced miners never took up the offers of training and business help and spurned away their payments in the pubs. Some did and made a very good fist of it, most were never really going to become self employed business minded people, its probably the reason why they went to work at the pit in the first place.When the money was handed over it should of come with stipulations to having to cover a certain amount of additional training to enable them to have the best opportunities to succeed. Never happened.What a condescending post - you obviously know very little about what happened. The enterprise zones employed a handful of people on a site where formerly a couple of thousand were employed. Not to mention all the support industries that collapsed.Yes redundancy payments were given but they don’t last forever.Amen.My uncle and cousin were chucked out of work when Yorkshire Main was shut down. My uncle spent the next 5 years shuttling up and down the country, working on the Channel Tunnel and slogging back home every other weekend. My cousin worked as a financial adviser then re-trained as a prison officer. The redundancy payments were the bare minimum those lads could be offered for careers and communities that were destroyed for political ends. Who the f**k has the right to tell them what they should and shouldn't have done with those payments.
You know so little sir, but please continue living in your parallel universe