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English Only Please

Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 3:50 pm
by abbey
capt_buzzard wrote: Can I have your eyes for one moment. ENGLISH ONLY PLEASE, was added here because we did not have England only sub forums as we do today. Here ended the lesson.
Aw c'mon Cap everyones welcome into our own English garden :yh_flower

English Only Please

Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 4:16 pm
by capt_buzzard
abbey wrote: Aw c'mon Cap everyones welcome into our own English garden :yh_flowerWhy of course they are. :yh_party

English Only Please

Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2005 5:32 am
by Raven
capt_buzzard wrote: Can I have your eyes for one moment. ENGLISH ONLY PLEASE, was added here because we did not have England only sub forums as we do today. Here ended the lesson.


EXCUUUUUUUUUUUUSE me! americans were BRITISH, BEFORE they became american.

And my ancestry traces back to 4 brothers who shipped out for the colonies, and their name was HIGGS. (my MOTHERS maiden name.) :yh_tong2

And MY maiden name was HAYES. Traced to the great clan HAY. so there.

see attached GRAND UNION flag. pre-revolutionary flag of the american colonies.

Attached files

English Only Please

Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2005 1:50 pm
by capt_buzzard
Raven wrote: EXCUUUUUUUUUUUUSE me! americans were BRITISH, BEFORE they became american.



And my ancestry traces back to 4 brothers who shipped out for the colonies, and their name was HIGGS. (my MOTHERS maiden name.) :yh_tong2



And MY maiden name was HAYES. Traced to the great clan HAY. so there.



see attached GRAND UNION flag. pre-revolutionary flag of the american colonies.Also Higgins, and Hayes, also Hoy as in British & Irish family names.

English Only Please

Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2005 1:13 pm
by Raven
capt_buzzard wrote: Also Higgins, and Hayes, also Hoy as in British & Irish family names.
I love digging up stuff in regards to family trees. I'm positive I'll dig up a few highwaymen and rogues, not to mention indentures and newgate inmates! LOL!!

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2005 7:06 am
by chicagolosina
I've never heard of the song you mentioned, but let me ask you this;

My kids sing "God save the Queen" after thier assembley Friday mornings..... when Prince Charles becomes King, will they just change the words, or will there be a new song? lol

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Feb 24, 2005 5:42 am
by gmc
posted by chicagolosina

I've never heard of the song you mentioned, but let me ask you this;

My kids sing "God save the Queen" after thier assembley Friday mornings..... when Prince Charles becomes King, will they just change the words, or will there be a new song? lol


they change queen to king assuming he gets to be king or indeed if we keep the monarchy.

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Feb 24, 2005 4:10 pm
by chicagolosina
Hmmm. I wonder if our currency will change? Any thoughts?

English Only Please

Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 3:54 am
by Me Mo
My husband and myself have thought about leaving the Uk for the fact of we work for a living and its very hard to see others who don't work get everything. they are on social so the live: rent free, Council tax free, prescriptions free, Leisure centres Free, Discounts on Gym memberships free, and some go on holiday board twice a year one being winter also while they are away if we get so many days cold they will get cold winter payments which means money forwards there heating bills

Now don't get me wrong there are people out there who do need help but there are also a lot out there who are screwing the system. :mad:

Unless something is done it may be the uk's workforce will leave the country

What do others think?

English Only Please

Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 7:28 am
by gmc
posted by me mo

My husband and myself have thought about leaving the Uk for the fact of we work for a living and its very hard to see others who don't work get everything. they are on social so the live: rent free, Council tax free, prescriptions free, Leisure centres Free, Discounts on Gym memberships free, and some go on holiday board twice a year one being winter also while they are away if we get so many days cold they will get cold winter payments which means money forwards there heating bills

Now don't get me wrong there are people out there who do need help but there are also a lot out there who are screwing the system.

Unless something is done it may be the uk's workforce will leave the country

What do others think?


Yes people take advantage, what you will find though is that those most hostile to scroungers are the ordinary people living next to them. Personally I prefer a country where if you are ill you can depend on receiving treatment-the NHS is not perfect but there is no not being treated because you are too poor. Who paid for your education and medical care when you needed it? Assuming you were born here. Safe bet it wasn't you (sounds rude but I don't mean it that way) In my experience those who complain about the NHS and want private medicine are also the first to feel hard done by when they find they can't be treated on their private policy and have to depend on the NHS to sort out the mess private treatment has made of them. They don't complain then.

Or if they go bankrupt they are not slow to claim all the benefits they were so keen to criticise before. Council hoses are better than the street when you've just lost their home.I've been at both ends of the spectrum, being poor is no fun at least I get free education and medical care and am now paying back good style. Then again it's there if I need it.

Most people with a mortgage in this country are within three months of not being able to pay the monthly payment if they become ill or lose their jobs. Unemployment is not the problem it was so how about an illness that stops you working how long before you are laid off or your business fails because you are not there to work at it. There is no state help for that. Is your income protected or are you on state benefits after three months and on your way to losing your home. Will your private health policy cover you for long term cancer treatment or leave you to the tender mercies of the NHS.

English Only Please

Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 8:06 am
by Me Mo
Thanks for answering gmc

I was born here and yes I do use NHS I pay for what i am supposed too

I too have had bad times. I hope this is just a chat :) ... What about the ones that just stay on the system and tell their own to do it as well ?

English Only Please

Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 3:10 pm
by gmc
posted by me mo

Thanks for answering gmc

I was born here and yes I do use NHS I pay for what i am supposed too

I too have had bad times. I hope this is just a chat ... What about the ones that just stay on the system and tell their own to do it as well ?


I didn't mean to give offence it is just a chat

I have absolutely no time for scoungers at all..



I was unemployed in the seventies for the better part of two years-not from choice there were simply no jobs. I found later working in London that people there had no concept of what unemployment really meant. Down there if you were unemployed it was from choice rather than because you couldn't get a job. We could not get staff despite being in a london borough with high unemployment supposedly.

On one occasion the area manager of the company i worked for was not going to take on a fellow scot-he had been unemployed for almost a year and was in London living in B & B till his money ran out or he got a job. The area manager just could not understand that there were simply no jobs to be had where this guy had come from. Having come down to get a job he wasn't going to give him one because he had been unemployed for so long and must not have been trying that was the way he thought of this guy. It was one of the few occasions where I really lost my temper with someone who was otherwise quite intelligent

English Only Please

Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 3:36 pm
by capt_buzzard
Hey gmc,

When an Irishman/woman loses their temper its bad. But when a Scot loses their temper run and don't stop running.

English Only Please

Posted: Sat May 07, 2005 11:44 am
by capt_buzzard
English Only Please:p

English Only Please

Posted: Mon May 23, 2005 6:34 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
GMC - I'm very surprised! I've always thought of you as someone who is in possession of all their facts. But you asked someone to write out 100 times that Great Britain consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

But it doesn't!

Great Britain is made up of England, Scotland and Wales.

When you add Northern Ireland to the mix it becomes the U.K.

Northern Ireland has never been a part of Great Britain.

English Only Please

Posted: Mon May 23, 2005 9:03 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
P.S. Please write out 100 times

Northern Ireland is NOT a part of Great Britain.



Oh and Prince Albert - your patriotism would be more convincing if you were to spell correctly.

English Only Please

Posted: Mon May 23, 2005 2:03 pm
by gmc
posted by philahelphia eagle

GMC - I'm very surprised! I've always thought of you as someone who is in possession of all their facts. But you asked someone to write out 100 times that Great Britain consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

But it doesn't!

Great Britain is made up of England, Scotland and Wales.

When you add Northern Ireland to the mix it becomes the U.K.

Northern Ireland has never been a part of Great Britain.


O.K. technically you are correct and it hurts to concede the point-but there are a few northern irishman that would take umbrage at being told they are not British, If you ask someone from the UK their nationality they will say welsh, english, scottish the ones that say British first tend to be ulster protestants-at least in my experience.

English Only Please

Posted: Mon May 23, 2005 3:37 pm
by capt_buzzard
Prince_Albert wrote: Rule Brittania, Brittania rules the waves;...................I'll be singing our countries songs till the day i die. There'll always be an England;...........................That's allowed your RH. Keep on singing

English Only Please

Posted: Mon May 23, 2005 3:39 pm
by capt_buzzard
gmc wrote: posted by philahelphia eagle





O.K. technically you are correct and it hurts to concede the point-but there are a few northern irishman that would take umbrage at being told they are not British, If you ask someone from the UK their nationality they will say welsh, english, scottish the ones that say British first tend to be ulster protestants-at least in my experience.Believe it or Not, there are some Southern Irish who well consider themselves British.

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 7:54 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
gmc wrote: posted by philahelphia eagle



O.K. technically you are correct and it hurts to concede the point-but there are a few northern irishman that would take umbrage at being told they are not British, If you ask someone from the UK their nationality they will say welsh, english, scottish the ones that say British first tend to be ulster protestants-at least in my experience.


Thank-you GMC for your concession. Not only ' technically' correct but actually and physically correct as well!

I wouldn't dream of telling someone from Northern Ireland that they were not British - of course they are! You don't have to have been born in Britain to be British. People from Northern Ireland, although not born in Britain, are accorded British nationality by virtue of the fact that they are born in UK.

Many other peoples around the world are also accorded British nationality - mainly those born in one or other of Britain's overseas dependencies. Generally they, however, do not have 'right of abode' in the UK.

I enjoy reading reference books etc. on commonly held (but mistaken) beliefs.

What about this one?

It is a fact that the most northerly point on the island of Ireland is, in fact, in Southern Ireland and not Northern Ireland. The same point is also in Ulster but not,of course, in Northern Ireland! I'm sure you know the reason for that apparent anomoly.

I did try pointing it out to someone else(from England) on this forum some tome ago but he got lost at 1st. base!

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 8:32 am
by gmc
posted by philadelphia eagle

It is a fact that the most northerly point on the island of Ireland is, in fact, in Southern Ireland and not Northern Ireland. The same point is also in Ulster but not,of course, in Northern Ireland! I'm sure you know the reason for that apparent anomoly.

I did try pointing it out to someone else(from England) on this forum some tome ago but he got lost at 1st. base!


You'd be dead wrong there, geography was never one of my strong points.

I wouldn't dream of telling someone from Northern Ireland that they were not British - of course they are! You don't have to have been born in Britain to be British. People from Northern Ireland, although not born in Britain, are accorded British nationality by virtue of the fact that they are born in UK.


As a Scot it tends to niggle when people use england and britain interchangably in the same sentence, same with the flag the British flag is not the english one.

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 8:49 am
by capt_buzzard
gmc wrote: posted by philadelphia eagle





You'd be dead wrong there, geography was never one of my strong points.







As a Scot it tends to niggle when people use england and britain interchangably in the same sentence, same with the flag the British flag is not the english one.Give us a bar of 'The Rose of Scotland' gmc.

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 9:24 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
Now GMC- I'm sure you must be hiding your light under a bushel!

The reason for the apparent anomoly is that, contrary to popular belief, Ulster and Northern Ireland are not the same thing.

Northern Ireland comprises 6 counties whereas the Provence of Ulster is made up of 9 counties - the 6 in Northern Ireland plus a further 3 which lie within the Republic of Ireland. Those additional 3 are the counties of Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan.

My ancestors on my father's side came from Donegal.

Try telling a Donegal man that he's not an Ulsterman!

To be fair -your own BBC media makes this mistake (or dis-information) constantly so it's not surprising that many people confuse the two.

Many foreigners (present company excepted, of course,) confuse geographical locations in this country too.

Common mistakes include confusing Washington DC with Washington State (they're 3,000 miles apart!), referring to New York City when they mean New York State and vice-versa, thinking that Miami is the state capital of Florida (it's Tallahassee) or that Kansas City is in the State of Kansas (it's in Missouri). and so on.

Geography has always been an interesting subject to me and I had the good fortune of traveling to (and living in) many different countries during my working life. I always enjoy debating geographical issues and apologise if I'm boring you with all this!

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 9:32 am
by capt_buzzard
Philadelphia Eagle wrote: Now GMC- I'm sure you must be hiding your light under a bushel!

The reason for the apparent anomoly is that, contrary to popular belief, Ulster and Northern Ireland are not the same thing.

Northern Ireland comprises 6 counties whereas the Provence of Ulster is made up of 9 counties - the 6 in Northern Ireland plus a further 3 which lie within the Republic of Ireland. Those additional 3 are the counties of Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan.

My ancestors on my father's side came from Donegal.

Try telling a Donegal man that he's not an Ulsterman!

To be fair -your own BBC media makes this mistake (or dis-information) constantly so it's not surprising that many people confuse the two.

Many foreigners (present company excepted, of course,) confuse geographical locations in this country too.

Common mistakes include confusing Washington DC with Washington State (they're 3,000 miles apart!), referring to New York City when they mean New York State and vice-versa, thinking that Miami is the state capital of Florida (it's Tallahassee) or that Kansas City is in the State of Kansas (it's in Missouri). and so on.

Geography has always been an interesting subject to me and I had the good fortune of traveling to (and living in) many different countries during my working life. I always enjoy debating geographical issues and apologise if I'm boring you with all this!You are correct. There are 9 counties in Ulster.

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 10:45 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
Thanks - Buzz As I mentioned before I had a similar discussion with an Englishman but he got lost and retreated most ungraciously by saying that, as a foreigner, my ignorance could be excused!

Oh dear! Talk about the shoe being on the other foot!

My father's side of the family were from Donegal as I said and my mother's ancestors were from Scotland.

How about that as a lethal combination!

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 12:29 pm
by Philadelphia Eagle
Can't help being amused by the fact that a thread entitled 'English Only Please' is now populated exclusively by an Irishman, a Scot, and an American!

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 2:47 pm
by capt_buzzard
Ann wrote: I am intrigued about the above comment, I havn't met any People from the Republic of Ireland who consider themselves British, unless that are British and are on Holidays. :guitaristWell my dear Ann, I know many folk who never accepted the 'Irish Free State or Eire to you. They hold British passports, also any citizens born here before 1948 can if they so wish have a British passport. And can vote in the UK elections.



Further inFo www.britishembassy.ie/

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 2:52 pm
by capt_buzzard
Philadelphia Eagle wrote: Thanks - Buzz As I mentioned before I had a similar discussion with an Englishman but he got lost and retreated most ungraciously by saying that, as a foreigner, my ignorance could be excused!

Oh dear! Talk about the shoe being on the other foot!

My father's side of the family were from Donegal as I said and my mother's ancestors were from Scotland.

How about that as a lethal combination!Were you ever in Donegal? Might be a homestead someplace:D or a crock of gold

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 4:51 pm
by Philadelphia Eagle
capt_buzzard wrote: Were you ever in Donegal? Might be a homestead someplace:D or a crock of gold


Killybegs was the place. Yes I have visited Donegal and had a wonderful time there.

I was also in Dublin many years ago and have great memories of there as well.

I was taken out 'on the town' one evening by Irish friends and visited more pubs than I can remember!

The next day I flew home to America and it took the entire flight for the recovery process to kick in!

English Only Please

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 2:10 am
by gmc
posted by cap'n buzzard

Give us a bar of 'The Rose of Scotland' gmc


Would if i knew what you were talking about-you don't mean the flower of Scotland do you?

posted by philadelphia eagle

Now GMC- I'm sure you must be hiding your light under a bushel!

The reason for the apparent anomoly is that, contrary to popular belief, Ulster and Northern Ireland are not the same thing.


Trust me I'm not. Bits of history I know a geat deal about but there are whopping big gaps of which I am well aware, I think the more you study the more you realise you need to study and the less ready you are to claim to know everything, geography was never an enthusiasm-as to you being a foreigner I find most canadian or american tourists range from incredibly knowledgeable about some aspects-especially those tracing their roots to completely ignorant to the extent they can't get over the fact we have cars and street lights and are expecting brigaddon in one of the most heavily industrialised countries in europe.

The funniest are the ones bamboozled by the accents-it's a running joke that you have to speak really slowly to give them time to carch up.

Posted by Philadelphia Eagle

Thanks - Buzz As I mentioned before I had a similar discussion with an Englishman but he got lost and retreated most ungraciously by saying that, as a foreigner, my ignorance could be excused!


No comment :sneaky:

Common mistakes include confusing Washington DC with Washington State (they're 3,000 miles apart!), referring to New York City when they mean New York State and vice-versa, thinking that Miami is the state capital of Florida (it's Tallahassee) or that Kansas City is in the State of Kansas (it's in Missouri). and so on.


I thought tallahassee was in kentucky

English Only Please

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 6:23 am
by capt_buzzard
gmc wrote: posted by cap'n buzzard





Would if i knew what you were talking about-you don't mean the flower of Scotland do you?



posted by philadelphia eagle





Trust me I'm not. Bits of history I know a geat deal about but there are whopping big gaps of which I am well aware, I think the more you study the more you realise you need to study and the less ready you are to claim to know everything, geography was never an enthusiasm-as to you being a foreigner I find most canadian or american tourists range from incredibly knowledgeable about some aspects-especially those tracing their roots to completely ignorant to the extent they can't get over the fact we have cars and street lights and are expecting brigaddon in one of the most heavily industrialised countries in europe.



The funniest are the ones bamboozled by the accents-it's a running joke that you have to speak really slowly to give them time to carch up.



Posted by Philadelphia Eagle





No comment :sneaky:







I thought tallahassee was in kentuckySorry Rose of Scotland is the Celtic version.:D . Flower of Scotland is to be true, much better

English Only Please

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 7:20 am
by Philadelphia Eagle
[QUOTE=gmc]posted by cap'n buzzard



Would if i knew what you were talking about-you don't mean the flower of Scotland do you?

posted by philadelphia eagle



Trust me I'm not. Bits of history I know a geat deal about but there are whopping big gaps of which I am well aware, I think the more you study the more you realise you need to study and the less ready you are to claim to know everything, geography was never an enthusiasm-as to you being a foreigner I find most canadian or american tourists range from incredibly knowledgeable about some aspects-especially those tracing their roots to completely ignorant to the extent they can't get over the fact we have cars and street lights and are expecting brigaddon in one of the most heavily industrialised countries in europe.

The funniest are the ones bamboozled by the accents-it's a running joke that you have to speak really slowly to give them time to carch up.

Posted by Philadelphia Eagle



No comment :sneaky:



I thought tallahassee was in kentucky[/QUOTE

Well - there may well be a Tallahassee in KY although it's unlikely. Tallahassee is an Native American name and FL was populated by different tribes than KY.

That's why we tend to follow a city name with the name of the State in which it lies e.g.Cape May, New Jersey or Charlotte, North Carolina etc.

There are so many places with the same name that not to include the State would lead to confusion.

English Only Please

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 8:08 am
by capt_buzzard
Philadelphia Eagle wrote: [QUOTE=gmc]posted by cap'n buzzard





Would if i knew what you were talking about-you don't mean the flower of Scotland do you?



posted by philadelphia eagle





Trust me I'm not. Bits of history I know a geat deal about but there are whopping big gaps of which I am well aware, I think the more you study the more you realise you need to study and the less ready you are to claim to know everything, geography was never an enthusiasm-as to you being a foreigner I find most canadian or american tourists range from incredibly knowledgeable about some aspects-especially those tracing their roots to completely ignorant to the extent they can't get over the fact we have cars and street lights and are expecting brigaddon in one of the most heavily industrialised countries in europe.



The funniest are the ones bamboozled by the accents-it's a running joke that you have to speak really slowly to give them time to carch up.



Posted by Philadelphia Eagle





No comment :sneaky:







I thought tallahassee was in kentucky[/QUOTE



Well - there may well be a Tallahassee in KY although it's unlikely. Tallahassee is an Native American name and FL was populated by different tribes than KY.

That's why we tend to follow a city name with the name of the State in which it lies e.g.Cape May, New Jersey or Charlotte, North Carolina etc.

There are so many places with the same name that not to include the State would lead to confusion.The Donegal accent is mild compared to Cork or Kerry accents. And Irish Roots.Com is a good place to start

English Only Please

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 9:09 am
by capt_buzzard
Here is one for your collection. Ulster Nation. www.ulsternation.org.uk:D

English Only Please

Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 8:44 am
by Lon
Hollywood18 wrote: So, are you saying that you would rather no one who's not actually from Great Britain come in here? Are you offended by others' interest in the UK? That's kind of rude, don't you think? Sorry I was born in America, so am not worthy to take interest in Great Britain. :mad: You take offense too readily my young friend. The Captain merely wanted feedback from U.K.members.

English Only Please

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 3:26 pm
by capt_buzzard
That's it Lon :-6

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 3:12 pm
by Bez
Hi I'm new here and keep replying to old threads because they are so interesting....bet no-one reads my replies.....but hey....I'm having Fun....any way my points are as follows

I was born in southern England......I think of myself as a citizen of the United Kingdom.

I am very patriotic....' Jerusalem' & 'land of hope & Glory' my favourite patriotic songs.

My concerns for the countries future......being too much of a 'Nanny state'

Scroungers bleeding the country dry so that I will get a meagre pension despite working every day of my life since I as 16.

Lack of respect fo people and property by far too many people

Too much greedy litigation

Won't bore you with any more but you get my drift.

The UK is a beautiful and wonderful place and it's people on the whole are warm amd friendly.

P.S. I'm really not a grumpy old beggar, just inspired by you messages to have my say.

warm wishes

Bez :-6

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 3:17 pm
by minks
Bez wrote: Hi I'm new here and keep replying to old threads because they are so interesting....bet no-one reads my replies.....but hey....I'm having Fun....any way my points are as follows

I was born in southern England......I think of myself as a citizen of the United Kingdom.

I am very patriotic....' Jerusalem' & 'land of hope & Glory' my favourite patriotic songs.

My concerns for the countries future......being too much of a 'Nanny state'

Scroungers bleeding the country dry so that I will get a meagre pension despite working every day of my life since I as 16.

Lack of respect fo people and property by far too many people

Too much greedy litigation

Won't bore you with any more but you get my drift.

The UK is a beautiful and wonderful place and it's people on the whole are warm amd friendly.

P.S. I'm really not a grumpy old beggar, just inspired by you messages to have my say.

warm wishes

Bez :-6


Greetings Bez: Glad you introduced yourself, sorry to have missed the rest of yer posts but will pay closer attention from here on in.

Cheers from Canada

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 3:18 pm
by abbey
Warm Wishes to you too Bez :-6

I love to go onto the Yorkshire Moors & belt out Jerusalum.

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 3:22 pm
by Betty Boop
Hi Bez,:-6





I totally agree with all you say in this post, and I'm sure your not a grumpy old beggar!! :wah:

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2005 12:13 pm
by Bez
[FONT="Comic Sans MS"]Hi Betty

Well I wasn't a grumpy old beggar once I got all that stuff off my chest and even a day at work counselling, commiserating, cajoling, craving (I'm trying to give up smoking) etc etc hasn't dampened my spirits.

Tomorrow we'll all be saying TGIF and looking forward to the weekend. Weather forecast not too bad so I'm going to think of something typically English to do on Saturday......might have a seaside day in Brighton....only 15 minutes on the train for me.....won't take the car because parking is a nightmare and very expensive.

I think it may be Gay Pride weekend so could be entertaining with all the floats.

I had a short break in Cornwall a couple of years ago. It's a magical place but i was pleased I've only got a small car ....all those dinky roads. I'd like to visit again on one day.

Warm wishes.....Bez :driving:

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2005 2:09 pm
by Betty Boop
Bez wrote: [FONT="Comic Sans MS"]Hi Betty



Well I wasn't a grumpy old beggar once I got all that stuff off my chest and even a day at work counselling, commiserating, cajoling, craving (I'm trying to give up smoking) etc etc hasn't dampened my spirits.

Tomorrow we'll all be saying TGIF and looking forward to the weekend. Weather forecast not too bad so I'm going to think of something typically English to do on Saturday......might have a seaside day in Brighton....only 15 minutes on the train for me.....won't take the car because parking is a nightmare and very expensive.

I think it may be Gay Pride weekend so could be entertaining with all the floats.

I had a short break in Cornwall a couple of years ago. It's a magical place but i was pleased I've only got a small car ....all those dinky roads. I'd like to visit again on one day.



Warm wishes.....Bez :driving:




:yh_rotfl All those dinky roads!!! I used to drive a landrover discovery round those!!! You get used to it and you learn to reverse pretty quickly!! The times I've had to jump out my car and reverse somebody elses car for them for us to pass!!!:wah:



Where abouts in Cornwall did you get too??



Good luck with the non-smoking!

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2005 2:27 pm
by Bez
I stayed at a really nice B&B near the Lost Gardens of Heligan....Lower Barn - Mevagissey, so I obvioulsy went there (the lost gardens). I'd watched a programme on the TV about how the project started and wanted to go ther for so long.b Also went to Eden project, Lanhydrock, Charleston etc. I was only there for 4 days and packed in as much sight seeing as possible .

I am a member of the RHS and love visiting gardens....we have loads down here in Sussex and I also like going to national Trust places....in fact I'm just about interested in anything.

What do you do in your spare time ???

Bez :-6

English Only Please

Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2005 2:33 pm
by Betty Boop
Bez wrote: I stayed at a really nice B&B near the Lost Gardens of Heligan....Lower Barn - Mevagissey, so I obvioulsy went there (the lost gardens). I'd watched a programme on the TV about how the project started and wanted to go ther for so long.b Also went to Eden project, Lanhydrock, Charleston etc. I was only there for 4 days and packed in as much sight seeing as possible .

I am a member of the RHS and love visiting gardens....we have loads down here in Sussex and I also like going to national Trust places....in fact I'm just about interested in anything.

What do you do in your spare time ???



Bez :-6


You were quite a way from me then, a good hours drive or more. I'm near Lands End and St. Michaels Mount, we have some good gardens here too, one being on the mount, Trewidden and Trengwainton are very close.

You beat me to the Eden Project, haven't made it there yet, maybe we'll try it out of season later this year.



Spare Time?

I don't get any!!! I've got two children, a boy of eight and a girl of three and a single Mum to boot!!

English Only Please

Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2006 6:25 am
by spot
gmc wrote: Write out a hundred times Great Britain consists of England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland-used to be Southern Ireland as well but they escaped.And nobody picked up on this? gmc, you know better - go on, analyse the title of the State for us - "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland".

When it comes to predicting the political shape in a few decades, I think we need to say first what constitutes a State at the moment. Once it was dead easy - it set its own laws, it was a State. Then we got involved in Treaty obligations that affected sovereignty - the International Court, GATT/WTO, The EU. At the moment, we remain a State to the extent that we retain control of Foreign Affairs and Taxation. I can’t think of any other aspect of UK governance that hasn’t been diluted, but those two are still decided in Westminster.

If either of them are devolved or diluted then the UK loses sovereignty beyond the point where “State” retains its current meaning. Westminster government would merely become another level in a chain that starts with the parish council and ends with the persons who declare war and hold the purse-strings. I suspect that taxation will be the one that falls first.

Does it bother me that Statehood will become more a European concept and less a UK one? Not in the slightest. The more groups there are who can shift armies around the globe, the less stable the globe is. The sooner we reach a point where there’s only one person in command of the armies, the safer we’ll all be. Assuming, of course, that this current stack of war criminals in the US have long since served their time.

English Only Please

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2006 6:57 am
by Yavanna
Actually, we already have lost parliamentary sovereignty , as a result of a series of legal cases arising from the Treaty of Rome (1957 I think) and the Human Rights Act 1998, both of which state that where UK laws conflict or are incompatible with Euro law, Euro law applies.

To the extent that our laws fit in with European directives, we still have sovereignty ; for anything else, we defer to those directives.