Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Cannot the operating company and the infrastructure nonetheless be state-owned? Indeed but IMU the work performed on it has to be publicly advertised to the rest of the EU and then awarded to the most suitable (not necessarily the cheapest) candidate not just to e.g. Mr Millipede's chosen recipient. Renationalising the infrastructure is probably the easy part but not the trains using it. Yep, it’s in the Lisbon treaty, once the competition genie has been let out of the bottle, whether it be competitive tendering for NHS, education or railways it can’t go back in. Under EU rules, the only way the UK government can regain control is by bidding in the competitive market so created, just like anyone else and, that’s not the end of it either, they would have to re-bid periodically as well. Now remind us again who it was that signed us up to the Lisbon treaty (whether we like it or not) oh that was Miliband’s ‘can’t win a vote outside of Kirkcaldy’ best mate Gordon. Ed Miliband is setting himself up for a great big fall the way he keeps trying to walk away from the last Labour government, pretending it had all never happened. He’s been at it today again, over the Libor banking scandal, which news reports over the weekend have now implicated the BoE and that’s perilously close to government err… the one he was in the Treasury with at the time. A proper democratic party would have cleansed itself of their disastrous previous thirteen years in office but then Labour isn’t a proper democratic party. |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
allantracy wrote:
Ed Miliband is setting himself up for a great big fall the way he keeps trying to walk away from the last Labour government, pretending it had all never happened. .... just like David Cameron who pretends he had nothing to do with the last Tory government, in spite of his role as Special Adviser to the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Norman Lamont. Pictures from Black Wednesday (16.9.92) when the pound was forced out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism show Lamont and Cameron strutting together. So on the basis of your argument, David Cameron must also be setting himself (and the country) up for a great big fall. ;-) |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 02 Jul 2012 15:38:45 +0100, Bruce wrote:
So on the basis of your argument, David Cameron must also be setting himself (and the country) up for a great big fall. ;-) Isn't he? -- Alex |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Friedmanite dogma is a good example of Einstein's statement that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. Err... wasn't it Friedmanite insanity that built our railway network, in the first place, and wasn't it Stalinist insanity, as applied to the burgeoning road network, that did so much to undermine the finances of some otherwise very sound private railway operations? |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Yes, it is just as believable as Harold Wilson & co. saying they will halt the Beeching closures. But as for the EU - sooner or later, we will get a UK government that will tell EU precisely what to do with their policies. A lot of people are getting fed up with EU meddling in what they consider to be matters for our own government. Possibly, as early as the next election if news reports today are to be believed. However, even if we came out, it’s still highly likely that we would remain members of the single market, a basic condition of membership being that we could not engage in the protectionism of closing off any of our markets, such as railway franchises, to other members of the single market. |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
So on the basis of your argument, David Cameron must also be setting
himself (and the country) up for a great big fall. * ;-) Isn't he? Possibly, though quite how you fall out of a hole, you're clearly already in, remains to be seen. I’ve always believed that, provided David can keep his hands off the nukes, he won’t have to deliver a great deal to be considered a considerable improvement on what had come before. |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Labour backs plans to return railway network to public control Labour has, by now, a long record of opposing Tory reforms, in opposition, around the public sector and then failing to do a single thing about them when, or if, returned to office. Thanks to their union ties, the Labour party is the real conservative party nowadays in this country, having failed to produce any real radical changes of any consequence for years. Apart from completely f**king up the nation’s finances the only thing I can think of the last lot did that you can now, with hindsight, never see being undone was civil partnerships. I would have added to that list the commendable decision to create an independent BoE but as that particular piece of dysfunctional wazzock brain implementation continues to unravel by the day, to the point of needing a complete rebuild, the credit counter rather diminishes. |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 02/07/2012 16:19, allantracy wrote:
Friedmanite dogma is a good example of Einstein's statement that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. Err... wasn't it Friedmanite insanity that built our railway network, in the first place, and wasn't it Stalinist insanity, as applied to the burgeoning road network, that did so much to undermine the finances of some otherwise very sound private railway operations? There is something to what you say. The railways were saved first by compulsory amalgamation in 1925, then by nationalization in 1947, by which time three of the four companies were going out of business. Even Margaret Thatcher stopped short of privatization, being a somewhat cannier Friedmanite than her epigones (I'll give her that much). -- Myth, after all, is what we believe naturally. History is what we must painfully learn and struggle to remember. -Albert Goldman |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 3, 8:41*am, Martin Edwards wrote:
On 02/07/2012 16:19, allantracy wrote: Friedmanite dogma is a good example of Einstein's statement that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. Err... wasn't it Friedmanite insanity that built our railway network, in the first place, and wasn't it Stalinist insanity, as applied to the burgeoning road network, that did so much to undermine the finances of some otherwise very sound private railway operations? There is something to what you say. *The railways were saved first by compulsory amalgamation in 1925, then by nationalization in 1947, by which time three of the four companies were going out of business. *Even Margaret Thatcher stopped short of privatization, being a somewhat cannier Friedmanite than her epigones (I'll give her that much). A major part of the financial problems the railways faced in the 1930s and later was that they were subject to government regulation of passenger fares and freight tarrifs, and subject to common carrier obligations, that were created when the railways were effectively regional monopolies, but that were no longer appropriate when motorised road traffic provided effective competition. Railways could not turn away freight that was expensive to transport (common carrier) and could not price it off (freight rates were controlled by government), nor could they increase rates on what should have been profitable traffic. That's before the lack of payment for wartime traffic loads are considered. Robin |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Labour backs plans to return railway network to public control - Guardian/Observer | London Transport | |||
German fare dodgers cause headache for public transport operators - The Guardian | London Transport | |||
Hush News: Gang of Labour's African Guests Impale White Lad on TreeStake | London Transport | |||
Sir Terry Farrell backs Euston as venue for London high speedrail hub | London Transport | |||
Times: Ken plans to take public control of rail services | London Transport |