Maybe, but it’s reported as doctors suspecting she was murdering babies, so they went to the management about it, not the Police.
In todays news...
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Re: In todays news...
- Yorick
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This Mason Greenwood thing upsets me. All charges were dropped. The club then did a 6 months investigation to find more info
They concluded that he did nothing wrong, but made a few unwise decisions
Then loads of female groups decided he was a scumbag and the club had to give in.
Poor fucker. I know there's no smoke without fire, but his life has been wrecked by the allegations, then by his club sacking him.
If the claims were false, the complainant(s) should be prosecuted..
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/66554874
They concluded that he did nothing wrong, but made a few unwise decisions
Then loads of female groups decided he was a scumbag and the club had to give in.
Poor fucker. I know there's no smoke without fire, but his life has been wrecked by the allegations, then by his club sacking him.
If the claims were false, the complainant(s) should be prosecuted..
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/66554874
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Re: In todays news...
Bad things.
If you thought someone was killing people, who would you tell? Middle management? HR?
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It has shades of the Jimmy Saviles about it. Lots of claims he did something. Some reasonable evidence he did something. No conviction.Yorick wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 9:26 pm This Mason Greenwood thing upsets me. All charges were dropped. The club then did a 6 months investigation to find more info
They concluded that he did nothing wrong, but made a few unwise decisions
Then loads of female groups decided he was a scumbag and the club had to give in.
Poor fucker. I know there's no smoke without fire, but his life has been wrecked by the allegations, then by his club sacking him.
If the claims were false, the complainant(s) should be prosecuted..
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/66554874
Bring him back in and the accusations would run and run, and it would be disruptive. Protests and constant booing, tabloid mania. Loads of opportunities for him to be provoked into something unwise, smiling or celebrating a goal for example, let alone telling journalists to do one. As a business decision binning him makes sense.
- weeksy
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Re: In todays news...
That's the problem though isn't it... You do it in a particular way, so do a few others, then the rest of us are sitting here being made to feel like arseholes with no more knowledge other than "you should know how to do it better" and "i've done great, i've got loads of money"....Meanwhile 99% of us have pensions which are dropping/dropped currently without any other real knowledge of how to do anything about it. So it ends up in the usual situation where the wealthy ones tell us they're better than the rest and the rest sit thinking "wankers"
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- Count Steer
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Re: In todays news...
I thought your experience (and mine to a lesser extent) was the equivalent of a 'check your spare tyre' reminder to anyone with a non-final salary pension. ie don't find out that something is kaput exactly at the point you need it. Also, be aware that things that shouldn't happen, sometimes do, so try and plan accordingly or, at least, have a plan B.Horse wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 7:21 pm
Part of my reasons for posting is to have a whinge. But also to try encourage others, that's younger others, to take an interest (pun intended) on where their money is and what's likely to happen with it.
I was, perhaps, naive and shouldn't have trusted the experts so much. Others have options.
There's always something people can do. All some of us can do is share what we've learned - sometimes the hard way, sometimes by putting the time and effort in to learn.
One things for sure, putting your fingers in your ears, closing your eyes and singing 'lalala, not listening' isn't a very good plan B.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- weeksy
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But you say that... however not the 'how'. My pension is work based and 'invested' in different portfolios as i suspect many are... However, none are doing great currently, but again, i suspect we're not alone there. The problem is... what to do, how to do it and the potential risk associated. I can't take mine out and move it (well, maybe i could but i suspect there'd be penalties) and even if i could, where would i move it to... As a customer/consumer/client, you make the assumption that whichever provider you're with are doing their best to make you money, because of course the more you make, the more they make... so makes sense.Count Steer wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:21 amI thought your experience (and mine to a lesser extent) was the equivalent of a 'check your spare tyre' reminder to anyone with a non-final salary pension. ie don't find out that something is kaput exactly at the point you need it. Also, be aware that things that shouldn't happen, sometimes do, so try and plan accordingly or, at least, have a plan B.Horse wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 7:21 pm
Part of my reasons for posting is to have a whinge. But also to try encourage others, that's younger others, to take an interest (pun intended) on where their money is and what's likely to happen with it.
I was, perhaps, naive and shouldn't have trusted the experts so much. Others have options.
There's always something people can do. All some of us can do is share what we've learned - sometimes the hard way, sometimes by putting the time and effort in to learn.
One things for sure, putting your fingers in your ears, closing your eyes and singing 'lalala, not listening' isn't a very good plan B.
But the 'guidance' here is often exceptionally vague... why, because, well, no-one really knows the answers.
- Horse
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Re: In todays news...
I thought that, with three different 'savings' pots, I wouldn't have all my eggs in one basket.Count Steer wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:21 amI thought your experience (and mine to a lesser extent) was the equivalent of a 'check your spare tyre' reminder to anyone with a non-final salary pension. ie don't find out that something is kaput exactly at the point you need it.
Turns out that all the baskets were on the same farm truck and there was a temporary driver
Even bland can be a type of character
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Yes, I made that assumption too. Based on how ever many years of their history.weeksy wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:29 am
But you say that... however not the 'how'. My pension is work based and 'invested' in different portfolios as i suspect many are...
The problem is... what to do, how to do it and the potential risk associated. I can't take mine out and move it (well, maybe i could but i suspect there'd be penalties) and even if i could, where would i move it to... As a customer/consumer/client, you make the assumption that whichever provider you're with are doing their best to make you money, because of course the more you make, the more they make... so makes sense.
But the 'guidance' here is often exceptionally vague... why, because, well, no-one really knows the answers.
Caveat on what follows: I am, by no means, a financial whizz. Total amateur.
My 'wealth' (and I'm not in anything like the earnings, savings, spending leagues of many here) is spread around. Mortgage paid off (by overpaying), no debts, some savings, meagre pension pots, smaller final salary pension.
The lesson from last year is, as the financial companies always say, 'previous performance etc ... ' The last few years have shown how random the world can be when it puts its silly head on.
Potter and others have been fairly vociferous that 'poorer' financial times are ahead. In simple terms, prices of everything up, interest rates up. Worst case recession, depression.
Some planning for that is fairly obvious: reduce debt, increase reserves. If you invest or save, then diversify.
When I had the opportunity, I paid the maximum into the company scheme. I *might* have been better putting that into something else.
I had an AVC running independent of any company scheme - but it was on the farm truck.
As to 'what' or 'where' you invest, I have no idea! I'm certainly not the type of person to buy watches. I know one who, on a whim, bought £10k of bitcoin. He's now semi-retired with a £0.5M nest egg. There was a guy who ran a US safety forum who was saying 'buy them, now!' I didn't. Partly because (like watches), I've not really had chunks like that to risk, but also - this might surprise you - I'm fairly risk averse
Get views, thoughts, ideas, options
Talk to an IFA or two, tell them what and why
Take some control in a way that suits you
Most important: decide NOW what you and MrsW want in the future.
And a sad, upsetting, honest, fact: I saw the state-funded home my father went into for the final months of his life. Filly and I want to avoid that if the time comes.
There's an old line that "growing old is mandatory, but growing up isn't". In this instance, it is.
Even bland can be a type of character
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Re: In todays news...
Probably should be on the pension thread but the key thing isn't that your funds go up and down, 'they all do that sir'. It's when do you plan to retire and what you do between now and then to end up with what you want when you do. It could even be ' put more money in now, prices are low' is a good tactic.weeksy wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:29 amBut you say that... however not the 'how'. My pension is work based and 'invested' in different portfolios as i suspect many are... However, none are doing great currently, but again, i suspect we're not alone there. The problem is... what to do, how to do it and the potential risk associated. I can't take mine out and move it (well, maybe i could but i suspect there'd be penalties) and even if i could, where would i move it to... As a customer/consumer/client, you make the assumption that whichever provider you're with are doing their best to make you money, because of course the more you make, the more they make... so makes sense.Count Steer wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:21 amI thought your experience (and mine to a lesser extent) was the equivalent of a 'check your spare tyre' reminder to anyone with a non-final salary pension. ie don't find out that something is kaput exactly at the point you need it. Also, be aware that things that shouldn't happen, sometimes do, so try and plan accordingly or, at least, have a plan B.Horse wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 7:21 pm
Part of my reasons for posting is to have a whinge. But also to try encourage others, that's younger others, to take an interest (pun intended) on where their money is and what's likely to happen with it.
I was, perhaps, naive and shouldn't have trusted the experts so much. Others have options.
There's always something people can do. All some of us can do is share what we've learned - sometimes the hard way, sometimes by putting the time and effort in to learn.
One things for sure, putting your fingers in your ears, closing your eyes and singing 'lalala, not listening' isn't a very good plan B.
But the 'guidance' here is often exceptionally vague... why, because, well, no-one really knows the answers.
Main thing me and Hoss have been on about is try and make sure it doesn't shrink just as you need it. That might even involve retiring early when things look good or having a later, back-stop, retirement date.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: In todays news...
Presumably hospitals have processes set up for this, I doubt the doctors expect the police to do anything other than report them to the trust as trouble makers.
- Horse
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I've done bothCount Steer wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:58 am That might even involve retiring early when things look good or having a later, back-stop, retirement date.
Final salary was always planned for a set date, so I took it.
3x 'savings' were not, so they're on hold until they increase ... decision some time in the future. Informal advice I had was basically 'set a level that you will be content', then cash in.
And I'm probably going back to work part time.
So all three of both
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They do make the news, just not the news that you read (at least, not headline news). And yes, they do mean less. The other major conflicts listed on your link are internal civil wars that don't involve the world's largest holder of nuclear weapons or 2 of the largest grain exporters on the planet.weeksy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 6:04 pm There's other wars in less developed countries, but they don't make the news. Do they somehow mean less? Mmmmm.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of ... _conflicts
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No, I mean their 'news worthiness' and the impact the war has had around the globe, in comparison to the other major conflicts listed which are all internal wars. An example being Bangladesh's inability to afford LNG imports last year due to the high prices European nations were willing to pay, and the effect it had on its industrial and export markets due to load-shedding.Potter wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 12:28 pmWhen you say they mean less, do you mean to you?Hoonercat wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 11:41 amThey do make the news, just not the news that you read (at least, not headline news). And yes, they do mean less. The other major conflicts listed on your link are internal civil wars that don't involve the world's largest holder of nuclear weapons or 2 of the largest grain exporters on the planet.weeksy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 6:04 pm There's other wars in less developed countries, but they don't make the news. Do they somehow mean less? Mmmmm.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of ... _conflicts
My view is that all wars (or no wars) are equal in whether they matter, until they affect you personally.
I would expect that I would be equally as upset about being shot on a Saudi border, or in Ukraine, or lying on a beach waiting for an inevitable death in a Neville Shute novel.
I'm not affected greatly by my fuel or my grain being a bit more expensive, so I'm immune from using that as my yardstick of which lives matter.
Re: In todays news...
I seem to recall people claiming that Ukraine had Nazis which we're attacking Russian of origin citizens. This was branded as misinformation, but then in 2016 the BBC reported exactly that, which was circulated after the BBC tried to hide it for some reason.
- ZRX61
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Burisma Biden impressing the people of Maui by comparing 1000+ people being incinerated into dust to a minor fire his home had from a lightning strike that put his kitchen out of use for a week... Judging by some of the footage of his visit, it's a wonder he made it off the island without getting his breathing permit revoked.