http://www.ukresults.net/08sep.html#pennington
If you haven't sorted it by weekend, you could always run this! The Prize Money should keep you going a few days.
That's as long as someone will sub you the entry fee![]()
http://www.ukresults.net/08sep.html#pennington
If you haven't sorted it by weekend, you could always run this! The Prize Money should keep you going a few days.
That's as long as someone will sub you the entry fee![]()
Just want to mention something on the FSA. I am against regulations, all regulations and here's why:
About a week ago a top financier was on Hard Talk( a BBC news program on Sky). He said the FSA couldn't regulate the banking sector, because they couldn't understand it. It was too complex.
They weren't the only ones. The bloke on the show didn't understand it either. In fact he said hardly anyone understood what was going on. Loans and investments with big names and pages and pages of information.
What was understood was that it couldn't last. There was too much money going out to too many people.
So we were paying taxes to regulate the banking sector and it couldn't be regulated. So more waste and also the illusion we were being protected.
With the pound tied to gold the markets wouldn't need regulation
The way it's going over here, we'll be getting Chinese investors coming over here to invest in manufacturing plants
- taking advantage of the cheap labour force!
And I'm not joking - a shoe factory in Fuzhou recently told me that they were having to pay some of the sewing machinists wages that would be close to the UK minimum wage over here, such is the shortage of skilled workers in the Chinese industrial areas.
The China comment may be naive, but it could be taken two ways.
1. Of course China is relavant to the current economic problems. The huge growth there in a country with 25% of the worls's population has put so much pressure on the world's resources. The pressure on Oil, Steel, Coal etc - even items such as rubber is incredible and these commodities have seen huge increases in price over the last 3 - 5 years.
Remember $10 a barrel?
2. IT isn't relevant. CHina has gorn as it was the natural factory of the world - if it hadn't have been - somewhere else would have been - such as Africa etc.
In fact China will soon start to lose as it is becoming difficult to source from in som instances.
DT - I just think that sometimes we shouldn't get too sickened by such terms.
I have young white youths in my neck of the woods I often refer to as Pond Life, Neanderthals etc - basically just terms to describe the local useless nob-heads that blight our society.
I think it is fair to say that this and other countruies have been assisting quite powerful Pond-Life in other countries around the world in the name of "Aid"
but in fact have been making the life of the poor sods on the ground a misery, rather than helping.
Much of the government "Aid" dished out is poorly targetted at thugs and villains, who seem to have a very nice life thank you.
Mugabe certainly has some dapper suits!
"primitive cavemen" Christopher? You're in danger of losing respect. If you start talking like that you'll find yourself surrounded by shouting rednecks slapping you on the back and respectable people won't be fighting through them to get near you.
And by the way, with regard to "primitive", what is gold? Just stuff. Only worth what people agree it's worth. No intrinsic value at all. More like fantasy capital. It can just as easily turn into a floating anchor if people stop believing it's heavy.
China is creating an interesting situation at present. For several years we've seen them selling commodity goods including clothes and household goods at below actual global cost because of low labour costs but also importantly, their government's subsidies. As you point out WP this is changing. I travel the world selling chemicals and manufacturing is becoming more and more itinerant. The time it stays in one place is getting shorter too as employees expectation rise and rise more quickly