Doing well today. I upset irie by being on his ignore list and I've upset you by quoting you.
'Remain' was totally irrelevant.
Keep it bitter
You changed what I said, there's quite the difference.
No, I'm saying that I don't need to be bitter, just because remoaning has infected someone who is resenting that their vote was in the minority over half a decade ago.
Get a grip.
There you are, your full statement. With bits in bold that were irrelevant, so removed.
If you feel they were relevant to the birthday of legislation, fill your boots.
Ant wrote: ↑Sat Oct 08, 2022 1:14 pm
So by upsetting people you think you're doing well? Well that's a small insight into the person I suppose.
That you told us this morning that you were busy, but have spent half the day banging on is a similar insight Or this is it
Life is too short for that, I've got better things to be doing.
Well, I still watch it - either in French or the highlights on C4. But I got pretty shouted down here when I last commented, so I figured I'd leave conversation about F1 to people that know much more than me!!!
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
It's been a bit of a 'meh' season this year with the new rules & cars, with luck a few more teams will catch up and make it a more interesting season in 2023
Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sun Oct 09, 2022 6:01 pm
Even bigger shame is that I've cancelled my Sky subscription.
I get my telly via an Amazon Firestick with a dodgy app installed. I seem to have every UK channel, every Sky channel, BT Sport, Eurosport, you name it I've got it.
MrLongbeard wrote: ↑Sun Oct 09, 2022 5:50 pm
It's been a bit of a 'meh' season this year with the new rules & cars, with luck a few more teams will catch up and make it a more interesting season in 2023
Tourists slightly up on 2019 numbers which is good.
Here's where they came from..
The tourist figures for August 2022 are as follows:
Spain – 53,159
Germany – 17,117
Belgium – 5,945
France – 18,038
Netherlands – 29,097
Ireland – 9,518
Italy – 8,343
Nordic Countries – 3,816
United Kingdom – 124,117
Other – 9,051
TOTAL – 278,200
Yorick wrote: ↑Mon Oct 10, 2022 2:41 pm
Tourists slightly up on 2019 numbers which is good.
Here's where they came from..
The tourist figures for August 2022 are as follows:
Spain – 53,159
Germany – 17,117
Belgium – 5,945
France – 18,038
Netherlands – 29,097
Ireland – 9,518
Italy – 8,343
Nordic Countries – 3,816
United Kingdom – 124,117
Other – 9,051
TOTAL – 278,200
Didn’t quite knock the bombing of Kiev off the front page.
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, IMF Economic Counsellor wrote:"The 2023 slowdown will be broad based with countries accounting for a third of the global economy expected to contract this year or next. The three largest economies, the United States, China, and the EU area will continue to stall. In short, the worst is yet to come, and for many people 2023 will feel like a recession.
So will there or will there not be recessions in 2023, and in which countries?
What an utter waste of space the IMF is with its pretense to prescience.
"Truth does not change because it is, or is not, believed by a majority of the people." - Giordano Bruno
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, IMF Economic Counsellor wrote:"The 2023 slowdown will be broad based with countries accounting for a third of the global economy expected to contract this year or next. The three largest economies, the United States, China, and the EU area will continue to stall. In short, the worst is yet to come, and for many people 2023 will feel like a recession.
So will there or will there not be recessions in 2023, and in which countries?
What an utter waste of space the IMF is with its pretense to prescience.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has doubled down on criticism of the chancellor's mini-budget, days after warning it will fuel rising prices.
The body, which works to stabilise economic growth, admitted tax cuts announced by Kwasi Kwarteng would boost growth in the short-term.
But it said the cuts would "complicate the fight" against soaring prices.
It expects high prices to last longer in the UK with only Slovakia out of the eurozone set to see higher inflation.
Inflation, which measures how the cost of living changes over time, is expected to peak at about 11.3% before the end of the year in the UK, according to the IMF's latest assessment of the global economy.
In each of the next two years, it expects price rises will average at about 9% - far above the Bank of England's target of 2%.
Although the UK economy is set to grow the fastest of the major economies included in the G7 group this year, it is projected to grind to a near-halt next year, with it expanding by just 0.3%.
So the government needs to find about £60bn right?
I couldn't help but notice when I saw this chart that there's one easy thing they could drop which would save the money and also make loads of people happy. Win win