-
Posts
2246 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Everything posted by AgentAxeman
-
Should have just shot the cunt. end of story!
-
am pissed and just need to vent my spleen............
-
Bumblebee - Paul Gilbert
-
C.C.C. TEAMS - UNBIASED ASSESSMENT.......
AgentAxeman replied to accadacca's topic in Newcastle Forum
yer forgetting boro's youth team which is FUCKIN' MINT!!! Honestly see them doing better than us!! -
Immigrants and miserly pensions may save Britain
AgentAxeman replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
what a load of bollocks! -
Kadars tackle was quality like...
-
seems really clever to me. he buys shares in a small struggling company using his own name, the stock rises cos its him and people think he has some master plan, he then sells at a profit. am i missing something here?? btw, he'd make a fuckin Gr8 new owner!!!
-
in the words of marc bolan "GET IT ON!!!"
-
didnt like Borat so its unlikely i'll like this. however, i will take a peak but not till its out on dvd
-
didnt he start out as a striker?? seem to remember reading that somewhere??
-
hit the nail on right the head there!! i've had many jobs (office,factory,manual labour etc...) and without a doubt, office work is by far the easiest i've ever done. lack of challenge = bone idle wankers. of course you dont see it that way at the time but i defy anyone to go from an office enviroment to working on Nissans line and then tell me the office work is harder!! The work I do is very challenging, so I dont think its that? Its mentally challenging, physically its a peice of piss man. agreed, however the mental challenge at nissan was just keeping yourself sane. you try doing some mindless repetitive task 400+ times in the middle of the night. at least you find your work interesting which is not usually the case for your 'average' office worker, therefore, no challenge = bone idle wanker!! as i said earlier, i've worked in an office enviroment (for approx 6yrs) and was not challenged mentally or physically in the slightest way for the vast majority of that time. which i guess by definition made me a bone idle wanker!!
-
cant blame the guy really. if he goes then good luck to him. and that goes for all of the players/staff. if things carry on like this then we are royally fucked!!
-
hit the nail on right the head there!! i've had many jobs (office,factory,manual labour etc...) and without a doubt, office work is by far the easiest i've ever done. lack of challenge = bone idle wankers. of course you dont see it that way at the time but i defy anyone to go from an office enviroment to working on Nissans line and then tell me the office work is harder!!
-
Owen still costing Magpies £50,000 per week
AgentAxeman replied to Angelus71's topic in Newcastle Forum
its still pretty sickening tho!! -
fuckin hell!!!
-
Boro are shedding keepers - Turnbull to Chelsea, Knight to Darlo
-
The bairns have got the same difference cd on.................
-
Bloodstock lineup looks canny this year
-
Here's a novel idea. It's my right to keep information about who I am to myself. Radical eh?? Thatcherite. Communist Well, there's a first. I was of course referring to the social contract between Parky and the state which guarantees his daughter an education and him facial surgery after his wife catches him feeding the pony of that 19 year old. dont see why Parky should need an id card to get his kid into school. and i dont believe he's gonna need the hospital either cos theres no way he's going to smash that lass's pastie!!!
-
Unbiased reporting from the British Broadcasting Communists there!!!
-
Here's a novel idea. It's my right to keep information about who I am to myself. Radical eh?? Thatcherite. Communist
-
like last season you mean?
-
Thats not the reason why they have them here. meebes i'm missing the point here. why are id cards needed in the 1st place if it does the same job as a passport? (which you already have). few things are given as the reasons behind ID cards, one of them being a method of reducing benefit fraud. Law & Policy ID card benefits were exaggerated, admits government "Perhaps we ran away with our own enthusiasm," says minister Tags: identity cards, government, id cards Printer Friendly Email Story RSS By Andy McCue Published: 4 August 2005 12:40 BST Show related articles The UK government has admitted that it exaggerated the benefits of ID cards by claiming they would be a panacea for identity theft, benefit fraud and terrorism. The frank admission was made by Home Office minister Tony McNulty at a private meeting with a left-wing think tank. According to reports in today's newspapers, McNulty told the seminar: "Perhaps in the past the government, in its enthusiasm, oversold the advantages of identity cards. We did suggest, or at least implied, that they may well be a panacea for identity fraud, for benefit fraud, terrorism, entitlement and access to public services... Perhaps we ran away with our own enthusiasm." McNulty refused to apologise for overselling the benefits of ID cards but admitted they won't wipe out identity theft or terrorism. [Ministers] are trying to lift themselves out of the mire they have got themselves in but it is hard to conceive how they can justify going on with the bill after this. -- Phil Booth, national co-ordinator, No2ID "It will help where fraud and abuse of identity is part of the equation. It will help in the development of some - but not all - strategies to combat identity fraud, serious crime and terrorism," he told the seminar. McNulty also warned that the legislation to make the ID cards compulsory could end up in a deadlock if the House of Lords rejects it and sends it back to MPs. Under the ID cards bill, secondary legislation to make the cards compulsory has to be approved by both MPs and Lords. The comments represent yet another change in tactics by the government and the Home Office in trying to combat falling public support for biometric ID cards. McNulty indicated the government would now emphasise the benefits to the individual rather than the state. Phil Booth, national co-ordinator of the No2ID campaign group, told silicon.com the government has realised it is not going to be able to railroad the ID cards bill through parliament in the face of such concerted opposition from the public and MPs. "It's a damning set of admissions and you don't often hear a government minister saying they have oversold something. They are trying to lift themselves out of the mire they have got themselves in but it is hard to conceive how they can justify going on with the bill after this," he said. The ID cards scheme is also set to come under scrutiny from the National Audit Office as part of a drive by the Better Regulations Task Force to slash the amount of red tape and bureaucratic processes coming out of government departments, including the Home Office. Nope, still dont see any benefits...........