Saturday, 9 August 2014

'We have no plan B': Alex Salmond admits he has no back-up plan if an independent Scotland was not allowed to keep the pound. Daily Mail

No Plan B: Mr Salmond hinted that not keeping the pound would be like settling for second best

  First Minister made admission in an open letter to voters in today's Sun
  'It implies settling for second best', he said, insisting Scots can keep pound
  But his plan is contested by all three main political parties in Westminster
  Ed Miliband reveals he will campaign against currency union in 2015 election

Alex Salmond has admitted there is no acceptable 'Plan B' if an independent Scotland is barred from using the British pound. The First Minister said dropping the pound 'implies settling for what's second best' - but still insisted there will be a deal on a currency union with the rest of the UK.

His admission came in an open letter to voters setting out why he has not yielded to calls to disclose a back-up plan, if his favoured option of sharing the pound and the Bank of England fails.

The letter, published in the Sun, declared: 'It is revealing that our opponents in the No camp like to talk about a "Plan B" on currency.

'It's revealing because it says it all about what they think of Scotland.
'Plan B implies settling for what's second best. And neither myself, my colleagues in the SNP, or the wider Yes campaign will ever settle for second best for Scotland.


Further Reading and Insight




Drivers warned to brush up on new road tax rules or face £1,000 fine as the disc disappears from windscreens in October Daily Mail

Disc death: Drivers will no longer need to have a tax disc displayed from October. Pictured, an original from 1921 and how they look today

  End to practice whereby car sellers include remaining tax in sale
  Drivers will no longer need a tax disc from October
  Onus is on the seller to inform the DVLA of ownership change

The tax disc with months left to run has long been a handy money-saving perk when buying a used car, but new rules will see that benefit axed from October when they vanish from our windscreens.

And motorists need to be aware of impending tax disc changes or face a £1,000 fine as well as potential penalty charges against a car they no longer own, experts warn. 

Automatic number plate recognition cameras enforcing road tax will end any tax disc is in the post excuses and spell penalties for those who forget to renew, while those buying and selling used cars will need to make doubly sure everything is done by the book.


The death of the tax disc has been well documented. This is Money revealed the Government was plotting its demise back in 2012 and the change was officially announced in last year’s Autumn Statement.

Yet experts at hpicheck.com say many drivers are likely to get caught out and now realise that the end of the tax disc will also see a tightening of enforcement.



As Eritreans and Sudanese riot in Calais over the best spot to jump onto lorries bound for Britain, one mother of a little daughter says 'Nothing will stop us getting to your schools and hospitals!' Daily Mail


Wearing a clean dress and pink socks as she waits patiently to be smuggled across the Channel to England, Kidan Tedros is the youngest child at the Calais camp

Wearing a clean dress and pink socks as she waits patiently to be smuggled across the Channel to England, Kidan Tedros is the youngest child at the Calais camp where African migrants armed with guns, flick-knives and iron bars rioted this week.

The four-year-old is sitting on a wall by the refugee camp which is spread over sand dunes and the base for 1,300 Eritrean and Sudanese who try, night after night, to jump on lorries where they can hide and be taken illegally on ferries sailing to Dover.

The little girl arrived in Calais three weeks ago with her mother, Laula, 40, after travelling at least 3,200 miles from Eritrea, a country in north-east Africa which is run by a ruthless dictator. Terrified, they watched when this week’s riot broke out and French police moved in to quell the violence and fired rubber bullets.

This mass exodus of desperate peoples from war-ravaged, religiously divided and impoverished countries on the giant continent — as well as Iran, Iraq, Syria and Egypt — poses a disturbing immigration problem for Britain.
Of course, this isn’t a new issue. Twelve years ago, our government agreed a deal with France to close the Sangatte refugee camp in Calais because it had become a magnet for illegal immigrants. Labour politicians promised the days of ‘soft touch’ Britain were over.

Yet as today’s Biblical scenes of human suffering show, the problem is getting worse. Indeed, it has been compounded by this week’s mischievous call by Calais’s deputy mayor for the refugees to be given ferry tickets to Britain and for the scrapping of the arrangement under which the UK’s border controls officially begin at Calais, rather than Dover.

This, he suggested, could happen for an experimental month so that the UK Government might comprehend the pressure Calais is under.






Cappuccino Communication - Knowledge is power (1/2)



·         John Glass,   General Superintendent - Elim Churches 

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