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Clarkkent

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Posts posted by Clarkkent

  1. [quote user="JK"]

    If the poppy were a universal symbol of remembrance then I don't see that a player should not wear one if he wants to.  But it is a peculiarly British emblem with the proceeds of  poppy sales going to British Service charities.  It is a national rather than international symbol.  Stop Press:

    FIFA have agreed that the poppy can be worn in the black armband.

    [/quote]

    It would be more accurate to say that the poppy is a Commonwealth symbol rather than a British symbol. I noticed that in Los Angeles, during the week, David Beckham was wearing a poppy when being interviewed.

    Some years ago, I saw a poppy which had been placed in a sand tray in front of the cenotaph in the Peace Park in Hiroshima.

  2. Val. Thank you for your message. It is now some years since I lost my wonderful wife but the pain is still with me.

    There is very little anyone can say that will help you. Cherish the good memories, they will help, perhaps not now - but in time.

    I think that you have been very brave in telling us of your loss. And I think that the opportunity of continued life for other people is a most wonderful gift.

    You have my very best wishes.

  3. I am often baffled by the utter waste of recycling ideas for old tyres.

    I'm not sure that it will help Sid, but on Grand Designs a couple of years ago was a family which bought land in (I think) Brittany and built an eco house with walls made from old tyres. There must be lots of sensible uses for old tyres.

  4. Frank, if you think that 60 is a great age then you must have been born middle-aged! The list you provide is for disabled octogenerians.

    I am shown photographs of events at which I was present but I am never on them. I think that I am being stalked by a grey, bald stout-ish person that I don't know, because he keeps pushing his way into the photos. I know what I look like - I see myself often enough in mirrors - and I know that I can pass for 35.

    And as for sex, I think young women these days are so burdened with work and family and child rearing that they are too weary to accept my entreaties for nights of passion that would exceed their wildest dreams. Poor things, they don't know what they're missing!

    Do you know Roger McGough's poem, Let me die a young man's death?

    Or when I'm 104
    and banned from the Cavern
    may my mistress
    catching me in bed with her daughter
    and fearing for her son
    cut me up into little pieces
    and throw away every piece but one

  5. Rather more, I imagine.  The birth-rate in countries traditionally associated with [cue sinister music]  'mediæval religious thinking'  is rather low…

    The highest birth rates are in sub-Saharan countries like Mali and Niger, both of which are almost 100% Islamic.

    What do you know about the treatment of women in such places? Case proved!  [6]
     

  6. Someone better versed in chemistry may correct me, but if salt can be tasted in cooked food, then that means that the salt has been held in solution during the cooking process and has not combined with any other chemical to form a different chemical substance. If that is so, then it matters not whether the salt is added during preparation or serving - any perceived taste benefit from the early adding of salt is just that: a perception. Professional cooks add salt because that is what they have been taught to do and they have not given the practice any thought.

    My kitchen is a salt-free zone, my table is not. I gave up adding salt years ago, I do not add salt to my food but anyone eating with me is free to do so. I think that they are masking the true flavour of their food in favour of a learned taste experience. There is sufficient naturally-occurring salt in our everyday food to provide that which is physiologically necessary.

    I eat out socially quite often and occasionally find the food presented to me to be so salty as to be unpleasant.

  7. [quote user="Joe"]Why is the former PM spoken about in such terms.To say she is "leeching" is not a nice turn of phrase. So were here policies that bad.Where I lived in the Kent near the coalfield. I saw things that opened my eyes. Is it obvious that Margaret Thatcher is to blame for the state of the UK ?. Did MRS THATCHER destroy British industry????[/quote]

    No, she didn't. But she changed its nature.

    Manufacturing is still a significant section of the UK economy. What has gone is the old, labour intensive, metal bashing, hand-crafting industries - but they are going from all western rich countries. They have gone to places like China and SE Asia where labour is cheap. The sort of industry that remains is either very high tech or specialised or both. Without British industrial input, Airbus would just be a .. bus. The wings - very complex structures - are made in the UK, as are Rolls-Royce powerplants. In spite of perceptions to the contrary, motor car manufacture is healthy, with Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Tata and BMW all operating successfully. Even Longbridge is producing cars again! There are significant food manufacturing companies, petrochemical companies and pharmaceutical companies.

    Mrs Thatcher reformed industrial relations - to the benefit of everyone (union members included). What she did get wrong, however, was her espousal of Reagonomics and her belief in the powers of competition.

    She had a choice when North Sea Oil revenues began to build up. The money could have been used to develop, re-inforce and expand the national infrastructure. She chose instead to give the money away as tax breaks to the wealthy in the expectation that increased wealth would "trickle down" and benefit the population as a whole. This did not happen - increased personal wealth was squirrelled away in places like the Cayman Islands!

    And competition? This produced short term benefits. Her abolition of the tied estate in the brewing industry did result in more brands of beer being available in individual pubs, but it has also resulted in a massive shrinking in the total number of pubs. Hardly increasing competition. (Her tied estate logic should have led to BHS goods being available in Marks & Spencer!) The ease and freedom by which foreign predators can buy into British industry has also meant that strategic decisions are no longer taken in this country. Is Cadburys any stronger or more secure for having been devoured by Kraft?

     

    Edit

    The Beer Orders was not the only factor in the decline of the pub - but it was significant!

  8. My Renault Modus 1.5D needed a new starter motor so I took it to my usual garage.

    Later that day, the phone rang: "According to the service schedule, you will need a new timing belt in about 500 miles time. Since we have to dismantle the front of your car to get at the starter motor we think that you ought to consider having the belt put on at the same time. We will only charge you the labour cost for the belt plus an extra half hour for the starter motor."

    I knew that it would be expensive, so I asked them to do an MOT as well.

    I reckoned on about £600, which is pretty much what it came to - without VAT. The bill came to the wrong side of £830. [+o(]

  9. [quote user="Hoddy"]When I watch Stephanie Flanders on TV, even though she is always serious, I think of her father. Hoddy[/quote]

    She looks nothing like him. He had a big beard ...

     

    All Gall

    This old man he played six

    "France and England they don't mix

    Eytie, Benelux, Germany and me -

    That's my market recipe!"

    They don't write 'em like that any more!

     

     

  10. I know that it is only a few hours now before your ordeal. But if you so choose it need not be an ordeal.

    You say you are talking to a committee. Does this mean that it is a group of people who are going to arrive at a decision, and you want to them to make a decision in your favour?

    If you feel that you must have a script, then make sure your script is legible: use double spacing, try to avoid complex expressions, and keep your arguments as simple as you can.

    If it is feasible - summarise your main points. State your objective - the decision you want them to make - and then provide a set of bullet points which lead to and support your objective. Print this out and give copies to your audience. This way you will ensure that they have all the information you consider important for their decision. Tell them you are nervous - you may gain their support.

    Remember - they are only people, not dragons. If they are hostile just look at them and imagine them sitting on the toilet severely constipated!

    Idun, you are articulate, you are passionate, you are honest ... you can do it.

  11. [quote user="Gardian"]

    Frankly, I don't think that its that big a deal.

    [/quote]

    I agree entirely. All food in the UK (with the exceptions of milk and ale) is sold in metric quantities. And frankly, it doesn't matter. I would guess that most people look at the size of the pack and determine their choice that way. Who cares how the weight is expressed if that's the size you want to buy.

    I buy the fuel for my car in litres and express its consumption in miles per gallon (which is more intuitively acceptable than litres per 100 km, anyway.)

    Those of us who went to school and learned Imperial measures are better at mental arithmetic than those who only know metric ... aren't we?  [Www]

  12. There seems to be the perceived wisdom that if there is a UK-wide referendum on Scottish independence, the majority of  Scots will reject the proposal but the English will be overwhelmingly in favour!

    Interesting interview on Radio 4 with a man from MORI who pointed out that a majority of Conservative supporters is still only a small proportion of the the UK electorate. Conservative right-wingers, such as John Redwood, make much of "this is the majority view in the country" but on other occasions will point out that people elected to Westminster are representatives not delegates. I don't think that there is any serious attempt being made to withdraw Britain from the EU at the moment - this is a bit of sabre rattling by the Conservative right wing to show the leadership that they are not happy with coalition.

    I have long held the view that when a new government is elected, the new prime minister is given a heart-to-heart by the senior Cabinet Office civil servants ... "well, Prime Minister, we know what you said in your manifesto, but let's now face a few home truths. First of all, membership of the EU ..."

     

  13. I understand that, having miscalculated his earlier date, Harold Camping gave a revised statement about the end of the world and the commencement of the Rapture. In fact the world actually ended two days ago on Friday. So none of us are still here. Pity that.

    However, it must be said that it was Mr Camping's fourth attempt, and since the world will eventually end at some time in the future, it could be said that Mr Camping's predictions are becoming more accurate. He might get it right one day (in about 5,000,000,000 years time).

     

    Pedantic point - evolution is a continuous process. It has no end point.

     

  14. Thank you for the info on double insulation, Nomoss. I've just looked at a couple of my large appliances and it looks as though you're right, they don't display the double insulation symbol.

    I'm still not certain about polarity. If I buy a French extension lead with only two conductors, how do I know which way round I should insert the male end into the wall socket and the female end into the appliance? Since the lead has moulded terminals I cannot see the colour of the shielding. How can I be sure that I insert both terminals in the same way?

    As for current delivery, I have a French adaptor with two outlet three-pin sockets which are mounted symmetrically about the midpoint of the body of the adaptor. The adaptor fits vertically into a wall socket. When back is taken off the adaptor, a solid metal bar connects the pins on each side of the adaptor so that the polarity of one socket is the mirror image of the other. This would appear to confirm what others have said.

  15. [quote user="Joe"]Glad I live here.The UK has gone to h... in a hand cart.[/quote]

    Why do you say that ...  "gone to hell in a handcart"?

    What do you know about the incidence and nature of industrial action, political protest and civil unrest in France that makes that statement justifiable?

    I'm not suggesting that either country is necessarily more attractive than the other but I would be interested to know the basis for your judgement.

  16. [quote user="nomoss"][quote user="Sunday Driver"]

    It doesn't matter.  If it did, then they wouldn't get away with it.......[;-)]

     

    [/quote]

    It does matter in most countries. The switch on the appliance connected to the socket should be on the live side. If the socket connections are arbitrary, as here, that is not possible.

    [/quote]

    If that's the case, how does the appliance know which is the live side of a two pin plug?

    Domestic appliances (to the best of my knowledge) are sold with switches that disconnect both sides. They are also double-insulated, so no earth is required.

  17. [quote user="Chancer"]

    [quote user="Russethouse"]I know lots of policies (all?) say you are not supposed to drive for 6 weeks after surgery......[/quote]

    Are you quite sure about that RH?

    I know that the "not supposed" is your words rather than an insurers but do they really list an exclusion of driving after an operation and 6 weeks!!!

    Surely it depends on the operation and the age and fitness of the patient? 

    [/quote]

    I would imagine that if an insurer learned that you had received advice to that effect they would consider it justification to invalidate your insurance.

  18. [quote user="crossy67"]You obviously know all Clark.

    ...


    What I was saying was surely if a diabetic is dependent on his license for his mobility or income then covering up a potentially harmful hypo would look attractive

    ....

    If you don't have anything useful to input then why comment at all?
    [/quote]

    Well, what side of the bed did you get out of today?

    You said: One big problem I can see is diabetics will just not seek medical help in the hope they can get over it them selves so there will be no record of it. That is a generalisation. You are extending to all diabetics behaviour that may be restricted to just a few. I'm pleased to hear that your brother-in-law manages his condition well, as do the diabetics that I know. I'm sure it would be very difficult for him if he lost his job, but are you saying that he would effectively falsify his medical history in order to keep it?

    And what I was saying was that in order to stay alive anyway people with diabetes have to be sensible. Why should they not be sensible in relation to their driving?

    It may be that the regulation is too draconian and that the risk has been over assessed, but there is a risk nevertheless.

     

     

  19. One big problem I can see is diabetics will just not seek medical help in the hope they can get over it them selves so there will be no record of it.  Dangerous

    This is all about people with Type 1 (insulin dependent) diabetes.

    Surely, such people already live on a knife edge. They know that they have to manage their glucose levels in order to survive, they receive continuing medical attention. Are you suggesting that the thrill of being behind the wheel of a car is so attractive to them that they would risk (at worst) a charge of manslaughter?

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