Tuesday 2 September 2014

The nationalists’ welfare plans: What the experts say | Better Together

The nationalists’ welfare plans: What the experts say | Better Together







“The DWP might say you can use our IT and administrative systems but it will come at a cost — particularly if you start differentiating welfare policies, because that will create an administrative burden that someone has to pay. That someone would be the Scottish government.” The Times, 12 June 2013

Northern light?

Northern light?



Gordon Brown



Beware the SNP’s false promise of social democracy, argues Gordon Brown
Progressives looking to an independent Scotland as the standard-bearer in the global fight against inequality will be sorely disappointed upon a closer inspection of the facts.
One of the propaganda devices of the Scottish National party has been to persuade left-of-centre opinion that breaking free from London rule would create a ‘northern light’ for social justice – a Scotland that is more just, more humane and more socially democratic. However, a Scotland which followed the policies outlined in the SNP’s white paper for independence and ended the system of pooling and sharing resources across the United Kingdom would quickly find that income and wealth would be more unequally distributed than in the country they abandoned.
It may seem paradoxical but the Scottish people’s much-vaunted egalitarian instincts are not reflected in the SNP’s prospectus for a separate state. Myth or reality, Scotland has always prided itself on both its democratic intellect – equalising opportunities in education – and its role as a pioneer of a civic society built on the idea that if the strong help the weak, we all become stronger. And although recent surveys have found Scottish and English opinion similar in their support for the NHS and for help for the unemployed – the difference lying only in a greater Scottish dislike of privatisation and private education – the idea of a socially concerned Scotland is a powerful one that influences how we act.

DANIEL HANNAN: Banning vacuum cleaners isn't about saving the planet - it's about Brussels grabbing even more powe. Daily Mail


Customers have been thronging High Street stores, like Boxing Day crowds, snapping up the last legal appliances that use more than 1,600 watts

Extremist parties are on the rise across Europe. The disaster of the French economy threatens to re-ignite the euro crisis. Russia is invading Ukraine. And what is the EU doing? Banning high-power vacuum cleaners.
Customers have been thronging High Street stores, like Boxing Day crowds, snapping up the last legal appliances that use more than 1,600 watts — the maximum power-limit decreed by Eurocrats and national politicians (including our own).

But it doesn’t stop there. Brussels is methodically working its way through our homes, proscribing any household machines that are deemed to use too much electricity. Televisions, dishwashers, tumble-dryers, toasters: all must now conform to the new low-power rules.

School sixth-formers used to debate whether the State had any place in the bedroom. Well, never mind the bedroom: I want the Government out of my bloody kitchen.

The last time we saw similar panic-buying was when the EU banned proper lightbulbs in 2009. A kind of dual stockpiling followed: retailers amassed the soon-to-be-outlawed incandescent bulbs, and consumers did the same.
Only now, five years on, have we ploughed through both sets of reserves. As a result, our rooms are lit by the strange light that comes from the low-quality halogen or LED versions.

Of course, the dimming of the lights may be useful when it comes to hiding the muck that vacuum cleaners are meant to remove. Various consumer organisations, including Which?, recommend the high-suction cleaners as the best way of extracting dirt rather than pushing it around.



Monday 1 September 2014

Views, Visions and Values.: Some Inspirational Christian Thoughts, Words for...

Views, Visions and Values.: Some Inspirational Christian Thoughts, Words for...: "The first thing that impresses us about the call of God is that it comes to the whole man, not to one part of him. The majority ...

Rugby World Cup 2015 - Team Talk Advert

theology as a ball and chain

theology as a ball and chain



theology that divides cartoon by nakedpastor david hayward



Theology is important to me. I love it. I enjoy it. I am on a mission to understand the truth. I have a suspicion that there is a unifying theory that would be the key to understanding it all. I also concede that I could be wrong about this. But this is the theory that motivates me in my search. - See more at: http://nakedpastor.com/2013/05/theology-as-a-ball-and-chain/#sthash.HPvrcYg0.dpuf

SNP defence plans “amateurish and unrealistic” says former NATO chief. | Better Together

SNP defence plans “amateurish and unrealistic” says former NATO chief. | Better Together







A former senior NATO chief has slammed the SNP’s defence plans for a separate Scotland as “amateurish and unrealistic”.
General Sir Richard Shirreff, who was until recently NATO’s Deputy Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, also said there is “no certainty about Scottish membership of NATO.”
General Shirreff – Key Points
On the timescale for any possible NATO membership for a separate Scotland:
“It is highly unlikely that NATO will agree to any further expansion while the promise of NATO membership made to Ukraine and Georgia in 2008 is still on the table.” 

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Jesus Christ, The Same Yesterday, Today and Forever

I had the privilege to be raised in a Christian Home and had the input of my parents and grandparents into my life, they were ...