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The Tories - for those of us old enough to remember 1st hand
For those who are old enough and are bitter. Aren't you just angry about how your life turned out in general? What do you expect, spoonfed and hand-held through life? No one owes you anything. People loose their jobs, shit happens, you never know what lifes going to throw at you, take life as it comes.
Heck, its part of life. You can't spend your life blaming 'Maggie'. Who are people going to blame for the last 10yrs? 'the greedy Bankers'?
Move on. Bitter old men existed for hundreds of years. I hope I don't become bitter until I hit 60.
Hora that is just rubbish
That was my nephew from LSE being interviewed on Sky News a few minutes ago and making pertinent comments on the press coverage of the election. Is that a credential?
I remember our phone being tapped for about 5-6 years after my dad talked to some miners during the strike. I remember the food and clothes runs during the strike. I remember the violent attacks on the peace convoy. I remember the rewarding of greed and dismantling of the civil society.
Scargill was a far cannier operator than you realise edukator and knew the stakes that were being played for extended far beyond the mines.
Is that a credential?
What? you're related to someone who was on Sky? Erm. no.
[i]was a far cannier operator than you realise edukator [/i]
Eh? How can you say that of someone who failed in everything he set out to achieve as a communist and union leader. Canny suggests succeeding using ruse and wile. He battered his head againt a brick wall and knocked himself out.
He was instrumental in the strike that brought down the Heath government. How canny was that? He stood for anti-democratic communism when communism was seen as the enemy by the vast majority of the British populaton.
I hope I don't become bitter until I hit 60.
Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but I think it might already have happened.
take life as it comes.
The rallying-cry/excuse of people without imagination or ambition.
ernie_lynch - Member
13% interest rates meaning £300+ repayments on a £30k mortgage.
I think you'll find that interest rates hit 17% under the Tories.Give credit where credit's due ........ the Tories certainly know how to give us sky-high interest rates - not just sky-high unemployment. Although obviously both go hand in hand.
And inflation peaked at 26% under labour in 1975.
25% inflation when interest rates were 11% destroyed many small investors' savings and led to one Britain's upteen property booms and crashes hence the 40% negative equity another poster moaned about.
So what we are saying is that both Labour and the Tories have had sh*t economic policies then?
Good, I'm glad we sorted that one out. 🙄
How about concentrating on the impact that said economic policies have had on society then. (Tories may need to run away now)
Nope, read back, we're saying Labour had especially lousy economic policies and that the Tories, though far from perfect, did significantly better. My previous post also refers to 1975 when Labour were in power.
scruzer - Member
Ya dont need a long memory... Their (HERS!)legacy still sits infront of me right now. Deprived South Yorkshire mining communities (all around Donny at least)and no investment to replace what they destroyed. Anyone know Stainforth??
So a Labour govt has gained your communities exactly what in the last 13 years if there has been no investment to replace what the Tory policies of the 80s & 90's created?
Cost my old man his life after they shut the pits down!
Cost my old man his life after they shut the pits down!
The pits cost many more their lives when they were open.
empathy not your strong point then backhander.
You're not my friend today are you pigface?
Just making a point that whilst the pits may have bought economic advantages to some areas, they were unhealthy and dangerous places to work.
I'm not saying that they should or shouldn't have been closed.
Of course i am your friend just happen to find the above comment a bit crass. No offence intended 🙂
Backhander, should we close the forces down, for the same reason? 😐
westkipper;
I'm not saying that they should or shouldn't have been closed.
Really, this covers it mate.
In reflection, my earlier post could seem a bit harsh. I certainly didn't mean to upset anyone by it. Apologies to creaser.
Unless you lived in the mining areas, you have no idea of the bitterness the dispute caused - I hadn't understood it until I moved up here. I spent the Thatcher years in a non-mining, non-indutrialised town where we actually did OK through the 80s. Now I'm a bit older, better travelled and a lot wiser.
Of course, all this Tory hating pre-supposes that CallMeDave and his cronies won't have learnt anything from the mistakes of their Tory predecessors. I mean, it's not like Blair/Brown have repeated the mistakes of the Wilson/Callaghan era and left the country in a huge financial hole with growing industrial unrest and rising unemployment, is it?
Pembo - Memberernie_lynch - Member
13% interest rates meaning £300+ repayments on a £30k mortgage.
I think you'll find that interest rates hit 17% under the Tories.Give credit where credit's due ........ the Tories certainly know how to give us sky-high interest rates - not just sky-high unemployment. Although obviously both go hand in hand.
[b]And inflation peaked at 26% under labour in 1975. [/b]
I said [i]interest rates[/i] NOT [i]inflation rate,[/i] there is a difference between the two.
Until New Labour came to power, interests rates were directly set by the government. In the early eighties interest rates hit 17% as the result of [u]deliberately[/u] Tory government policy to reduce inflation. It had the most devastating effect on employment, and unemployment went up to over 3 million - the worst since the Great Depression.
The Tories argued that reducing inflation was more important than reducing unemployment - the Labour Party disagreed. And you can give [b]me[/b] high inflation over high unemployment, any day of the week.
The high inflation rates of the 1970s, which occurred under both Labour and Tory governments, was not similarly directly linked to government policy. External factors as well as factors outside the direct control of both Labour and Tory governments, contributed to the inflation rates.
High inflation rates in the 1970s was a global phenomenon. All the advanced nations were vulnerable to it, including the United States which was under conservative administration. In fact the US suffered so much from high inflation that it was forced to introduce "The Nixon Shock" and dollar devaluation.
There were many reasons for the global economic mess of the 1970s, including the fact that all the major stock markets around the world crashed between 1973 and 1974. The Vietnam War contributed hugely to inflation and economic crises in the US. And most significantly, OPEC at a stroke, quadrupled the price of oil towards the end of '73. Britain produced no oil at that time, and the quadrupling of oil prices today, would have a simular effect on inflation across the world.
These were all things which, unlike the [i]deliberate[/i] setting of sky-high interest rates in the 80s and 90s, was outside the [i]direct[/i] control of both Tory and Labour governments. And did indeed lead to capitalism yet again (mostly in the Anglo-Saxon economies) attempting to re-invent itself - this time in the guise of monetarist "neo-liberalism". Which of course ultimately failed because the inherent contradictions of capitalism, can never be overcome......however revolutionary the capitalist class attempts to be. In the meantime, the most effective and acceptable model for capitalism, is the social-democratic Keynesian model.
Nope, read back, we're saying Labour had especially lousy economic policies and that the Tories, though far from perfect, did significantly better. My previous post also refers to 1975 when Labour were in power.
Significantly better? Amusing.
ernie - you seem to have missed the point that taking interest rate decisions out of the chancellor's hands and into the hands of the Bank of England was precisely so that the BoE would keep inflation low, rather than politicians being tempted to reduce interest rates to fuel an inflationary boom in the run up to an election.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_of_England
On 6 May 1997, following the 1997 general election which brought another Labour government to power, it was announced by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, that the Bank of England would be granted operational independence over monetary policy. Under the terms of the Bank of England Act 1998 (which came into force on 1 June 1998), the bank's Monetary Policy Committee was given sole responsibility for setting interest rates to meet the Government's stated Retail Prices Index (RPI) inflation target of 2.5%.[8] The target has now changed to 2% since the Consumer Price Index (CPI) replaced the Retail Prices Index as the treasury's inflation index.[9] If inflation overshoots or undershoots the target by more than 1%, the Governor has to write a letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer explaining why, and how he will remedy the situation.The handing over of monetary policy to the Bank of England had featured as a key plank of the Liberal Democrats' economic policy since the 1992 general election.[10] A Conservative MP Nicholas Budgen had also proposed this as a Private Member's Bill in 1996, but the bill failed as it had neither the support of the government nor that of the opposition.
Of course, not including house prices in the inflation measure used, and exporting our manufacturing to China, allowed the most recent boom to go under the radar.
[i]And you can give me high inflation over high unemployment, any day of the week.[/i]
High inflation ultimately leads to high unemployment as many countries have found to their cost. Doing nothing about inflation not only gets you high unemployment but also compromises a country's ability to trade, the stability of its financial institutions and its social stability. Just off the top of my head the people of Germany between the wars, Argentinia (and other Latin American states) not so long ago and Hungary post war all suffered more than in any country with 10% unemployment but a stable currency.
ernie - you seem to have missed the point that taking interest rate decisions out of the chancellor's hands and into the hands of the Bank of England was precisely so that the BoE would keep inflation low, rather than politicians being tempted to reduce interest rates to fuel an inflationary boom in the run up to an election.
I wasn't making any point at all about "why" interest rate is no longer set by the government. I was simply stating that unlike now, in the 80s and 90s interest rates were set by the government. So the very high interest rates which those decades experienced, were the direct result of deliberate government policy to have high interest rates. In comparison, the inflation rates of the 70s was not.
But it is disingenuous of you to suggest that "[i]taking interest rate decisions out of the chancellor's hands and into the hands of the Bank of England was precisely so that the BoE would keep inflation low, rather than politicians[/i]" as it is still the government and therefore politicians, who decide what the inflation rate should be - not the Bank of England. The government gives the BoE Monetary Policy Committee "inflation targets" which it wants it to meet. Ultimately the BoE is answerable to politicians who make decisions for political purposes - hence the BoE support for Northern Rock for example.......so not really a very 'independent' bank.
And of course the government has found new imaginative ways of stoking up inflation apart from playing about with interest rates, such as quantitative easing. Because contrary to what monetarist Tories tell us, inflation isn't the greatest evil - deflation is.
[i]"allowed the most recent boom to go under the radar"[/i]
So no one noticed the growth in credit then........that people were borrowing and banks were lending ? That should have provided a clue that we buying stuff we couldn't afford. It kept wages down though, didn't it ? But you're right of course, contrary to the monetarist myth, inflation isn't the only thing which matters.
.
Edukator - can you clarify what you mean by Germany between the wars, and Argentina not so long ago, having "stable currencies" ? Because whichever way I read it, I can't get it to make any sense.........pardon me if I'm being a bit fick 😐
And btw, I haven't suggest that hyperinflation is good, merely that inflation isn't always necessarily bad, nor necessarily the worst problem.
Edukator - can you clarify what you mean by Germany between the wars, and Argentina not so long ago, having "stable currencies" ? Because whichever way I read it, I can't get it to make any sense
Probably because he said the exact opposite of that. Oh well.
you could get 10 players number 6 for 72p under the tories...
I'm not totally convinced anyone should be basing their choice of vote on what a party did some 20 or 30 years ago. Surely it's what they'll do (or at least you hope they'll do; let's be honest, none of them ever do) if they get elected that's the issue?
From a non-political point if view, I for one am not sorry to see the back of the coal industry. It is rare that I have to treat someone with pneumoconiosis nowadays, for the simple reason that the vast majority are dead!
Regardless of which political side of the fence you sit, the standard of living has improved immensely. Whether that is despite the best efforts of the Tories and entirely due to the wonderful work of socialists is a risible argument and one I'm pretty bored with, especially coming from the armchair (particularly 'leftie') pundits on here who are so blinkered they tend to ignore +ve and -ve aspects of both political camps to suit their arguments.
I will be out on my bike in an hour or so, breathing in relatively clean air on a rolling green countryside, something which could not have happened a few years ago.
[url= http://www.dmm-gallery.org.uk/gallery/b015-013.htm ]THEN[/url]
[url=
]NOW[/url]
It's not like the last 13 years have been a non stop period of enlightenment, peace and well being is it?
I'm not totally convinced anyone should be basing their choice of vote on what a party did some 20 or 30 years ago. Surely it's what they'll do (or at least you hope they'll do; let's be honest, none of them ever do) if they get elected that's the issue?
I really wouldn't have faith in trusting any party to do what they say they're going to do
I'd rather judge them on how they operate now & in the past
In the dying minutes of the last parliament the Tories still managed to put their big business chum ahead of everything else with underhand, greedy methods
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/mar/13/cameron-pressure-identify-poverty-bill
From a non-political point if view, I for one am not sorry to see the back of the coal industry. It is rare that I have to treat someone with pneumoconiosis nowadays, for the simple reason that the vast majority are dead!...I will be out on my bike in an hour or so, breathing in relatively clean air on a rolling green countryside, something which could not have happened a few years ago.
Well, absolutely - and if we shut down and remediated all offices and factories, we would be sure there would be no more industrial injury, and you're right, there would be much more clean air and places for middle class IT spods to ride their bike around. 🙄
Konabunny
I'll keep my eyes open for some of these middle class IT spods in the next few hours and let them know that they should be 'down the pit' doing a proper job instead of enjoying the countryside. 😉
porterclough - MemberEdukator - can you clarify what you mean by Germany between the wars, and Argentina not so long ago, having "stable currencies" ? Because whichever way I read it, I can't get it to make any sense
[b]Probably because he said the exact opposite of that[/b].
Erm, I don't think he did.......but maybe he meant to ?
Actually I'm interested in why Edukator wants to mention [i]"Argentinia and other Latin American states"[/i] at all, to back up his argument - as the example of Argentinia and other Latin American states so clearly undermines it.
Whilst a substantial number of voters in the UK and the US enthusiastically embraced monetarist neo-liberalism, the peoples of Latin America were somewhat more reticent. Therefore Washington had to force the neo-liberal experiment onto them against their will, through a series of brutal and bloody military dictatorships.
In this climate of fear where death squads operated freely and people simply "disappeared", the monetarists where able to fully implement their experiment without the risk of any opposition. It was, monetarist neo-liberalism in it's purest form........what Thatcher and Reagan could only dream about.
The economic and social consequences of the neo-liberal experiment in Latin America, were absolutely catastrophic for it's people.
In the case of Argentina, it accumulated in the final complete collapse of it's economy, and the sight of banks locking their doors to keep people out. [b]And the largest ever, sovereign default in history.[/b]
Argentina which had at the turn of the last century been the fourth richest country in the world, was utterly ruined. In a country which is the eighth largest in the world and has some of the most fertile land on the planet and half the population of the UK, children were dying of starvation on a weekly basis.
Luckily by then, Argentina had been returned to civilian rule. And after decades of economic crises with all it's social consequences of poverty and unemployment, the monetarist neo-liberal experiment was finally abandoned.
A newly installed social-democratic government was able to completely turn around the situation and within a couple of years poverty and unemployment had been cut by half. And within 4 years of being declared the largest default in history, Argentina had paid off all of it's foreign debt.
Argentina was able to do this because despite having it's economy shafted by the neo-liberals, it is intrinsically a wealthy country. Have a guess from this graph when the social-democrats took over from the monetarists !
Of course due to the fact that Argentina's recovery was very much export led, it has recently experienced some difficulty as a result of global recession. And wealthy Argentine Tories who had been utterly demoralised after the collapse of firstly their military government, and then their civilian government, have now regained their confidence, and have recently been using their wealth and power to sabotage and blackmail the current social-democratic government, as it continues to bring about social change. But the life of ordinary Argentines has immeasurably improved.
Interestingly enough Edukator, when inflation reached 5000% in Argentina, whilst it halved the value of wages, it did not increase unemployment significantly, which somewhat undermines your claim that [i]"high inflation ultimately leads to high unemployment"[/i] (although I wouldn't condone hyperinflation !)
As does of course, the famous quote by a former Tory Chancellor that high unemployment was the price of low inflation :
[b][i]"If higher unemployment is the price we have to pay in order to bring inflation down, then it is a price worth paying."[/i][/b] - Norman Lamont, Chancellor of the Exchequer. 1992.
The greatest threat we face in Britain today, is high unemployment....with all it's consequences of poverty, low wages, social injustice, crime, racism, lack of social cohesion, etc. Not inflation.
what ernie says Edukator says makes no sense.
[b]ernie_lynch - Member[/b] [i]Edukator - can you clarify what you mean by Germany between the wars, and Argentina not so long ago, having "stable currencies" ? Because whichever way I read it, I can't get it to make any sense.........pardon me if I'm being a bit fick[/i]
what Edukator said.
[b]Edukator - Member[/b] [i]Just off the top of my head the people of Germany between the wars, Argentinia (and other Latin American states) not so long ago and Hungary post war [b]all suffered more than in any country with 10% unemployment but[/b] a stable currency.[/i]
ernie, if you miss out bits of a sentence, its no wonder things dont make any sense to you.
and also to the person who said he was born in 1977 and said he remembered Thatcher 'snatching the milk'
It really is amazing that you can remember something which happened during the 1970-74 goverment.
It really is amazing that you can remember something which happened during the 1970-74 goverment.
Is that true, because I certainly remember having free milk when I first went to school but then not getting it later on and I wasnt born till 1974.
Someone mentioned we shouldnt judge what the previous Tory gov did when deciding to vote, however I dont see that the Tories have significantly changed their tune as regards their aims/beliefs (for want of a better word) whereas Labour certainly did under Tory Blair prior to them getting voted in. Cameron certainly seems to be singing from a well used Conservative hymn book to me.
to the person who said he was born in 1977 and said he remembered Thatcher 'snatching the milk'. It really is amazing that you can remember something which happened during the 1970-74 goverment.
Actually, it was the mid 1980s before the Tory government really managed make any real progress in removing state-subsidised milk from state primary schools:
The 1980 Education Act added a further £25 million in EEC subsidies to LEAs to help subsidise milk in schools although six years later as part of an amendment they were told it could only apply to the very lowest income families.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1507023/Thatcher-the-snatcher-may-not-have-been-wrong.html
Unless your argument was that the Tories promised a policy in 1971 and only got around to anything near full implementation fifteen years later, and this is a good thing?
Lord Summerisle - Memberwhat Edukator said.
Edukator - Member Just off the top of my head the people of Germany between the wars, Argentinia (and other Latin American states) not so long ago and Hungary post war all suffered more than in any country with 10% unemployment but a stable currency.
ernie, if you miss out bits of a sentence, its no wonder things dont make any sense to you.
Nope, [i]"but a stable currency"[/i] makes absolutely no sense at all to me.
If someone would care to [i]explain[/i] what Edukator means, instead of just repeating it, I would be very grateful.
Because obviously Argentina is possibly the worst example of a "stable currency".
During the period of the neo-liberal experiment, crises ridden Argentina had to constantly reinvent it's currency. It went from the "Peso Ley" to the "Peso Argentino", to the "Austral", to the "Peso Convertible". It underwent 8 currency crises, and in a desperate attempt to deal with the instability of the Argentine currency, the neo-liberals ended up pegging it to the US Dollar. This did not in the long term stabilise the Peso, and in the crises of 2002 it was abandoned.
So unless I'm missing something, I can't see how the words "Argentina" and "stable currency" can be used in the same sentence. Unless of course, there is the inclusion of the word "not".
To me, the closure of the pits and the miner's strike is a very ugly time in our history. Towns that used to rely on mining are still fairly grim places, over 25 years on from the miner's strike.
Nevertheless, you have to remember the background. We were losing millions of working days a year to strikes in the 1970s - we have lost less working days since 1990 than we have in single years of the 70s. Ultimately, the unions had to be faced down, and the miners were unfortunate enough to be the people who took Thatcher on.
Is that true, because I certainly remember having free milk when I first went to school but then not getting it later on and I wasnt born till 1974.
Hang on, here's a simple test. Can you also remember being woken in a bright room full of grey beings with large heads coming towards you with "probes"?
I certainly remember having free milk when I first went to school but then not getting it later on and I wasnt born till 1974.
+1
sorry smart alec nay-sayers.. we had milk in little tiny milk bottles with a straw..
Towns that used to rely on mining are still fairly grim places, over 25 years on from the miner's strike
I live in a former pit village and work primarily in a former pit town. I can assure you that it is far from [i][b]grim[/b][/i]. I didn't live in the area 25 years ago but from talking to colleagues, film footage etc etc. I would say that, on the whole, things are considerably better than they were when the area was reliant upon mining.
I certainly remember having free milk when I first went to school but then not getting it later on and I wasnt born till 1974.+1
sorry smart alec nay-sayers.. we had milk in little tiny milk bottles with a straw..
Harold Wilson removed school milk for secondary schools in 1968 and Ted Heath removed it for primary schools in 1971. Since then I believe it's been a local authority decision. But it's no doubt all Thatcher's fault - "Harold Wilson - Milk Snatcher" doesn't have quite the same ring... 🙄
I remember at my school a few people drank the milk but most of it was thrown away - it was a post-war policy designed probably as much to help milk farmers as the children.
I live in a former pit village and work primarily in a former pit town. I can assure you that it is far from grim.
We must have different standards of grim. Most of the places round here (North Notts / Derbyshire) that had pits and now don't are still conspicuously poor areas. Some, like Manton, are horrendous.
We had free school milk, but that was because our school (it might have been the LEA I can't remember) made sure it was available to us. Most of the kids drank it and enjoyed it. The reason behind free school milk was to ensure all young children were given valuable nutrition. The vitamins and Calcium in milk are vital to help growing bones. In deprived areas, the benefits of this were proven, with a significant improvement in the health of young children. Not so important for older kids, hence not absolutely necessary in secondary schools.
Removing free school milk from primary schools is just another sign that the Tories don't actually give a **** about the people of Britain. The poorer working classes? As long as they can do the menial tasks, fine; that's all they're good for...
Is that true, because I certainly remember having free milk when I first went to school but then not getting it later on and I wasnt born till 1974.Hang on, here's a simple test. Can you also remember being woken in a bright room full of grey beings with large heads coming towards you with "probes"?
nope, never been in such a situation as far as I can remember. What does that have to do with milk?
I remember being forced to drink milk out of little bottles with a straw in that had sat around in the sun all morning, this would have been mid to late 70s.
Still can't face milk without adding Nesquik.
Tron
I'm not familiar with Derby (I live 3 miles from Durham) and I'm not saying it's all rosy. There are still some very poor areas (eg. Easington where Billy Elliot was filmed) but there were 'poor areas' even when the mines were operating. The NE was hit very hard with the demise of shipbuilding, mining and steel to name but a few, there has been a good deal of regeneration and influx of new business and overall things are better. IMHO of course. 😉
Ted Heath removed it for primary schools in 1971
No he didn't, the decision was taken by the education minister. And I doubt very much that the School Milk Act, which was introduced by a Labour government a few months after the end of WW2, was designed to help "milk farmers". Britain still had rationing, and farmers would hardly have encouraged to produce something which wasn't actually needed or necessary.
I remember being forced to drink milk out of little bottles with a straw in that had sat around in the sun all morning, this would have been mid to late 70s.
Early 80's onwards for me. Small glass bottles+straw. Always remember the milk being slightly bloody warm and yuk!
Education Secretary (1970–1974)
When the Conservative party under Edward Heath won the 1970 general election, Thatcher became Secretary of State for Education and Science. In her first months in office, Thatcher came to public attention as a result of the administration of Edward Heath's decision to cut spending. She gave priority to academic needs in schools,[37] and imposed public expenditure cuts on the state education system, resulting in, against her private protests, the abolition of free milk for school-children aged seven to eleven.[38] She believed that few children would suffer if schools were charged for milk, however she agreed to give younger children a third of a pint, daily, for nutritional purposes.[38] This provoked a storm of protest from the Labour party and the press,[39] and led to the unflattering moniker "Margaret Thatcher, Milk Snatcher".[38] Of the experience, Thatcher later wrote in her autobiography, "I learned a valuable lesson. I had incurred the maximum of political odium for the minimum of political benefit."[39]
She successfully resisted the introduction of library book charges. She did not volunteer spending cuts in her department, contrary to her later beliefs.[38] Her term was marked by support for several proposals for more local education authorities to close grammar schools and to adopt comprehensive secondary education. Thatcher, committed to a tiered secondary modern / grammar school system of education, was determined to preserve grammar schools, which prepared more students for admission to universities.[37] She abolished Labour's commitment to comprehensive schooling, and instead left the matter to local education authorities.[37]
S'funny, how modern thinking has been so poisoned by freemarket Thatcherite thinking, that someone suggests that free school milk was simply a scheme to keep bolshevik farmers employed by the state!.
(assuming,jokingly for a second, it was true)-'Keeping farmers in jobs! how is that in the national interest!?' 🙄
Thing is. Every says Thathca Thathca Thathca. Why not focus on the here and now? Lets face it Labour has the murderer who found God and the bungler who currently has us close to a trillion of debt. how can a small Island have close to that mucch national debt?
Get someone in who knows how to make money/run a business FFS.
Get someone in who knows how to make money/run a business FFS.
irrespective of our political differences this is a bizarre statement, surely we need someone who can run a country?
You really need to brush up your reading skills Ernie. I'll give you a couple of short easy examples:
Germany has had a stable currency with low inflation for years but unemployment that has often reached 10%, despite the unemployment Germans live well, even the unemployed.
Argentinia despite its potential has suffered runaway inflation that has bankrupted companies, banks and individuals leading to significant collective suffering. The economic woes caused by high inflation have led to unemployment of up to 25% contrary to what you say about unemployment having remained low.
I stand by my original assertion that inflation and currency instability are far greater threats than unemployment and Thatchers decision to fight inflation was the right one - as proved by the improving economic fortunes of Britain over the period 1979 to 1997. John Major handed over Britain's economy to Blair in fine form - look what Labour have done, again.
The similarities between the end of labour's last stint are striking: Non elected prime ministers presiding over huge public deficits. It took Thatcher five years to get the budget deficit she inherited from Labour down to reasonable levels. I wonder how long it will take the Tories or Clegg this time.
irrespective of our political differences this is a bizarre statement, surely we need someone who can run a country?
It's Hora - bizarre statements are his stock in trade
Get someone in who knows how to make money/run a business FFS.
Who do you suggest Hora? I don't think Dave or Gideon have ever run a company
It really would be great if Labour won, not because I have any great affection for them but Hora's rant if they do will be epic in many ways
Edukator - so you [i][b]actually[/b][/i] meant what you said.......Germany between the wars, and Argentina in recent years, are examples of "stable economies" ?
Yeah, ok mate..........I think we'll leave it there. Thanks.
Do you enjoy making a fool of yourself Ernie? The problem with trying to distort what people say on this forum is that there are hundreds of other people out there that do read and do understand even if they don't agree. The vast majority then present their own counter or complementary views and arguments and the [b]debate[/b] progresses.
We're not mates as far as I know and you may wish to leave it there but I'm quite enjoying myself and will continue as long as I have something I hope others find interesting, amusing or mildly annoying to add.
What does that have to do with milk?
Just checking for False Memory Syndrome
I don't think Dave or Gideon have ever run a company
Nor has James*. He's not even an economist, despite his proclamations.
*You may know him as Gordon. Odd that. No one ever makes anything of the fact he has chosen Gordon over James, yet you dull Guardian readers never shut up about Osborne using George over Gideon. Why is that, I wonder? Something to do with class and inverted snobbery perhaps? No, of course not......
The problem with trying to distort what people say..........
No mate, you can say whatever you want say - it really doesn't bother me. I'm just slightly annoyed that I took you seriously. But then you probably see that as a result - so well done.
I'll try and ignore you in future - so no risk of me "distorting" what you say.
Keeping farmers in jobs! how is that in the national interest!?
Well....
Assuming that we will have an unlimited supply of oil into the distant future, and that burning that oil will have no environmental consequences, then it isn't important.
But, given that we have a finite amount of oil, and that we are being urged to preserve it, not just for economic, but also for environmental reasons, then imported foodstuffs will become more expensive and face possible interuption. At which point we might be glad to still have people around with the skills and knowledge to produce the food we will need to survive.
In fact it's a similar argument to the one that goes for Trident missiles - at some unknown time in the future we will be glad we've got them, although of course it's different because in the case of farmers, we actually do know that in time we really will need them.
*You may know him as Gordon. Odd that. No one ever makes anything of the fact he has chosen Gordon over James, yet you dull Guardian readers never shut up about Osborne using George over Gideon. Why is that, I wonder? Something to do with class and inverted snobbery perhaps? No, of course not......
Actually I didn't know that. Being a Grauniad reader I thought his first name was Gudgeon.
Being a Grauniad reader I thought his first name was Gudgeon.
Genuine PMSL moment! 🙂 Brilliant!
Obviously a Thomas the tank engine fan Mr Brown.
[i]Gordon is the senior member of the engine family, the fastest and most powerful engine on the rails. He's extremely proud and inclined to boast. He's good-hearted, always willing to use his superior strength to help smaller engines out of trouble.[/i]
J[i]ames is a medium sized engine. He likes to think of himself as a really splendid engine. This can occasionally lead to grandiose ideas about the sort of work suitable for such a noble creature, which invariably lands James in trouble. James is a mixed traffic engine, which means he can pull both passenger coaches and freight cars.[/i]
Maybe its because Gideon is a daft name?
Don't posh people always give boys daft names ?
What's your first name Flashheart ? 😉
Wot, like James.
Leonard James Callaghan. James Gordon Brown.
I'm putting money on Tarquin Meredith Flashheart..
(plus some more middle names.. probably three more)
Rightplacerighttime, I wuz being ironic (hence the quote marks)
I happen to think that it IS in the national interest to keep farmers in a job, and miners too for that matter...
I'm putting money on Tarquin Meredith Flashheart..
😀 ......actually I happen to know Flashheart's first name. And yes it is posh - very posh in fact some would say, but not actually daft. At least I hope not, as it happens to be my middle name ! Although in my defence I wasn't given it because it appeals to the English aristocracy (which it clearly does), I was named after a famous general which my father served under - and he wasn't British. Mind you, I reckon it's well cool in it's Spanish form.
Get someone in who knows how to make money/run a business FFS.
Hora, you are a true Child Of Thatcher....
Edukator - you show how little you know by asserting this
Edukator - Member
I stand by my original assertion that inflation and currency instability are far greater threats than unemployment and Thatchers decision to fight inflation was the right one - as proved by the improving economic fortunes of Britain over the period 1979 to 1997. John Major handed over Britain's economy to Blair in fine form - look what Labour have done, again.
Unsder the tories the economy was devasted - years of declining output and stagflation and the wasting of the north sea oil money on paying for the millions of unemployed.
the damage done and the missed opportunities can never be repaired. Norway got rich on the back of the oil money and invested it for the peoples future. thatcher wasted ours on paying benefits. without the oil money the economy would have collapsed totally. As it was it was virtually destroyed.
Really - you have now lost any credibility you have had. Remeber black wednesday? Remembner high inflation high interst rates and simultaneous falling GDP?
"*You may know him as Gordon. Odd that. No one ever makes anything of the fact he has chosen Gordon over James, yet you dull Guardian readers never shut up about Osborne using George over Gideon. Why is that, I wonder? Something to do with class and inverted snobbery perhaps? No, of course not...... "
Can I say, I'm a dull Guardian reader and I had no idea George Osborne's given name is Gideon til you mentioned it
The reason people laugh at Osbourne is that he stopped using gideon to try not to look so posh. As have others of the tories changed their used name to avoid looking so posh although some have refused. there is no particular difference in how James or Gordon are seen.
Conservative candidates are under pressure to drop aristocratic-sounding names to play down the blue-blooded image of David Cameron’s party, it was claimed last night.
The Conservative leader, who wears his Old Etonian background lightly and is known as Dave by friends, asked one candidate, Annunziata Rees-Mogg, to change her double-barrelled name to Nancy Mogg
However, other Tory candidates have anticipated ‘Dave’s De-toff’. Simon Radford-Kirby, candidate for trendy Brighton Kemptown, describes himself as plain Simon Kirby.
Fellow Tory Scott Seaman-Digby switched to Scott Digby for his unsuccessful bid to become the Brighton Pavilion candidate
But aren't double barrelled names increasingly common due to women not necessarily taking the husbands name in marriage? No big deal nowadays IMHO.
Annunziata is quite a different story and Willy should be ashamed of himself ......... 😯
[i]Unsder the tories the economy was devasted - years of declining output and stagflation[/i]
That was Labour, "stagflation" was a term first employed by Conservative Iain Mcleod to describe what was happening under Labour when he was shadow chancellor in the 60s.
The conservatives have always had lousy economic numbers during the first few years of their mandates as the clear up the economic mess left by Labour. You can't congratulate Blair for the first two years of his mandate because he was riding on the result of years conservative good management. Thatcher was elected after the winter of discontent and it took a while to pick up the pieces.
Labour: tax busines more, introduce labour laws that are expensive for the employer, allow sabotage of the work place by a minority of communist fanatics, expand the public sector and pay people not to work.
Consevative: tax business less, limit union powers and favour democracy in the work place, reign in public spending and encourage people to work with measures such as the £1000 to start a buisiness under Thatcher.
That's why the economy does better under the conservatives. I believe that can be combined with measures to assure equality in education and health that I call caring capitalism so my sympathies would lie with the Liberals if I had a vote.
[i]Really - you have now lost any credibility you have had[/i] TJ in trouble and resorting to insult rather than argument, well I never.
Edukator
Are you Hora's intelligent brother? You are wasted in France m8, you should be writing speeches for Dave 8)
Dull Guardian readers, I am polished and shiny like a new penny.
Dont have an issue with Gideon changing his name, my dad was Francis Mervyn and always known as Merv. I have an issue with him being a buffoon 🙄
Likening our position to Norway is a bit daft there are only about 5 million Norges. We must have had that many unemployed. Also for good or for bad Norway is not in the common market.

