BMW X6 surely…
You have no idea, you really haven’t. Was a Rangerover last week. These are not one off events. But as we’ve almost finished moving, no more mither
As above. I’d photograph the collections carpark, but you wouldn’t believe me anyway.
Or perhaps they are?
I saw another article that said the governments proposals will only affect about 10 MP’s.
For me the problem is not hours worked. It is the impossibility of doing outside work without the existence of conflicts of interests. Even perceived CoIs are legitimate even if there is no actual conflict produced.
If MPs were working in hospitals or as social workers it might not be so bad, but they are ‘advising’ real estate companies while working on housing policy, ‘consulting’ energy companies while drafting environmental protection measures and so on. It is obviously against the spirit of democracy.
Pay them what they need, cut all second jobs and perks/expenses.
Dont forget the hand sanitiser or the PPE.
I feel very sorry for any new parents if wipes are banned.
Wipes are biodegradable, right?
Nope, but I doubt there’s any reason why they couldn’t be.
Nappies too I guess.
Personally I’m struggling to see why this has taken so long. It’s one of those obvious things that can be done, that has only short term and minor discomfort as people adjust but has wider benefits. An easy win if you like.
Things they wipe, are, the wipes aren’t.
Uh oh. Just saw a ‘do not trade’ alert on Bulb Energy. Collapsed into administration or will very shortly, that would be the biggest yet.
edit: Yep, in press now. ‘Special administration’ because the normal process won’t handle, biggest yet. That is 21 failures now.
I saw this being mentioned a couple of weeks ago and assumed all was OK because I hadn’t heard anything since.
Surprises me a little because they don’t do fixed deals with customers, so were probably in a better position than those that do…
I think that just slowed the bleeding, the policy regime still compromised their ability to flow through full costs to the customers. They were trying to recapitalize in September, and there just wasn’t a case to be made. Fundamentally, if the UK government thinks consumers should not be paying the actual cost of energy, which is the direct implication of the policy, they need to have a more interventionist stance and subsidize it from tax revenues. Private capital isn’t flowing into the UK’s energy sector, it is running for the hills.
That’s ok we’ll have fusion soon.
This isn’t energy sector really is it?
It’s more a service industry that buys and sells a product. Madness of a model imo.
It was actually on BBC News before you posted I think. Was wondering if I should post it, and which thread to post it in.