Flynnwood
Established Member
The dogs are happy that you look after them. And give betterment to you. (OP)Too simplified, I know, but I am feeling grumpy and have to walk the dogs.
The dogs are happy that you look after them. And give betterment to you. (OP)Too simplified, I know, but I am feeling grumpy and have to walk the dogs.
While we're here lets dispel some economic myths.
1) Central Banks do not control the money supply. 97% of money is created by banks. Banks control the money supply.
2) Government 'debt' isn't debt. Its private sector savings at the central bank. Do the math. If you can print money, why would you borrow it?
4) There's no such thing as 'tax payers money'. All taxes are destroyed on receipt. If you can print an unlimited amount of money, why would you need someone else's money?
To control inflation. So, what can you not do with money you remove from the economy in order to control inflation?
Spend it. You can't spend it.
Technically, all money is created as an IOU. So when one pound is created it is created as a one pound 'liability' of the state and a one pound private 'asset'.
When that pound is returned to the state, the liability is extinguished. Poof! Gone. No money.
and don't forget we are contracted in to pay a very high price per unit, £92 per megawatt hour plus inflation that was set before renewables drove the price right down to around £42 per megawatt hour as well as providing site security at our cost and as far as I am aware we are also liable for decomisioning and storing the waste for the next several hundred years. French economy should do ok, it is costing £23 billion plus it's carbon footprint to date is going to take many years before they get anywhere near neutral, they have been moving thousands of workers onto site for years in fleets of buses not to mention all that concrete which although bad for the climate must be good for the economy.Hinkley point C is madness - a French built nuclear power station with Chinese finance.….not much “taking back control”
and don't forget we are contracted in to pay a very high price per unit, £92 per megawatt hour plus inflation that was set before renewables drove the price right down to around £42 per megawatt hour as well as providing site security at our cost and as far as I am aware we are also liable for decomisioning and storing the waste for the next several hundred years. French economy should do ok, it is costing £23 billion plus it's carbon footprint to date is going to take many years before they get anywhere near neutral, they have been moving thousands of workers onto site for years in fleets of buses not to mention all that concrete which although bad for the climate must be good for the economy.
Has anyone been called a nazi yet?
Haven’t posted for a while been filling the bath with petrol.
Sadly we don't have the gumption to build it. Too busy asset stripping our own construction firms and under quoting for maintaince jobs.and don't forget we are contracted in to pay a very high price per unit, £92 per megawatt hour plus inflation that was set before renewables drove the price right down to around £42 per megawatt hour as well as providing site security at our cost and as far as I am aware we are also liable for decomisioning and storing the waste for the next several hundred years. French economy should do ok, it is costing £23 billion plus it's carbon footprint to date is going to take many years before they get anywhere near neutral, they have been moving thousands of workers onto site for years in fleets of buses not to mention all that concrete which although bad for the climate must be good for the economy.
Changes still neededMaking generic statements about the merits or otherwise of privatisation based on circumstances today is a nonsense. The bulk of privatisatons took place 30-40 years ago, since when governments of both shades have had the opportunity to make changes.
This is not "generally" proposed. Only "particularly" as necessary....
I do not believe the option to renationalise generally makes any sense - .....
Wishful thinking.More effective regulation would be far better, achieve critical national interest goal, be far, far less disruptive, and preserve the impetus the profit motive delivers to progress and efficiency.
Wrong. If anything I've moved much further to the left, having been forced to look at things more closely.The great thing about forum debates is how you can see people’s attitudes change through debate, for example Jacob used to be a very left wing socialist, yet through 2 decades of internet debate and reasoning he has become a very left wing socialist. This my friends is what internet debating can achieve over time.
Wrong. If anything I've moved much further to the left, having been forced to look at things more closely.
Perhaps it's inevitable and affects a lot of people the same way, to a little extent even yourself Bobby?
One thing which stands out is that the right tend to come across more and more like marginalised head bangers!
Don't forget to turn the bath taps off, petrol all over the floor is no good for the finish.......The great thing about forum debates is how you can see people’s attitudes change through debate, for example Jacob used to be a very left wing socialist, yet through 2 decades of internet debate and reasoning he has become a very left wing socialist. This my friends is what internet debating can achieve over time.
Anyway no time for this, need to arrange my bog roll collection in year dates.
Oops - should have replied to this earlier - sorry.
Free markets are far more efficient, because they include innovation, and creative destruction. Monopolies of whatever flavour stifle innovation on purpose in order to continue as they are. Rather the point of a monopoly, in fact - fear of competition. A government monopoly will never admit to being wrong, and will wrongheadedly grind on for no reason, while the hangers on fleece the system and profit mightily. Jacob's comment on the Afghanistan war is a fine example of monopoly behaviour - hardly cutting edge and innovative to blow up goatherders for the umpty third time, just because.
"Scholars have proposed a number of theories to explain China's successful transition from a planned to a socialist market economy."have you studied in depth how China plans and organize its economy? They show a very intelligent planned economy that has no free market, but state filter to what lives and what dies, plus it was designed to exploit international capitalism.
It is certainly one of the most common words you find in most places, it is on everything around the house. Imagine how different the world would be now if China had not gone into that period of closed to the world, the future is asian if not just chinese. How long now before we have the chinese equivalent to the cuban crisis, if we arm Australia then they can do the same to any asian country.The future is beginning to look Chinese.
I cannot not think of Blade Runner whenever I read that or think about China expansion.It is certainly one of the most common words you find in most places, it is on everything around the house. Imagine how different the world would be now if China had not gone into that period of closed to the world, the future is asian if not just chinese. How long now before we have the chinese equivalent to the cuban crisis, if we arm Australia then they can do the same to any asian country.
Nah, the shortage is one created by PR men who understand human nature. Drop a hint that 'some' filling stations have been closed due to a shortage of drivers, get the MSM to run the story and...Bingo! you have caused an already insecure public to go into panic mode. Filling stations will close because the 'shortage' will drive up prices, so better to hold on to your existing stock for a few days and sell it at a 20% premium than let it go now. The whole thing is a bad joke. Worst of it is that the artificially inflated prices will stay with us long after the 'shortage' expires. For example, back when oil prices hit $120 per barrel, diesel prices hit £1.30 per litre, up fro something like 80p per litre. Today, with oil prices at $78 per barrel I have seen diesel prices at £1.48 at some filling stations near Chichester. The absolute laugh of it, though, is that pricing is considered to be a primary tool for managing demand and this plays a big part in the government's 'green' strategy. Yet it does not stop people filling up their tank! The rich get richer......
Then do we really have a fuel shortage or is it the creation of media hype, had there been no panic buying then our local garage would not have ran out, they sold a weeks delivery in a day! But getting extra ones to boost their profits whilst everyone tries to outstrip supply and many not realising there is a legal limit on how much fuel they can carry in containers.
Enter your email address to join: