All Activity
- Past hour
-
elmoputney reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
The barbers, vape & phone repair shops, etc., are just a front, where the dodgy cash gets laundered. The war on drugs is a lost cause & successive governments are too stubborn to admit it. Instead of regulating and taxing it. I think its Portugal that tried this years ago. Guess what overall drug misuse dropped significantly. That's a win in my book What's this got to do with the Greens?
-
It wasn't literal but you missed that. Afghanistan?
- Today
-
elmoputney reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
Oh dear! Do you read the mail? You mean it's sold there, not produced. So, it's not a mafia/gang making all the profits???π€
-
Great idea, now guess where the heroin/opium comes from......your high street 'Turkish' barber ?
-
commonly reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
So what do you suggest ? Doing something is better than doing nothing. Remember those winters we used to have as kids, you know real snow. My kids have never seen real snow that isn't gone in a flash. Perhaps read the green manifesto they want to support farmers to grow more locally, renationalise all utilities and bring as much as they can back under our control. All the other parties are just selling us to neoliberal investors.we will be completely asset stripped and left to rot. Also Why can't you legalise drugs? Why not control substances rather than allow criminal gangs to control them? Why not profit from them to rebuild the economy rather than allowing criminals to get richer? The profits could provide much needed rehabilitation and recovery centres, better hospital funding.
-
elmoputney reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
At least it would raise some much needed cash, instead giving that to foreign mafias π
-
commonly reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
commonly reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
Stop talking sense now. π Legalised hard drugs, really ?
-
There is a problem in that. Green energy is brilliant, but relying on North Sea wind farms is damaging the seafloor environment. It is 'out of sight, out of mind'. Solar farms, using arable or livestock land to put up solar panels is not Green. The cleaning of those panels put earth damaging chemicals in the soil. Your Fairy liquid is one of the most damaging products, despite being biodegradable, imagine industrial strength Fairy cleaning products. Wind power technology relies on wind; too little no electricity, too strong wind, and the turbines have to be switched off. Solar panels are only about 15% effective. 85% of the sunlight is wasted, and the waste increases the ambient temperature around the panels, potentially reducing important natural wildlife. Crops and livestock can't be grown effectively around solar panels. Importing goods from abroad, brilliant, let's keep our emissions at 0.4% while China goes to 25% of global emissions and we can ignore the emissions created by transporting goods halfway the world. Yet manufacturing, as yet, electricity is not suitable to power smelting, metalwork, glass making. You need gas, coal or coke. You can't have an economy without manufacturing, and you can't have 'legalise drugs' as the manifesto.
-
Pete Springate's Guns reacted to a post in a topic:
Elmo's DIY journey begins.
-
Dave Fowler reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
- Yesterday
-
commonly reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
commonly reacted to a post in a topic:
The Green Party
-
Yup The Post Office has spent over Β£600 million on contracts with Fujitsuto continue using the controversial Horizon IT system, with costs extending until at least March 2026. A further Β£41 million was agreed to extend the contract for another year until March 2027. BBC +3 Key details regarding costs: Contract Value: The Post Office is "shackled" to the system, paying over Β£600m to Fujitsu, largely because they do not own the core code. Ongoing Costs: A Β£41 million extension was added in late 2025 to keep the system running until March 2027. Compensation Costs: Separately, over Β£1 billion has been paid out in compensation to over 7,300 victims of the scandal as of June 2025. The system has been in place for over a decade despite being identified for replacement.
-
Too much money invested Iβm guessing itβs a joke.
-
The post office still use Horizon. There is no accountability.
-
Also Rupert Lowe is not one of the good guys, Restore Britain is just another millionaire backed far right venture that is based on racial hatred and control of the population, it preys on the vulnerable, offers no hope and whatever you think they don't care about you, this country or anyone else but themselves.
-
That's why people should be voting green, because they are pretty much the only party that actually want to put people above profit.
-
Totally agree mate π I have just watched the whole series.... pardon my french but a corrupt load of f**kers!!!
-
blooming disgusting the cover ups by the environment agency letting the water companies spill as much as they did. shocking docufilm. i do appreciate its tv and will have a lot to capture the audience but even it a 10th is true itβs immoral what they did. every angler should watch it scrub that everyone should watch it
-
Not sure it would all fit in the garage tbh.
-
Sorry mate, missed this from you. It does make your blood boil. I have just watched it. Hopefully if picked up it will have the same effect as the PO program? π
-
Actually mate, I need to add to this, I wouldn't normally post links to BBC, but I have been made aware of a C4 progam called 'Dirty Buisness' I (We) all know as anglers how much water companies pump untreated waste into rivers and seas but this is beyound belief! Thatcher and the tories, and now labour really have a lot to answer for π₯΅ Here is the link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c309z18e47no
-
Excellent book. Increased in value significantly this past couple of years so worth keeping hold of.
-
Fool is a much underated book, Reeling in the years, Happy days, in the still of the night, magic in the water are keepers I can recall off the top of my head
-
Dave Fowler started following Hutchy's Golden Years
-
Hutchinson has been reaped to emptiness now. I sold all my books bar the Hutchinson Yates legacy.
- Last week
-
For when you feel ready to scale up lol https://www.cottandco.com/en/lots/auction/4245--3452---modern-fish-bait-manufacturing----packaging-machinery-and--ancillary-equipment-surplus-to-the-ongoing-requirements-of-nash-bait-ltd-
-
Unfortunately, this type of scenario is played out in most sectors, there's nothing Great left in Britain. Apart from us dopes that pay our taxes and live by antiquated laws and processes πͺ
-
Tim Richardson Carp Bait Making Secrets: Is it worth that much?
framey replied to Gabriel's topic in Book Reviews
Edited until I make sure.. -
The national government 'confiscated' it. Instead of buying and building new local authority housing it went to national government to 'repay' the annual budgets and loans. Britain lost over 50% of the local authority housing. Building companies were given land at cheap rates for housing, which instead of building on, they 'landbanked' after gaining planning permission. The top ten building companies own enough land to build over 1.5million properties (which is Labours housing target), and have the cash reserves already to do so, but can't get the skilled workers as they failed to train apprentices, and refuse to build unless they make a profit on sales. There are some local authorities who have built or are building new properties, but used building companies who weren't part of the landbanking schemes, basically new building firms. In Norfolk when Right to Buy came to force, an estate of new council properties had just been built in Bowthorpe and Costessey. Tenants were moved into those properties, often from older council houses and the Right to Buy discount meant they got new properties at extremely low prices. The older houses and flats those tenants were in were supposed to be renovated. Some of the areas ended up derelict (Anglia Square) That is a story in itself. The Right to Buy scheme meant many tenants bought properties on mortgages that they could never afford, so were repossessed by the banks and building societies and later sold off to just cover the debt. Many private landlords bought numerous properties and made the cost of purchase through renting the houses out. I know of at least one Ipswich landlord, ex bank employee, who owned at least ten properties in Ipswich.