Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I thought the format of the new M and S will not be the "grab and go" kind but more of a standard supermarket, selling fruit/veg/dairy/meats as well as packaged foods.

I do miss Iceland, which was great for a pretty wide range of staples at great prices and agree that some ED residents will now be inconvenienced, having to travel further afield for the same, keenly-priced products.

Maybe the bosses at M and S could - as a way of accommodating those who have been put out - stock cut-price basics, given that the assumption is they have been reading the EDF for ages?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023711
Share on other sites

Louisa Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'm running out of reasons to visit LL. A real

> shame.


Me too. Quite frankly if it weren't for the butchers, the fishmonger, the various grocers / greengrocers, the barbers, the stationers, the DIY shops, AJ Farmer, the cheese shop, the restaurants, the cafes, the pubs and the cinema ... I'd probably move.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023713
Share on other sites

*Bob* Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Louisa Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> lots of elderly people who were reliant on

> > Iceland now having to struggle to Peckham or

> > further to get their weekly shop.

>

> Surely some of them could release half a million

> pounds or so of equity from the house they bought

> back in the day for ?10 - and get their shopping

> delivered by Ocado?


At least they had to work to pay the deposit and mortgage and not rely on mummy and daddy falling off their perch to aspire to ED.


Release equity get screwed seven ways to Sunday. Cost ?1 or 1 million not worth zilch until you sell.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023714
Share on other sites

I was born and bred in the area, my grandparents and parents lived in the area and I bought my house in the area long before it hit the most wanted list.


I also held down 2 jobs in 1975 to pay for it.


When we and my generation bought it was it was very different.


You did not take on debt if you did not have a pot to piss in.


How different to today

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023721
Share on other sites

Jeremy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Bought in 1975 - salt-of-the-earth types who

> worked their socks off to buy their home

> Bought in 2015 - good-for-nothing slackers who

> lucked out when their parents popped their clogs

>

> Glad we got that sorted out.


You really are a prize pr..t

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023729
Share on other sites

*Bob* Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> It takes a fairly warped sense of awareness to see

> a whole group of people who - unlike you - could

> never afford to buy a house without help,

> regardless of what job they might be able to get

> .. and still not realise it's you who's been the

> lucky one.

>

> Crazy.


Even if you got help from parents to buy (I didn't), that doesn't mean you don't work hard (my wife and I both work 10hr days). Lots of other couples in very similar circumstances.


But even then... we're probably lucky compared to today's twenty-somethings, many of whom probably view the prospect of ever owning property in London (or even the SE) as hopelessly unrealistic.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023740
Share on other sites

I was not lucky I worked my arse off to buy my house.


I was lucky most of my friends had to move out to fields far away.


Maybe the snowflake generation might like to consider giving up their I must have at any cost what is advertised or feel left out.


You can continue this discussion on who has what but I and many others had to do it off our own back and this was when interest rates were at 18%.


If people did not chase houses that clearly overpriced the world would be different. Houses are to live in not a financial opportunity.


When I am dead what ever is there is of no concern to me.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023747
Share on other sites

Wrong.


I never knew at the time time if I could, If I could not I lost what I had.


At least we never moaned that the world was unfair.


What most people forget when we bought If the area caught fire no one would piss on it to put it out.


We put our money where our mouth was.


Am I grateful for the financial input...yes


Long may it continue.


Many thanks

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023778
Share on other sites

*Bob* I know you've had a rubbish week and you're using this opportunity to stir the pot on an otherwise dull Friday night. But please, take the argument to a new thread I don't mind specially creating for you guys to thrash it out in over in the lounge.


Back to M&S and there goes the neighborhood please.


Louisa.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/111602-m-s/page/5/#findComment-1023801
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • As a diminutive (5ft 1) woman who regularly attends the park with her four children - all under 5; two of them (twins) in a push-chair - the thread caught my eye. If there identifiable troublemakers likely to be there I want to know what they look like so I can avoid them. Isn't that "strange" of me, wishing to avoid harm coming to my children?? 😲 I have been discussing the ludicrous responses to this thread 🧵 (which I bet £100 exclusively emanate from bourgeois native Brits) with work colleagues (you would be hard pressed to find a more 'diverse' bunch in terms of age and ethnicity - except we are all female). One colleague (a Ukranian lady) made a perceptive observation that everyone seemed to agree with. When British newspapers and news websites mention an offender (e.g. 'police are asking the general public for assistance in seeking the alleged offender who is a middle-aged male'), she always assumes the offender is not of white British heritage since, if the offender is white this is usually mentioned, but seldom the other way around. Until recently racial prejudice was a thing of the past (unless in the most hardcore of families), now it is creeping back and one important factor is the perception that the indigenous general public are not being treated fairly with this sort of dishonest - some would say activist - reportage. An attitude that clearly informed the bizarre claim that my concerned inquiry was  "strange". Fact is it was anything but strange. What is strange is people denying the evidence of their own eyes and - in this case - casting aspersions on a concerned parent. 
    • Yesterday we received about 3 weeks worth of post. This included duplicate documents where we'd had to ask for another copy since the first copy never arrived, bank papers, my new driving licence and one mis-delivery.  We'd spent ages in the last few weeks either on the phone or convoluted websites trying to chase these things. I'd rally like to co,plain but have a feeling I'd be wasting my time.
    • sad news one of the few shops offering good value
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...