View Full Version : By God, this is the last straw!
Incongruous
12-16-2008, 09:13
I don't care if it is not important!
I'm sick of these pigs selling away my damned country!
Kill 'em, bloody send them to Pakistan! I don't bloody care! Gordon Brown should be shot in the street! Mandlseon hanged! If the Tories are no better, bloody shoot them!
I am sick and bloody tired of politicians treating my homeland like a hole, I demand anyone residning in the UK to do their utmost to protests against this outrage and so many others before, god first they wanted to destroy the home of the first computer and now this, plus many others.
You know, I actually now believe it when old geezers say the country is going to the damned dogs, no one gives a bloody toss. The commons must be got rid of, along with the rest of the bloody Westminster farce:furious3:
Scoundrels!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/3778424/Royal-Mail-stake-to-be-sold-to-private-foreign-firm-in-3bn-deal.html
CountArach
12-16-2008, 10:03
For-profit mail? Good luck with that.
Tribesman
12-16-2008, 10:08
From the article....Lord Mandelson, the Business Secretary...that says it all .
Incongruous
12-16-2008, 10:52
From the article....Lord Mandelson, the Business Secretary...that says it all .
Yeah, pretty bloody much!
Smoke and mirrors! Blow and bollocks! That man should be banished from the realm!
I wonder which German mailman Mandy is in bed with?
I hope Labour are destroyed after the next election.
Sarmatian
12-16-2008, 11:51
Because they sold 1/3 of the Royal Post??? Why's that such a big deal?
CountArach
12-16-2008, 11:53
Because they sold 1/3 of the Royal Post??? Why's that such a big deal?
The Royal Post is a public institution paid for by public money. Selling off a third of it means that those who buy the one third stake will be gaining money from a public institution... for no good reason... Once something becomes privatised it will only serve the interest of its shareholders, not the wider society - which is clearly undesirable when it comes to something this crucial.
Oh and how could I forget that the entire institution has been built through taxpayer dollars meaning that the infrastructure is already in place. Hence while these people profit off the Royal post, the taxpayers have put in the hard yards already.
Adrian II
12-16-2008, 13:05
Once something becomes privatised it will only serve the interest of its shareholders, not the wider society - which is clearly undesirable when it comes to something this crucial.Sounds like another hair-brained privatisation scheme with no guarantees of genuine competition and no benefits to the public.
We've seen this in The Neds where TNT took over. My mail is now delivered by a 16-year-old incompetent on a bike, usually to a guy three blocks removed who happens to have the same name as me. And if I want to file a complaint, I am connected to a 'call center' where other 16-year-old incompetents work the phones. Oh, and it's become more expensive than ever to send a package and no one can explain why that is. Apparently the TNT managers have decided that package mail is an inelastic demand and they can charge whatever the hell they like. It sure is. Granny is going to send that home-knitted sweater to her grandchild anyway.
For 15 euros... :shame:
Never had a problem with TNT, reliable & cheap. 15 euro for a sweater? Where you sending it the moon?
Oh and how could I forget that the entire institution has been built through taxpayer dollars meaning that the infrastructure is already in place. Hence while these people profit off the Royal post, the taxpayers have put in the hard yards already.
Agreed.
HoreTore
12-16-2008, 13:25
Sounds like what happened when we privatized our electrical industry here... In the past, we had cheap electricity, and there was never any talk of shortages. Now, however, our electrical bills have tripled or more, and there are shortages every bloody winter.
It *might* have something to do with the new private owners trying to squeeze every penny out of their customers... And as an added bonus, our heating systems are mostly based on electricity, because we used to have a lot of clean and cheap hydropower. Now we're switching to burning gas, oil and wood, with some half-arsed attempts to subsidize "green" electricity... What, like the thing we used before? :idea2:
Our postage sector is well underway for privatization too. It's already suffering because of rationalization and tax cuts with following budget cuts, I can't wait for the days when some schmuck decides to sell it off to owners who want profit from it. I'll probably have to drive to the capital and pick it up myself.
LittleGrizzly
12-16-2008, 14:36
ohh privatisation.... great, expect service to drop... prices to go up.... and then in a few years the goverment will slowly start giving this money back to the company in subsidies.... its a lose lose as far as im concerned
Postal service is something i think should remain a public service rather than a for profit one..... looks like that dutch company TNT is going to get it... 15 euro's did you say ? i suppose at least that will discourage the sending of crappy clothes from well meaning older relatives, just send the money it'll be cheaper for you :D
ohh privatisation.... great, expect service to drop... prices to go up.... and then in a few years the goverment will slowly start giving this money back to the company in subsidies....
When it's done the wrong way, that is making being semi-public where companies have to work with a fixed price, how much do you pay for calling someone on your cellphone nowadays?
Gregoshi
12-16-2008, 15:42
Sounds like the UK will need some mail enhancement medications...at least for the private parts. :eyebrows:
Vladimir
12-16-2008, 16:35
I don't care if it is not important!
I'm sick of these pigs selling away my damned country!
Kill 'em, bloody send them to Pakistan! I don't bloody care! Gordon Brown should be shot in the street! Mandlseon hanged! If the Tories are no better, bloody shoot them!
I am sick and bloody tired of politicians treating my homeland like a hole, I demand anyone residning in the UK to do their utmost to protests against this outrage and so many others before, god first they wanted to destroy the home of the first computer and now this, plus many others.
You know, I actually now believe it when old geezers say the country is going to the damned dogs, no one gives a bloody toss. The commons must be got rid of, along with the rest of the bloody Westminster farce:furious3:
Scoundrels!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/3778424/Royal-Mail-stake-to-be-sold-to-private-foreign-firm-in-3bn-deal.html
:laugh4: at the outrage!
In fact I am so :daisy: off about this I might go to my local MP's office and burn my useless :daisy: Labour card in her useless :daisy: face.
I am fuming, bad times ahead.
Vladimir
12-16-2008, 16:58
:daisy: disgrace.
Another brilliant analysis of privatization. :yes:
rory_20_uk
12-16-2008, 17:22
It's not a proper sale - the government takes all responsibility for the pension deficit - running at £7 BILLION and then sells off part of the rest for something to look good on the balance sheet.
I'm sure it's not the most efficient service, and IMO if it is to be privitised it should be done as BT was with strict rules to ensure no loss of service (although in BT's case their phone boxes are fnally being reduced) - the company makes savings from efficiency and not just from loosing the debt burden / ruining services.
~:smoking:
We've seen this in The Neds where TNT took over. My mail is now delivered by a 16-year-old incompetent on a bike, usually to a guy three blocks removed who happens to have the same name as me. And if I want to file a complaint, I am connected to a 'call center' where other 16-year-old incompetents work the phones. Oh, and it's become more expensive than ever to send a package and no one can explain why that is. Apparently the TNT managers have decided that package mail is an inelastic demand and they can charge whatever the hell they like. It sure is. Granny is going to send that home-knitted sweater to her grandchild anyway.
For 15 euros... :shame:
Sounds exactly like what happened to De Post when it got privatised for 49 %.
Not to mention the privatisation of Electrabel. Free market? Yeah right. A de facto monopoly position and prices of electricy and gas are absurdly high.
Idem dito with Belgacom, formerly RTT, Belgian phone company.
Once they privatise public transport, the end will be nigh.
Bloody politicians, bah, they can take their free market and shove it where the sun never shines.
Strike For The South
12-16-2008, 19:16
Wait......You get free school but you have to pay for mail? Ya'll are doing this backwards.
Sarmatian
12-16-2008, 19:49
The main point is that only 1/3 was sold, so it's still in control of whoever was in control before. Fresh capital just might improve the services. No reason to get angry about it...
I have the feeling that it's mostly because it's Royal Post. If it were Mike's Courier or Joe's Parcels and Letters Service, no one would care...
rory_20_uk
12-16-2008, 20:56
Capital isn't the issue.
Issues are increasing the automation of post and fewer, larger sorting offices. Selling 1/3 and then changing nothing is merely a way of making the balance sheet of the country look better today.
~:smoking:
Wait......You get free school but you have to pay for mail? Ya'll are doing this backwards.
There is no free lunch, Strike.
seireikhaan
12-16-2008, 21:34
There is no free lunch, Strike.
Sure there is. You just have to make sure nobody notices you taking it. :smartass2:
Incongruous
12-16-2008, 22:06
The main point is that only 1/3 was sold, so it's still in control of whoever was in control before. Fresh capital just might improve the services. No reason to get angry about it...
I have the feeling that it's mostly because it's Royal Post. If it were Mike's Courier or Joe's Parcels and Letters Service, no one would care...
Royal, bloody, Mail, the oldest postal service in the world is being flogged off in the most incompitent fashion. Whats more, they swore they would not do it, not even The Iron Lady dared to, this Mandleson :daisy: thinks he is god.
Fresh capital? Improvement! What the hell? Do even know what happens when a public service is privatised? Clearly you do not. There is no competition really is there? These :daisy: called shareholders (who make large sums of money by doing piss all) will do everything in their power to ruin a national institution.
I have every reason to be angry at a known criminal! And one in government at that.
HoreTore
12-16-2008, 22:21
The main point is that only 1/3 was sold, so it's still in control of whoever was in control before. Fresh capital just might improve the services. No reason to get angry about it...
Fresh capital? That's the reason a private company sells off some stock... Government owned companies have access to the biggest source of income in the nation, the treasury. There's no need to sell stuff off to get money, unless the country in question is doing seriously bad and desperately needs some quick cash. I honestly can't say Britain is in that situation... This is idealism, nothing else. Market libby idealism.
this Mandleson :daisy: thinks he is god.
The man literally has no shame, so this latest turn of events is depressing but not surprising.
What I am still scratching my head about is how a man who is almost universally unpopular and with a known record of incompetence and corruption still managed to worm his way back into power despite having been twice previously forced to resign in disgrace.
Regarding the privatisation itself; although I can see the argument that the free market can be more efficient and deliver a better service than a state-owned entity, the fact is that every major privatisation of a public service in my lifetime has resulted in a sharp drop in service and all manner of scandals and dirty dealings. I honestly don't know whether this is simply due to the government consistently favouring their cronies every time there is such a selloff, or if there are just some areas which are simply to conducive to price fixing and profiteering for a free market to function properly.
Sarmatian
12-16-2008, 23:59
Royal, bloody, Mail, the oldest postal service in the world is being flogged off in the most incompitent fashion. Whats more, they swore they would not do it, not even The Iron Lady dared to, this Mandleson :daisy: thinks he is god.
Fresh capital? Improvement! What the hell? Do even know what happens when a public service is privatised? Clearly you do not. There is no competition really is there? These :daisy: called shareholders (who make large sums of money by doing piss all) will do everything in their power to ruin a national institution.
I have every reason to be angry at a known criminal! And one in government at that.
Bah. As a customer I'm interested only how good is the service and how much money it costs. Whether it's owned by bunch of corrupt and morally bankrupt politicians or a bunch of corrupt and morally bankrupt businessmen - not really important. I agree that in certain areas government should always have a final say and I'd understand your point of view if they'd tried to sell of 2/3, but since they're in control of more than 51%, I see no reason for such an outburst.
If I'm not mistaken, postal services are private in the US. I've never had any problem with postal services there. Quick, cheap and efficient...
Fresh capital? That's the reason a private company sells off some stock... Government owned companies have access to the biggest source of income in the nation, the treasury. There's no need to sell stuff off to get money, unless the country in question is doing seriously bad and desperately needs some quick cash. I honestly can't say Britain is in that situation... This is idealism, nothing else. Market libby idealism.
You obviously have a wrong idea how it works. Treasury is not some room where huge piles of money are stored. It's not like prime minister can tell the janitor: "Hey, bring me a couple of billions from the treasury, we need to invest in postal system!". No, every penny has it's purpose. It's a time of relative big economic crisis, British budget certainly felt it. Hell, only that 2.5% (or whatever) VAT cut means billions and billions less revenue for the state. Post probably needed some investment, and they decided that instead of taking away more money from an already tight and strained budget, they get that capital from abroad. It's only 1/3, so the state is still fully in control. And I'd be surprised if Royal Post brought some huge revenues to the state.
I admit I'm not familiar with this particular deal, but I sincerely doubt that someone from the government decided to sell of 33% of the Royal Post just for the fun of it...
Discussing whether that money was needed, how much (if any) revenues the state would lose long term because of it, will the service be improved etc... is ok. But instead of it, it's all about: "Hey, it's Royal Post. You know, I mean Royal Post. Like, Royal Post."
HoreTore
12-17-2008, 00:40
I've never had any problem with postal services there. Quick, cheap and efficient...
Indeed it is:
"The United States Postal Service (USPS) is an independent agency of the United States government (see 39 U.S.C. § 201) responsible for providing postal service in the United States."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Postal_Service
You obviously have a wrong idea how it works. Treasury is not some room where huge piles of money are stored. It's not like prime minister can tell the janitor: "Hey, bring me a couple of billions from the treasury, we need to invest in postal system!". No, every penny has it's purpose. It's a time of relative big economic crisis, British budget certainly felt it. Hell, only that 2.5% (or whatever) VAT cut means billions and billions less revenue for the state. Post probably needed some investment, and they decided that instead of taking away more money from an already tight and strained budget, they get that capital from abroad. It's only 1/3, so the state is still fully in control. And I'd be surprised if Royal Post brought some huge revenues to the state.
BAH! We're talking about the bloody UK here, not some tiny pacific island. They've got the cash. As I said, for a government to start selling off stuff, they'd have to be in deep :daisy: . The UK isn't even close. The postal service needs a billion or two for infrastructure, you say? Well then, the answer is easy; borrow some money(like states do all the freakin' time), take some from some other place, dig into the treasury reserve, etc etc. The UK isn't in the position where it has to sell stuff to caugh up some cash.
But, no, nobody is doing this "for fun". They're doing it for ideological reasons. Idealists. It has nothing to do with the real world, just like every other idiot privatization out there.
Note that I'm not criticizing privatization in general, I'm criticizing unnecessary privatization. For some people, privatization isn't a means to an end, it's the ultimate goal itself. Bad things happen when those people enter the real world, as there are a bunch of businesses who are much better of in state hands.
Seamus Fermanagh
12-17-2008, 00:51
Indeed it is:
"The United States Postal Service (USPS) is an independent agency of the United States government...
So are Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae -- do not assume that "independent agency of the United States government" is anything resembling a panacea.
Even when semi-privatized, the USPS retained a monopoly on 1 oz. "first class" mail. FEDEX and others were competing for everything else. The USPS service is the same, or slower but costs slightly less than FEDEX or DHL....but for some reason they keep raising the price of stamps on their monopolized service FASTER than any other analogous service.
Consider this: In 1984, the year Ma Bell was broken up, the average long-distance phone call cost 28 cents per minute. Meanwhile, a first-class stamp cost 20 cents. Today, the average long-distance telephone rate has plummeted to 11 cents, while stamps have soared to 37 cents. If telephone prices had risen with inflation like stamps, a long-distance call today would cost a whopping 51 cents per minute.
Today, that LD call is under $05/minute, but the stamp is $0.42 and going to $0.43 in May.
You can make arguments that government can provide services no other provider could or that government can apportion a resource or service more equitably (I'd argue that, but it is at least a valid argument), but do NOT assume that cost and efficiency are hallmarks of goverment control. The best to hope for with government is that it's "break-even" compared to the private sector.
Tribesman
12-17-2008, 00:59
Bah. As a customer I'm interested only how good is the service and how much money it costs.
And as in this case if you were in Britain you wouldn't just be a customer , you through taxes would be the financier .
How happy would you be to have the profitable interests taken from you for a pittance while you retained the non-profitable parts and all accumulated and future debts ?
Seamus Fermanagh
12-17-2008, 01:06
And as in this case if you were in Britain you wouldn't just be a customer , you through taxes would be the financier .
How happy would you be to have the profitable interests taken from you for a pittance while you retained the non-profitable parts and all accumulated and future debts ?
Why are you unhappy with Paulsen's decisions? Oh wait, this particular SNAFU is on YOUR side of the pond. I'll try not to conflate the UK's idiocies with our own.
Sarmatian
12-17-2008, 02:13
Indeed it is:
"The United States Postal Service (USPS) is an independent agency of the United States government (see 39 U.S.C. § 201) responsible for providing postal service in the United States."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Postal_Service
Don't know about USPS, I got my stuff through FedEx and UPS.
BAH! We're talking about the bloody UK here, not some tiny pacific island. They've got the cash. As I said, for a government to start selling off stuff, they'd have to be in deep :daisy: . The UK isn't even close. The postal service needs a billion or two for infrastructure, you say? Well then, the answer is easy; borrow some money(like states do all the freakin' time), take some from some other place, dig into the treasury reserve, etc etc. The UK isn't in the position where it has to sell stuff to caugh up some cash.
But, no, nobody is doing this "for fun". They're doing it for ideological reasons. Idealists. It has nothing to do with the real world, just like every other idiot privatization out there.
Note that I'm not criticizing privatization in general, I'm criticizing unnecessary privatization. For some people, privatization isn't a means to an end, it's the ultimate goal itself. Bad things happen when those people enter the real world, as there are a bunch of businesses who are much better of in state hands.
We may be talking about bloody US here, it wouldn't change anything. I didn't say how much money it needs, I don't know that. Maybe it needs half a billion, maybe it needs 5, it doesn't matter. Maybe they don't want to pay interest on something that isn't a sure investment. Royal Post, according to the article is getting less and less revenue. They have a monopoly on delivering residential mail and the amount of mail is dropping 7% each year. Just to make it simpler, that means 50% less in 2015. Their revenues fell for one third last year, again according to the article. You don't have to be Soros to recognize the trend here. TNT is already delivering business mail for BT. Why did BT decide for TNT instead of Royal Mail? Obviously they offer either better or cheaper services. Or both...
And as in this case if you were in Britain you wouldn't just be a customer , you through taxes would be the financier .
Valid point, worth discussing, unlike most others that were outcries because someone was selling "national pride".
I should be only a customer. I pay to have my mail delivered. I don't want to have to pay some more through taxes every year because the company is becoming unprofitable.
How happy would you be to have the profitable interests taken from you for a pittance while you retained the non-profitable parts and all accumulated and future debts ?
Maybe I got it wrong, but the article doesn't say future debts. All it says is the government is supposed to take on current pension commitments, not future ones. Also, I'd say it's much more important to have control over pension funds than mail. Even it is unprofitable, it's still better to have unprofitable pension funds than both pension funds and post. If something goes wrong with those pension funds, financial security of many people would be in danger...
Tribesman
12-17-2008, 03:30
Why are you unhappy with Paulsen's decisions? Oh wait, this particular SNAFU is on YOUR side of the pond. I'll try not to conflate the UK's idiocies with our own.
Well its like this Seamus , our government tends to have an interest in what happens in Britain ,they seem to watch closely every ballsup the conservatives and new labour do in terms of privatisation .
Then being the clever bastards that they are they see if they can make an even bigger ballsup of it than the Brits managed , and unfortunately they are pretty consistant in achieving that .
Seamus Fermanagh
12-17-2008, 04:12
Well its like this Seamus , our government tends to have an interest in what happens in Britain ,they seem to watch closely every ballsup the conservatives and new labour do in terms of privatisation .
Then being the clever bastards that they are they see if they can make an even bigger ballsup of it than the Brits managed , and unfortunately they are pretty consistant in achieving that .
Our politicos seem to employ that charming approach to "learning from the other person's mistakes" as well.
Figures THAT is what we'd have in common. :laugh4:
Banquo's Ghost
12-17-2008, 08:42
Gentlemen, I realise this is an emotive subject but the level of bad language is breaching the unacceptable. I am running out of daisies, and if I need to spend the time to harvest some more, I will be forced in the interim, to use warnings instead.
(Particularly reprehensible is the continued and widespread use of the word "Mandelson" which as you should know, outranks the f-bomb in most parts of Europe for vulgarity).
Thank you kindly.
:bow:
We may be talking about bloody US here, it wouldn't change anything. I didn't say how much money it needs, I don't know that. Maybe it needs half a billion, maybe it needs 5, it doesn't matter. Maybe they don't want to pay interest on something that isn't a sure investment. Royal Post, according to the article is getting less and less revenue. They have a monopoly on delivering residential mail and the amount of mail is dropping 7% each year. Just to make it simpler, that means 50% less in 2015. Their revenues fell for one third last year, again according to the article. You don't have to be Soros to recognize the trend here. TNT is already delivering business mail for BT. Why did BT decide for TNT instead of Royal Mail? Obviously they offer either better or cheaper services. Or both...
Yes, but that is part of the problem. IIRC back when the Royal Mail had what to all intents and purposes was a monopoly it made money quite happily. It is, after all, business post which makes the money not residential. Then when the system was demonopolised (one might almost say, in effect, part-privatized) it was decided that while business post should be open to private firms like TNT the residential mail should continue to to be a monolpoy of the Royal Mail with its old fashioned public service ideal of 100% coverage with set and affordable prices. So the private firms, not saddled with the unprofitable residential mail, were able to easily undercut the Royal Mail in the areas that counted - business contracts. Hence the much of the problem with the Royal Mail today, especially as new communication methods like email and mobiles continue to reduce the level of residential mail.
This is one of the worries about privatization - that the universal service will cease to be as private firms with their eyes on their shareprice shed unprofitable delievery areas. We've already seen similar things with the bus and, especially, rail companies. They cancel unprofitable services, often upping the fares or reducing the service and using the subsequent drop in users as an excuse. All the while they get subsidized by the government anyway (and it is hard to shake the feeling that the government will have to catch them if they fall) and dodge as much tax as possible while the toothless, incompetant and/or corrupt regulators look the other way.
Tribesman
12-17-2008, 15:22
Particularly reprehensible is the continued and widespread use of the word "Mandelson" which as you should know, outranks the f-bomb in most parts of Europe for vulgarity
Perhaps "His Ladyship" would be less vulgar than "Mandelson" .
But more on topic .
Would this very contentious proposal to asset strip the tax payer in favour of giving profit to a corporation be slightly less of an issue if it didn't come from a person who (to put it mildly) has a very long history of extremely dubious business/political dealings with very dodgy compaies/individuals , not to mention some rather "interesting" personal financial transactions and errrrrr....."gifts" ?
KukriKhan
12-17-2008, 15:55
It's not a proper sale - the government takes all responsibility for the pension deficit - running at £7 BILLION and then sells off part of the rest for something to look good on the balance sheet.
Indeed, that sounds pretty short-sighted to me. If fixed rates, 'universal' collection and delivery, and citizen/customer/taxpayer input are all seen as desireable, a gov't-run (or semi-gov't-run, as is the US) would seem desireable, even with the inevitable shortcomings of gov't enterprise.
Incongruous
12-18-2008, 06:18
Ha!
Labour will be squirming under this kind of pressure, Mandey's attempt to "reassure" backbenchers will hopefully fail and have him cowering behind the PM, who is fast looking like Swiss cheese!
If this does not end Labour then the next revolt surely will, I hope Brown backs down over this. I expect a stand down will have to wait.
Linky:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article5361526.ece
LittleGrizzly
12-18-2008, 10:42
Because of the various things that have happened Brown cannot get things through in the same way Blair could, this is mostly good in terms of individual policys but bad looking at a long term view of it, this can only make labour look bad and make a tory victory more likely... lose lose...
Seamus Fermanagh
12-18-2008, 19:23
Because of the various things that have happened Brown cannot get things through in the same way Blair could, this is mostly good in terms of individual policys but bad looking at a long term view of it, this can only make labour look bad and make a tory victory more likely... lose lose...
Perhaps the Liberals could win by playing one off agin the other? :wiseguy:
LittleGrizzly
12-18-2008, 20:24
Perhaps the Liberals could win by playing one off agin the other?
I can't see anything other than a hung parliment giving power to the liberals, thier accussed of populism but if they're the smaller partner in a coalition i don't think that would be such a bad thing, they have been against a lot of labours worst policys, Iraq, General erosion of civil liberty's and it wouldn't surprise me if they were against privitisation as well.
Originally back when i made my first vote i figured the LD's (liberals) were closer to me idealogically so i would vote them, but if needed i would be prepared to switch my vote to labour to keep out the tory's..... These days i just don't now if i can bring myself to do it....
Seamus Fermanagh
12-18-2008, 21:18
Originally back when i made my first vote i figured the LD's (liberals) were closer to me idealogically so i would vote them, but if needed i would be prepared to switch my vote to labour to keep out the tory's..... These days i just don't now if i can bring myself to do it....
Very close to the "ringing" level of support I felt for John McCain. I understand the dilemma.
Philippus Flavius Homovallumus
12-19-2008, 16:42
Perhaps the Liberals could win by playing one off agin the other?
I can't see anything other than a hung parliment giving power to the liberals, thier accussed of populism but if they're the smaller partner in a coalition i don't think that would be such a bad thing, they have been against a lot of labours worst policys, Iraq, General erosion of civil liberty's and it wouldn't surprise me if they were against privitisation as well.
Originally back when i made my first vote i figured the LD's (liberals) were closer to me idealogically so i would vote them, but if needed i would be prepared to switch my vote to labour to keep out the tory's..... These days i just don't now if i can bring myself to do it....
How could the Tories possibly be worse than Labout short of Cameron being Hitler in a zip-up bodysuit a la Bill and Ted 2?
Incongruous
12-21-2008, 03:04
Cameron's Broken Society talk has me tingling in the back of my mind.
Fisherking
12-21-2008, 19:01
Maybe you should just sell off the prime minister’s office and be done with it.
If you are going to be robbed blind you may as well have them put their cards on the table.
KukriKhan
12-21-2008, 19:41
Maybe you should just sell off the prime minister’s office and be done with it.
If you are going to be robbed blind you may as well have them put their cards on the table.
Rofl. :)
The primary purpose of any national postal system is communication between a government and its citizens. It is the reason that 'universal' service is demanded, even though sending mail to far-flung parts of the nation might be economically inefficient and costly.
That primary mission often gets lost sight of by the commercial uses that piggy-back that communications channel. We're so accustomed to seeing catalogs and adverts and other junk in our mail, that we begin to think that postal services are just another arm of business - and we're thus tempted to believe that it should be run like one.
God knows government-run services are never cost-efficient, and do a poor internal job of preventing waste, fraud, and abuse. But, in my opinion, the primary purpose and value of the systems outweighs those considerations. We just have to get better at policing the waste, fraud, and abuse, and sometimes be willing to let heads roll when we find gross inefficiency. But the citizens, and their governments need to keep control themselves; not auction off the profitable bits on eBay.
HoreTore
12-22-2008, 08:10
Rofl. :)
The primary purpose of any national postal system is communication between a government and its citizens. It is the reason that 'universal' service is demanded, even though sending mail to far-flung parts of the nation might be economically inefficient and costly.
That primary mission often gets lost sight of by the commercial uses that piggy-back that communications channel. We're so accustomed to seeing catalogs and adverts and other junk in our mail, that we begin to think that postal services are just another arm of business - and we're thus tempted to believe that it should be run like one.
God knows government-run services are never cost-efficient, and do a poor internal job of preventing waste, fraud, and abuse. But, in my opinion, the primary purpose and value of the systems outweighs those considerations. We just have to get better at policing the waste, fraud, and abuse, and sometimes be willing to let heads roll when we find gross inefficiency. But the citizens, and their governments need to keep control themselves; not auction off the profitable bits on eBay.
Right. I'm going to bed now, Kukri, and in my dreams you won't be a middle-aged guy, you'll be something along the lines of this. (http://www.funwarehouse.co.uk/acatalog/Satin_French_Maid_R56101_large.jpg)
Seriously, if you ever visit Norwayland, I'll buy your beer. You don't happen to have any unwed daughters, do you?
Incongruous
12-22-2008, 11:43
Rofl. :)
The primary purpose of any national postal system is communication between a government and its citizens. It is the reason that 'universal' service is demanded, even though sending mail to far-flung parts of the nation might be economically inefficient and costly.
That primary mission often gets lost sight of by the commercial uses that piggy-back that communications channel. We're so accustomed to seeing catalogs and adverts and other junk in our mail, that we begin to think that postal services are just another arm of business - and we're thus tempted to believe that it should be run like one.
God knows government-run services are never cost-efficient, and do a poor internal job of preventing waste, fraud, and abuse. But, in my opinion, the primary purpose and value of the systems outweighs those considerations. We just have to get better at policing the waste, fraud, and abuse, and sometimes be willing to let heads roll when we find gross inefficiency. But the citizens, and their governments need to keep control themselves; not auction off the profitable bits on eBay.
God, if only British national pride went further than the Pound Sterling...
rory_20_uk
12-22-2008, 11:50
Rofl. :)
The primary purpose of any national postal system is communication between a government and its citizens. It is the reason that 'universal' service is demanded, even though sending mail to far-flung parts of the nation might be economically inefficient and costly.
That primary mission often gets lost sight of by the commercial uses that piggy-back that communications channel. We're so accustomed to seeing catalogs and adverts and other junk in our mail, that we begin to think that postal services are just another arm of business - and we're thus tempted to believe that it should be run like one.
God knows government-run services are never cost-efficient, and do a poor internal job of preventing waste, fraud, and abuse. But, in my opinion, the primary purpose and value of the systems outweighs those considerations. We just have to get better at policing the waste, fraud, and abuse, and sometimes be willing to let heads roll when we find gross inefficiency. But the citizens, and their governments need to keep control themselves; not auction off the profitable bits on eBay.
BT hasn't done such a bad job after privitisation. It had strick rules as to what it had to do.
A privitised Royal Mail (not a fire sale with the pension disaster taken off) could again have strict rules that it has to deliver al all houses, no if or buts. They can then sort out the efficiencies.
~:smoking:
CountArach
12-22-2008, 13:31
A privitised Royal Mail (not a fire sale with the pension disaster taken off) could again have strict rules that it has to deliver al all houses, no if or buts. They can then sort out the efficiencies.
How could they sort out the efficiencies? What would force them to do that? The idea of sorting out efficiencies assumes that there is perfect competition between several different companies attempting the same deliveries for more profit. By ordering that they must deliver to every house and then not giving other companies the same order a situation is created where there is no reason to sort out efficiencies... you might as well have not sold the entity off in the first place.
At least with public companies we have elections to sort these things out.
rory_20_uk
12-22-2008, 13:44
Elections to sort this out? When was the last one? Oh, you mean general elections... :inquisitive:
I'm a GP. The money practices are paid is often reduced with the monies returned for services (QOF). Private companies are therefore directed by the government restricting the money. The saving would be that prices are dependent on the government but the business can manage itself however it likes. To make a profit requires efficiencies or more sales, but not merely by tripling the price of a stamp.
~:smoking:
Tribesman
12-22-2008, 13:54
Private companies are therefore directed by the government restricting the money
errrrrrr no .
If you were a private practice then you wouldn't be getting NHS patients would you
rory_20_uk
12-22-2008, 14:06
errrrrrr no .
If you were a private practice then you wouldn't be getting NHS patients would you
Errrrrr no, you're completely wrong. All GP practices are private and have been since the inception fo the NHS. All GPs tender for work from the NHS. More and more and becoming PLCs.
Taking on private patients is something completely different.
~:smoking:
The Black Ship
12-24-2008, 01:08
Your government also just sold off ownership of your only nuclear weapons research center. It's now owned by American companies.:dizzy2:
Tribesman
12-24-2008, 03:56
Your government also just sold off ownership of your only nuclear weapons research center.
Sorry BS but they didn't .
Britain has lots of research centres , there is a nice one in Teddington called the NPL .
Aldermaston was once a research center , that was when it was called AWRE , the "R" standing for research , then it became AWE which means its just for production , just like Burghclere is just for assembly of what is produced at Aldermaston not research .
Now in my opinion both should be shut down as there are serious legal cases , in such that they are both illegal developments on common land (NPL is different as that is on a royal estate) and the temporary wartime measure allowing airfields(as they originally were) has long since gone .
Though of course the levels of contamination do mean that they cannot really be returned to common use
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