I'm not sure that we can compare a few scuffles with the Met's heavy mob with a lifetime of oppression from a communist dictatorship... :?sunrise":2be014hj said:JohnH":2be014hj said:I don't know about the best healthcare system in the world, but they do have networks of informers living amongst the people who report to the secret police if anyone dares to criticise the government...
tbf no govt is perfect, what about the heavy handed police tactics used on teenagers and school pupils during demonstrations? demonstrations which started peacefully!
I tried and failed to find the actual quote online, but from memory, Ken Clarke stood up from the back benches and said something along the lines of "I must warn the new chancellor to stop meddling with the affairs of the Bank of England". That's obviously not an exact quote, but the essence is about right.sunrise":2be014hj said:Brown was warned by Ken Clarke in 1997 or 1998 not to meddle with the organisation of financial regulation
I bet he actually said 'some types of financial regulation are worse than others'
What I did find while searching, was an article written before the 2010 election in the Telegraph which pinpointed the date upon which the UK switched from being able to cover the costs of running the country to spending like a drunken lottery winner. It was the date that Gordon Brown stopped following the Major government's spending plans...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/7530 ... -fate.html
It's really nothing to do with chance.sunrise":2be014hj said:we're going to end up in the same position as Greece or Ireland.
arent the chances of that pretty low?
Either a government imposes strict spending restraints and the credit markets reward it with low borrowing costs (like the UK). Or a government refuses to restrain its spending and the credit markets convey their uncertainty that that government will repay its debts by lending at high interest rates. Which makes that country's indebtedness even worse, as it has done in Greece.
:shock: Erm sunrise, I thought we were worrying about ordinary people here....sunrise":2be014hj said:But it does hurt ordinary people contributing to pensions, regular people who are trying to build their savings and public sector workers who are being axed because the country can't afford to keep them and pay debt interest at the same time.
if it had to be it had to be, recessions come and go
The fact is, it didn't have to be. Gordon Brown saw the country getting wealthier and thought to himself "Great! I'm going to tax all of this wealth and use the money to build a massive public sector infrastructure that employs all of these out-of-work people!". He thought that he could keep that up forever because he'd "put an end to boom and bust".
But he failed to understand that the country's new found wealth wasn't built on abundant natural resources (like Russia or Australia), it wasn't built on a solid manufacturing base (like Germany or Japan) and it wasn't built on a roaring hi-tech sector (like Silicon Valley).
It was built on an abundance of borrowed money. And when the borrowed money ran out, so did our boom.
So now the country has to pay all of that borrowed money back.
Yom Kippur? Crikey, that's 1973! :shock:sunrise":2be014hj said:I thought this recession had infact started with the Yom Kippur war?
At about that time, the United States printed dollars that were no longer redeemable in gold. Thanks to Nixon, it then became a so-called 'fiat' currency where the money markets would determine the value of the dollar rather than linking it to a valuable asset.
David Stockman, one of Reagan's former right-hand men, writes a devastating criticism of that decision (and others since then) that he says has "destroyed" the US economy...
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/reagan ... 2010-08-10
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/reagan ... 2011-05-24
Sunrise, I'm sure you'll agree with me that you can't spend a fiver twice. You can either buy one thing or another. But you can't use the same fiver to buy both.sunrise":2be014hj said:I just think the condems are condemning the ordinary folk.
This country has to pay £120 million per day in interest payments to moneylenders. And we can only spend that money once. So instead of paying for special needs schools or extra classroom assistants or well stocked libraries, it's got to pay for the massive debts that this country has.
And the people who ran up those massive debts were Gordon Brown and Alastair Darling.
They are the people who have condemned the ordinary folk.