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#21
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On 12/28/2016 10:53 PM, Recliner wrote:
michael adams wrote: "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... TfL is back under the control of the tin pot mayor of an artificial county. Given the national importance of London's transport infrastructure TfL ought to answer to Parliament. With Chris Grayling in overall charge presumably. Now what could possibly go wrong ? Good point! TfL seems to be a lot better at running, and granting conessions to run, railways than the DfT, regardless of which individuals or parties temporarily occupy the mayor's and SoS's offices. And London mayors stay in the job much longer than any transport secretary. I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. Government of what later became Greater London by parish vestries was not a great success. -- Myth, after all, is what we believe naturally. History is what we must painfully learn and struggle to remember. -Albert Goldman |
#22
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On 12/28/2016 11:44 PM, Basil Jet wrote:
On 2016\12\28 22:53, Recliner wrote: I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. Don't rehash this one again, or I'll send you to Warwickshire. My part of Northwest Birmingham was in Staffordshire, while most of what became the enlarged Birmingham in 1911 was in Warwickshire. -- Myth, after all, is what we believe naturally. History is what we must painfully learn and struggle to remember. -Albert Goldman |
#23
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On 12/29/2016 7:20 AM, Graeme Wall wrote:
On 28/12/2016 22:53, Recliner wrote: michael adams wrote: "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... TfL is back under the control of the tin pot mayor of an artificial county. Given the national importance of London's transport infrastructure TfL ought to answer to Parliament. With Chris Grayling in overall charge presumably. Now what could possibly go wrong ? Good point! TfL seems to be a lot better at running, and granting conessions to run, railways than the DfT, regardless of which individuals or parties temporarily occupy the mayor's and SoS's offices. And London mayors stay in the job much longer than any transport secretary. I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. The conventional answer is people like him want to freeze the world at the time they lost their virginity. Hence all the old fogeys harking back to a mythical golden age in the 1960s. It took me till 1970. -- Myth, after all, is what we believe naturally. History is what we must painfully learn and struggle to remember. -Albert Goldman |
#24
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On 2016\12\29 07:20, Graeme Wall wrote:
The conventional answer is people like him want to freeze the world at the time they lost their virginity. That explains my complete lack of nostalgia. |
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#27
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e27002 aurora wrote on 29 Dec 2016 at 09:57 ...
On Thu, 29 Dec 2016 00:07:07 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Thursday, 29 December 2016 07:20:15 UTC, Graeme Wall wrote: On 28/12/2016 22:53, Recliner wrote: michael adams wrote: "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... TfL is back under the control of the tin pot mayor of an artificial county. Given the national importance of London's transport infrastructure TfL ought to answer to Parliament. With Chris Grayling in overall charge presumably. Now what could possibly go wrong ? Good point! TfL seems to be a lot better at running, and granting conessions to run, railways than the DfT, regardless of which individuals or parties temporarily occupy the mayor's and SoS's offices. And London mayors stay in the job much longer than any transport secretary. I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. The conventional answer is people like him want to freeze the world at the time they lost their virginity. Hence all the old fogeys harking back to a mythical golden age in the 1960s. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. Either that or imagining that there was some mythical golden age just before they were born. When I was younger, I used to get very fed up of elderly relatives saying how much better things were in the "old days", which by their definition were before my time (1965 in my case) so I had no way of disproving them. ("Ooooohhh, isn't that book so **dear**! In my day, it would only have cost 1/6..." etc etc etc. Does anyone say "dear" to mean expensive these days?) That harking back to some mythical golden age is, unfortunately, a very powerful electoral weapon, as Donald Trump has just proved. I am waiting for Farage to say we should bring back £sd! That may be true for some. I do logic for a living, and observe what works. So, tThere are several reasons I believe London's present structure is contrived. Let's start with history, geography, and civic pride. No-one in Croydon, Kingston-Upon-Thames, or Romford believes he is in London proper. I was brought up in Orpington and Bromley in the 1940s and '50s. As far as I was concerned, they were London-centric suburbs, and I have always been proud to be a Londoner. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#28
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On Thu, 29 Dec 2016 13:28:26 +0000, "Richard J."
wrote: e27002 aurora wrote on 29 Dec 2016 at 09:57 ... On Thu, 29 Dec 2016 00:07:07 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Thursday, 29 December 2016 07:20:15 UTC, Graeme Wall wrote: On 28/12/2016 22:53, Recliner wrote: michael adams wrote: "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... TfL is back under the control of the tin pot mayor of an artificial county. Given the national importance of London's transport infrastructure TfL ought to answer to Parliament. With Chris Grayling in overall charge presumably. Now what could possibly go wrong ? Good point! TfL seems to be a lot better at running, and granting conessions to run, railways than the DfT, regardless of which individuals or parties temporarily occupy the mayor's and SoS's offices. And London mayors stay in the job much longer than any transport secretary. I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. The conventional answer is people like him want to freeze the world at the time they lost their virginity. Hence all the old fogeys harking back to a mythical golden age in the 1960s. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. Either that or imagining that there was some mythical golden age just before they were born. When I was younger, I used to get very fed up of elderly relatives saying how much better things were in the "old days", which by their definition were before my time (1965 in my case) so I had no way of disproving them. ("Ooooohhh, isn't that book so **dear**! In my day, it would only have cost 1/6..." etc etc etc. Does anyone say "dear" to mean expensive these days?) That harking back to some mythical golden age is, unfortunately, a very powerful electoral weapon, as Donald Trump has just proved. I am waiting for Farage to say we should bring back £sd! That may be true for some. I do logic for a living, and observe what works. So, tThere are several reasons I believe London's present structure is contrived. Let's start with history, geography, and civic pride. No-one in Croydon, Kingston-Upon-Thames, or Romford believes he is in London proper. I was brought up in Orpington and Bromley in the 1940s and '50s. As far as I was concerned, they were London-centric suburbs, and I have always been proud to be a Londoner. So a bit like US wannabes who've never set foot in the place ? |
#29
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On Thu, 29 Dec 2016 07:40:47 +0000, Martin Edwards
wrote: On 12/28/2016 10:53 PM, Recliner wrote: michael adams wrote: "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... TfL is back under the control of the tin pot mayor of an artificial county. Given the national importance of London's transport infrastructure TfL ought to answer to Parliament. With Chris Grayling in overall charge presumably. Now what could possibly go wrong ? Good point! TfL seems to be a lot better at running, and granting conessions to run, railways than the DfT, regardless of which individuals or parties temporarily occupy the mayor's and SoS's offices. And London mayors stay in the job much longer than any transport secretary. I'm also curious about what constitutes a real vs an artificial county? Adrian seems to want to freeze the political map at some arbitrary point in history, presumably the day he was born. Government of what later became Greater London by parish vestries was not a great success. Probably why they were stripped of their civil government functions the century before Greater London was thought of. |
#30
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