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churchill

Member Since 2005-09-23
Offline Last Active Today, 20:02
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Topics I've Started

Obama Says Debt Crisis Needs Balance Of Cuts With Growth

2012-05-19 16:33:26

So how do you achieve this .....

The only way I can see is to cut governments , regulations ( apart from financial ) , and defence spending

and to invest in education , infrastructure , and hope Posted Image

and to restore faith in currencies .. which means a new reserve ..

http://www.alt-marke...ill-be-replaced

http://www.bloomberg...ith-growth.html

Coco Port .. ?

2012-03-24 16:20:43

I think the name needs consideration  .. !

but could this the start of a bigger Marina project .. ?

http://www.nathoncity.com/paper/5798

Garlic Turning Blue/Green ?

2011-12-13 18:03:06

Probably been asked before but I noticed garlic turning  blue/green when fried and understand that this is a reaction to copper in the tap water ...or anything else ... ??

Is it safe ..

Herr And Madame, Señor And Mrs

2011-11-20 16:59:21

Its not easy for sure .. but progression ...

'A hundred years ago, such alliances were confined to the elite of the elite. When Randolph Churchill married Jennie Jerome of New York, it seemed as if they had stepped from the pages of a Henry James novel: brash, spirited American heiress peps up the declining fortunes of Britain’s aristocracy. Now, such alliances have become almost commonplace. To confine examples to politicians only: the French president Nicolas Sarkozy is married to the Italian-born Carla Bruni and his prime minister François Fillon has a Welsh wife, Penelope Clarke. Nelson Mandela is married to Graça Machel (from Mozambique). Denmark’s new prime minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt is married to a Briton, Stephen Kinnock. And two leading ladies of Asian countries, Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar and India’s Sonia Gandhi, are both widows from international marriages. In rich countries alone such unions number at least 10m.'

http://www.economist.com/node/21538103

Thai Floods: Impact Worse Than Feared

2011-11-17 17:25:54

'With the flood waters still washing through Thailand,  assessments of their impact on the economy are steadily becoming more gloomy. On Thursday, Barclays Capital raised its estimates of the cost to 3-4 per cent of GDP from 2-3 per cent.
Down go forecasts for GDP growth for this year and next, and for export-oriented production of electronics, vehicles and food. The only silver lining is that the disaster could prompt the central bank to cut interest rates, possibly as soon as its next meeting on November 30.'

continued  ..

http://blogs.ft.com/...d#axzz1dxO5aZt5

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