Potter wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 1:16 pm
Little—less—nothing!—and that ended it.
No more to build on there. And they, since they
Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs.
Well, well. I never expected anyone quoting my favourite poet on here.
Very apt.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
Greenman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 1:38 pm
As you have appointed yourself as my resident TRC mortgage advisor, can you advise as to why all these rates are rising soo much?
I could, and I could give you a good steer on what will happen between now and Q1 2025, but I'm all burned out with explaining stuff just to get into an argument.
Go steady on the spends and try to save as much as you can.
Vaya con dios.
Taipan wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 12:17 pm
So you're not bothered a Dad will probably watch his son die or vice versa. That's a dreadful thing for any family to go through, especially the remaining family knowing that. Its a dreadful thing that any of them should have to see another human die in front of them. So yes I have sympathy.
I do too, just a lot less than I would if something happened to someone who didn’t elect to do something with a very high and very foreseeable level of danger. I would expect for anyone to have a disproportionate level of sympathy if I got killed on my bike after riding like a loon.
I predict that by the end of next week the jellyfish that is Rishi Sunak will have announced handouts for people struggling to pay their mortgage, something along the lines of "Homeowners Tax Allowance", it will be targeted at "hard working families", whoever they might be.
He will cave in due to light pressure from the Labour Party and BBC / Guardian, and defeat the whole reason for raising interest rates, not that I think raising interest rates will bring down inflation, it's being caused by pressure outside of the UKs control.
Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 3:00 pm... inflation, it's being caused by pressure outside of the UKs control.
"Outside pressure" may be a small part of it but the main driver of inflation is that the government spent money we didn't have.
Print too much money, get inflation. We've known this for years yet it still, apparently, takes governments by surprise.
Band of England, printing money, QE.....then guess what. Still, it'll be Truss's fault no doubt due to the budget which didn't come into fruition, then she went and it got worse....
Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 3:00 pm
I predict that by the end of next week the jellyfish that is Rishi Sunak will have announced handouts for people struggling to pay their mortgage, something along the lines of "Homeowners Tax Allowance", it will be targeted at "hard working families", whoever they might be.
I imagine there'll actually be options presented for people to go 'interest only'. That seems a reasonable solution.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
As someone who grew up where the damn thing is the biggest tourist attraction of all time, I can't get too excited about the whole submarine thing, its no different to all the yanks coming over to ooh and ahh over teacups and bits of metal salvaged off the thing. If one of them tripped and went under a bendy bus outside the exhibition, nobody would give a fuck, but submarines make news, even though as a species we have no real business being 12000 feet down. The whole set up seems to have been very shonky from the outset....
Yambo wrote: ↑Thu Jun 22, 2023 1:51 pm
Turkish Central bank (with a new boss) has just raised interest rates to 15% from 8.5%.
£1 now at 31.25 and climbing (it was £1 = 30.07 this morning).
Be interesting to see how long Recep keeps Hafize Gaye Erkan in the job.
According to the BBC, during his recent election campaign he promied to keep rates low, while the opposition said they would raise them. And we think the UK has problems wth lying politicians
Supposed to be a press conference at 8pm uk time. Also seems banging noises were likely natual sounds and not related. I think that basically all realistic hope is gone, no doubt the search will continue but without much hope.
It's not exactly today's news but I've been reading about another well-buried find - 7 tons of nails (Buried by departing Romans to stop the locals getting their hands on a large quantity of 'weapons grade' iron). Nails were quite important and not always readily available - there was also something about American settlers burning down the homestead and sieving the ashes to recover the nails when they moved.
In other news, a few hundred people died at sea fleeing war and famine this week.
Kinda weird how ones newsworthy and the other is just dead refugees innit.
I'd have thought people would move on from Brexit by now, it's done, it's gone. Let it go.
Blaming something from years ago doesn't matter any more. It changes nothing