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titch juicy

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Everything posted by titch juicy

  1. Mick Mac Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Yes, the avacado is a gentrification too far. Egg > and bacon is good, just change the name. > > On the sauce debate I'm HP brown, and no brown > substitutes can match it. It's the simple and undeniable truth. All other brown sauces are too fruity or too sweet. I don't care what the actual sugar content suggests. Edit: BUT, a good pork sausage is a better bedfellow for HP sauce than bacon.
  2. Loz Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > titch juicy Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > Folks, stop ruining bacon sandwiches. It's just > awful the things you're inflicting on them. > > > > Bread, toasted or otherwise > > Butter > > Bacon of choice, cooked how you like it > > Ketchup or HP (no other brown sauce will do). Or > at a push English Mustard. > > > > End Thread. > > TOASTED? No. Just no. Lightly toasted white bread bacon sandwich is remarkably good.
  3. Robert Poste's Child Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Calm down, it's only a sandwich. And mine has > avocado. > > I'm guessing you voted leave... Lord no.
  4. Folks, stop ruining bacon sandwiches. It's just awful the things you're inflicting on them. Bread, toasted or otherwise Butter Bacon of choice, cooked how you like it Ketchup or HP (no other brown sauce will do). Or at a push English Mustard. End Thread. Avocado. FFS
  5. I have a friend that goes to Wilderness. I've looked at it a couple of times but it seems just a little too unbearably Hunter welly, face painty, gourmet picnicy and camping chairsy for my tastes. Saying that, I'm going to Citadel on Sunday in Victoria Park and that seems like Wilderness in microcosm but with better music (however; Wilderness have Flaming Lips playing this year!!). I'm not doing any multi-day festivals this year. I usually go to Primavera Sound in Barcelona but couldn't make this years. I really want to go to End of the Road in September. Instead it's all one day festivals in London. Was supposed to go to the Sunday of Field Day, but was sick. Went to Sunfall in Brockwell Park last Sunday which apart from Kamasi Washington, who was mind-blowingly good, was average. Have Citadel on Sunday and the Sunday of Caught By The River Thames at Fulham Palace in August (mainly for Sun Ra Arkestra and Super Furry Animals).
  6. Broadstairs. A choice of nice sandy beaches and closer than the other suggestions.
  7. It's almost as if the FA enjoy us being a laughing stock.
  8. Jah Lush Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Otta Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > Alan Medic Wrote: > > > -------------------------------------------------- > > > ----- > > > Me too. It should be fun. Hopefully Sam will > > have > > > gone.....to England. > > > > > > Apparently he's being interviewed this week. > > > > Goodo. > > > WHAT!!!!! YOU'RE JOKING. He's never won anything, > no experience of managing a club playing in a > European competition, has one way of > playing...caveman football. How on earth can those > idiots at the FA seriously contemplate him as > England manager. Totally unqualified usless tub of > lard. Exactly this. Unless as previously discussed it's with nurturing a younger man in mind. Still think Hoddle should have that specific role though. I'd still prefer Klinsmann to any of them though.
  9. Can't help thinking that they've missed a big trick with this. Surely something branded and aimed at people wavering on the out/remain boundaries would have been a better exercise, rather than preaching to the converted.
  10. I'm sure a few people on here have taken psychedelics before. Enough to understand that the mind is capable of a lot more than the everyday use it get's from us. Surely it's more reasonable to assume that these incidences are just a part of the brain that we don't normally use opening for a brief moment?
  11. Nicaragua. Seriously. It's on my list. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/02/what-to-do-in-nicaragua_n_6524202.html
  12. TwoScoops Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Titch juicy your post IS fear mongering and not > related to what was being said > The things you mention are fall out from the > surprise vote but not the reality of a world where > Brexit has actually been agreed and implemented. > Negotiations haven't started yet. > Rise in racism - horrible but not created by the > vote, uncovered by it. Tensions were high due to > mismanaged immigration policy. All of us can only > tackle that as it arises and stamp it out. If > there was a Remain vote then suddenly no racists ? > Maybe you'd just prefer to ignore there was an > issue. Maybe instead it's easier to say every > Leave Vote was racist . That's a big shout for > 17.4m people. > Volatility in the pound in not for forever. > Markets react to uncertainty. For example can't > you see how it might recover if for example a > trade agreement is agreed. We don't know what it > will look like yet and that's exactly what markets > are reflecting, doesn't mean it's not going to > happen. > Extreme volatility in world markets ? Be more > specific ?? What do you mean ? > Increased traffic on German websites - fear > mongering rubbish. The threat of losing > passporting- yes, but just a threat for now. > The current situation is not the result of the > vision of Brexit - it's the reflection of the > uncertainty until we finally get on with it and > agree what it looks like. I think all are keen to > do that The racism might have been simmering under the surface, but it's much much better under the surface than those feeling it has been legitimised reacting on it. This is a direct consequence of the result of the vote. Nowhere have i said anything about a majority of leave voters being racist and i don't believe that's the case. I do however believe that a lot of leave voters will have been swayed by lies peddled by leading leave campaigners, perpetuated by Murdoch and Dacre led media (The Sun has a daily readership of 4.5m according to some sources). Re- the pound, i'm not speculating about the future, i'm telling you what's happening now, as a direct result of the vote. No-one knows what's going to happen in the future- but what's happening now is bad. Short term effects are still effects. Massive volatility in global markets is exactly that. World indices are lurching up and falling dramatically with no consistency, making it very difficult for investment managers to manage portfolios, except to retreat into safe haven sectors, like gold or cash, meaning the everyday things that rely on those funds, like yours and my pensions are affected. Traditional safe haven investment sectors such as UK property are having a terrible time, with three of the main UK property funds (Aviva, Standard Life & M&G...all giants) having stopped redemptions from the funds as they can't sell assets quickly enough to keep up with the withdrawal demand from investors. Why is the huge increase in traffic on German jobsites from British young people scaremongering and not evidence of current sentiment? Why do you think that any of this will be resolved any time soon? Experts (yeah, them) are predicting that this will go on and on for years. Think about the net damage that can be done in that time, considering the damage that's been done in less than two weeks.
  13. rahrahrah Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Everyone gets a vote regardless or how informed > they may or may not be, however smart / stupid > they might be, prejudiced or not etc. etc. It's > democracy and the vote is for us to leave. Now we > need to work out how what we're going to do having > 'flipped the bird' to the worlds second largest > economy, think about rebuilding bridges and > exploring new opportunities elsewhere. I think the > whole exercise has been incredibly destructive and > foolish, but the decision has been made and we now > need to start taking action to stem the damage. Or drag it out with endless to-ing & fro-ing, posturing from the UK and the EU and legal challenges, while the damage piles up higher and higher and enough people eventually realise what a huge mistake it's all been, ending with the government not invoking Article 50 and giving us a slap on the wrists and telling us not to be so silly next time.
  14. Rook Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > No Im not saying it means we will definitely be > fine, Im arguing that it doesnt mean we definitely > WONT be fine -which is clearly the > suggestion/expectation/conclusion already made by > Remainers who are posting the kind of content I > responded to. Thats my point. That shouldnt stick > in your craw, as we are in agreement re not > knowing yet. Maybe it means some are just more > positive than others, or understand it better ( > which i think shows evidence of being true of both > sides) The rise in verbal and physical racially motivated attacks. The fall in the pound to lowest levels for 30+ years. The extreme volatility in world markets. The fall in NHS applications from overseas doctors (where we have a shortage anyway). The huge rise in traffic on German job websites from young British (the brain drain seems to be underway already). The pull back from European academic bodies in collaborative research with UK academic bodies. The threat of losing European passporting for non-EU overseas funds, threatening London as the most impoertant global financial base. I'm sure there are other immediate effects, but that should be enough to be going on with. This isn't fear mongering, this is cold hard fact. This is happening. It wasn't fear-mongering before the vote either. It was expert opinion, which is now manifesting itself in reality. But they told us not to listen to experts eh? I would say that things definitely aren't fine right now. Still; Trump, Putin and Le Pen are happy with the outcome and hasn't Farage got a funny rubbery face.
  15. *Bob* Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > What about the DILFs? > > Equal perving opportunity for all. Dobermans I'd like t f*ck? Doughnuts I'd like to f*ck? Dereks I'd like to f*ck?
  16. Jenny1 Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > The way I see it nxjen is that she knows that just > as well as we do. But it's her job to manoeuvre > into a position where two things slowly (and > perhaps quickly) become possible. Scottish > independence and Scottish EU membership. She's > likely to achieve the first, and maybe the second. > The political landscape is shifting rapidly so > it's sensible to put place-makers down with speed > and to miss no opportunity to do so. She's done > that. That was my take on it too.
  17. Wow! Some honesty. A promise is not a commitment. Even if he didn't mean it.
  18. DulwichFox Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I do not think we have heard the last of Boris > Johnson just yet. > > DulwichFox. In a political sense we have. I'd be astonished if the Tories (at least) ever let him near them again after the embarrassment he's caused them. He's not being given an easy ride in the media or on social media. Heseltine's piece and Ewan MacGregor and Alex Kapranos' tweets don't pull any punches.
  19. Jenny1 Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I don't want to see the break up of the UK, but > the way things are right now I'd like to be given > the option of voting for the SNP - with a > broadened UK-wide set of policies and mandate of > course. I would be quite happy to live in a newly > arranged UK in which Edinburgh became the > political capital and London the financial > capital. The Houses of Parliament could then house > a devolved English assembly and a museum. Most of > our current 'leaders' would belong in the latter, > rather than the former. On the surface that all seems reasonable. Nicola Sturgeon seems to be doing a good job.
  20. Where has Ian Duncan Smith slithered off to? Not seen or heard from him since pre- referendum.
  21. red devil Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > titch juicy Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > I particularly love the idea of a European > manager > > for the England job right now. > > Yep, especially a German, just to hack off the > Ingerlanders... Yep, that was my line of thinking
  22. Plus, there will likely be a huge support from younger voters for the Lib Dems. If anything good can come from this whole sorry mess it'll be the politicisation of the younger generation.
  23. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/liberal-democrat-membership-brexit-latest-remain-tim-farron-london-stays-a7109906.html
  24. apbremer Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Lib Dems ??!! This must be a joke? More of a joke than the current lot or the official opposition?
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