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mockney piers

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  1. 'tis but a ghost. Either that or you're undergoing a pareidolic experience from unrelated phenomena ... *pokes seabag :) *
  2. pretty much; well, in Ireland which is close ;)
  3. Nobody pokes any more, i miss poking *pokes keef*
  4. "I don't really care if there is evidence this is not the case. In my view... " This is the homeopathy thread and I claim my five pounds
  5. This made for uncomfortable reading. I imagine http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/science-technology/scientists-discover-normal-person-called-piers-2013082878985
  6. I knew you were off but living in denial is an easy thing to do. T'is a sad day but all the best for you and yours, and having hung about in the middle of nowhere in Suffolk for a bit I can see why Cornwall beckons. You'll be missed, though with You and huguenot into the realms of lurked, there is probably some sort of quantity theory of insanity balance that remains. (you're the sane part of the equation ;-)) .
  7. Righteous kill, great cast, pairing De Niro and Pacino as police partners. Great supporting cast of character across. Script is merely bad rather than dreadful, performances are acceptable with dashes of Ok. Film is just....... awful. Badly paced, boring, implausible, the editing is confused and distracting, and that soundtrack is claustrophobic, no scene is allowed to breathe. Really really really bad, and that's before the third act reaches out to the worst post Shaymalan clich?s for merely dismal. Can I have my life back please!
  8. The moderators have recently been inundated with reported posts, we'll do our best to get to them but we're a little short staffed these days. Pm me if you like and I'll deal with them.
  9. Oh my, I'm so very sorry for your loss Ruth. I can only echo the sentiments expressed here. Simon was a firm favourite of mine and his thoughtful, insightful contributions will most certainly be missed, but above all it was his warm, wry sense of humour that shone through. My sincerest condolences Piers
  10. I can be briefly tempted out of self-imposed exile to basically say 'what quids said'. I'll also do some terminlogogy quibbling as I'm not sure what unregulated capitalism is meant to be. As capitalism covers the means of production then there's nothing that fits this description outside of counterfeit goods, the illegal drugs market and perhaps about a decade of oligarchic consolidation in the post communist collapse. Unregulated markets? Again, drugs and failed states. Global markets are thoroughly regulated, there a tons of laws protecting most aspects,from consumer protection to anti cartel practices, through copyright protection and the list goes on. If we're talking specifically about banking then we're a billion miles away unregulated markets or practices. What we did have was a period where regulators were leaned on by politicians happy at the swelling coffers to have a light touch and avoid rocking the boat/killing the golden goose/insert clich?d analogy here, which in practice meant turn a blind eye to practices went into dubious grey areas and some that almost certainly transgressed the regulations. This wasn't some nefarious plot by cartoon caricature capitalists in stovepipes smoking evil cigars whilst crushing little people under their boots, but more like a massive exercise in self-delusion at every level, from the banking CEO's who encouraged risky business models, through the risk managers who tinkered with the figures due to the pressures to make certain deals, down through everyone who leveraged their house to use for loans, through the millions of people with one too many store/credit cards, knowing that they're screwed if they lose their job. We're irrational actors, we're selfish, and that's why we get into these situations and perfect hindsight is causing far too many people for my taste to claim some superior moral stance. The way forward? Accept that the world has changed and find our place in it, but the good times have indeed gone. Ban certain financial practices and enforce better regulation on the industry as a whole, there is a global anger and will to do so. I don't like arguments whereby we won't because nobody else will, that's just an abnegation of our resposibilty to our children, the parallels with the environment are too depressingly familiar sadly. If we don't like the rest of the world becoming wealthier at our expense then I suggest we invade the cheap producers of goods and places with raw materials and rule them with a good old fashioned iron fist and let our consciences be damned, because they're in pretty bad shape anyway ;) Anyway, as you were people......
  11. That people eat pigs, laws aren't religiously obeyed (see what I did there?), that the written word is inherently unreliable and everything is open to interpretation. This isn't rocket science is it. What point are you trying to make?
  12. My bet? People eating pigs. Either the defenders or the attackers or indeed someone else entirely. Perhaps the romans wanted to defile the remains of those that stood up to them as a gesture; typically roman behaviour but purest specualtion. Archeology is a cruel science.
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