BrianShaw
Well-known
anselwannab said:Like 90% of the population, I think I am an above average driver.
If people really found out how good/poor their driving skills are (and adapted to reality) the roads would be safer for all.
anselwannab said:Like 90% of the population, I think I am an above average driver.
Paul T. said:Who's more powerful in the US, teachers, or the arms industry? Certainly in the UK whoever's in charge loves to go and confront the teachers' organisations. But threaten the few thousand over-subsidised jobs that rely on armaments, or address corruption in the arms industry, which is endemic, and you'll have a real crisis on your hands.
dreilly said:The bad part about the "PC" movement in the US is that it makes langauge untruthful--and it covers things up instead of revealing it.
Why? Why is it that somebody is a 'twat' simply because they would rather 'take pictures' than go and 'shoot'?1. The instructor is a twit, and could use a twat upside the head. (Proper usage of the verb?)
No stats for Scotland then Jenny?* 373 people in Germany
* 151 people in Canada
* 57 people in Australia
* 19 people in Japan
* 54 people in England and Wales, and
* 11,789 people in the United States
Sparrow said:and the rest???????????
the Midlothian question!
gareth said:In what way? Acting together with the USA to invade Iraq? Supporting Israel in it's suppression of the Palestinian people? Watching as our oil money is wasted on illegal wars, identity cards and nuclear weapons? To support the global free market which screws the third world? What use is the Union?
To hell with the Union. Scotland has been screwed for far too long, our industry destroyed, our culture diluted etc etc. If we can run England for the English, why can we not run Scotland for the Scots?
Don't get me wrong, I don't have a problem with the English, in fact they are often rather shrewd, it's English rule I despise, and sometimes, more than that, my fellow Scots who have insisted for many years that we suffer it. Scotland may well have virtually invented the industrial world, yet we lack the self-confidence to take care of our own future.
May 2007 is a chance to change all that. Every five years we now have that chance. Devolution's only use is that of a stepping stone. Scotland will eventually go independent, it's just a matter of time, even most of my English fiends who live here will be voting for it.
I really think 2007 could be the year. I don't think there's ever been a better opertunity.
The Scotsman said:Political row brews as Scottish subsidy soars to record high
FRASER NELSON AND HAMISH MACDONELL
SCOTLAND's annual subsidy from England has shot up to a record £2,200 a head, according to official government figures, having more than doubled since Labour came to power.
Gordon Brown's spending bonanza has pushed Jack McConnell's budget to Scandinavian levels at a time when Scotland's tax burden dropped below that of England, Poland and Canada.
The figures from the Scottish Executive sparked a political storm yesterday as MSPs asked why it has failed to translate world-class spending into world-class public services.
In its annual survey of the Scottish economy, the Executive said the government spent £45.3 billion in 2003-4, putting Scotland in a rare club of countries where state spending is more than half of the entire economy.
But only £34 billion was generated in tax. This leaves an £11.3 billion gap, which has to be filled by tax collected in England, as Wales and Northern Ireland are also heavily subsidised.
The figures do not include North Sea oil and gas; but the study shows that even if Scotland had collected every penny of tax raised offshore, it would still have required a £7 billion subsidy from England.
Gareth, I agree totally. But I feel that economically we're better acting with the English than against. Don't forget, before oil they subsidised us for many a year.
Silva Lining said:Self government is a noble goal, for which many throughout history have campaigned, fought and died for, not always successfully.
I too think that Scotland will gain independence eventually. I fear it might not deliver the promised land of milk and honey that many devolutionists want though.
The drive for an independent Scotland to me appears based more on an emotional and ideological response or a yearning for a mythical, united Scotland that never existed, (apart from in a Mel Gibson movie) rather than the economic and political reality of 21st Century Europe.
The midlothian question is quite an amusing situation, but as the UK government is run by Scots anyway, I see it as of little consequence. The fact that a few Scottish MPs can vote on English issues matters little in a government that uses blatant lies and spin, to instigate and pass policy, including war.
As for 'Screwing Scotland' I'll refer you to the following excerpt from an article in the Scotsman.
Full article available here
Note the statements from the SNP....
Some disagree with this think it implies something to do with firearms.BrianShaw said:So, is anyone shooting any pictures today?
Take ... that sounds a bit like stealing ... someone could object to that.BrianShaw said:So, is anyone taking any pictures today?
Capturing ... seems to imply pictures made against the subject's will. That's probably bad too.BrianShaw said:So, is anyone capturing any images today?
gareth said:The Midlothian question, eh? I love that one. I've had a few English folks moan to me about this. I just tell em tough, get used it to, time to taste your own medicine.
Scotland had to suffer 17 years of Tory rule that it never voted for.
Roll on May 2007. Roll on independence and an end to the Union!
the scotsmanSCOTLAND's annual subsidy from England has shot up to a record £2,200 a head, according to official government figures, having more than doubled since Labour came to power.