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Coss

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Everything posted by Coss

  1. My view too. He's got a NZ passport, or at least he's holding one in the photos I've seen. That would make him a Citizen. Unless they have some other crime to get him on, most unlikely. They still can't extradite DotCom, and they want to get rid of him.
  2. Had to chuckle over this one, a Thai in trouble again. _____________________________________________ The inaugural final of an Islamic international rugby tournament between Malaysia and Algeria was abandoned at the weekend after a savage all-in brawl involving players, officials and spectators. Sunday's match in Malacca was the final of the inaugural Crescent Cup, a six-nation tournament also involving Iran, Lebanon, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan aimed at promoting solidarity and close cooperation between Islamic countries. New Straits Times reported that an assistant referee had several teeth broken and suffered neck injuries in the melee, while 10 players from both sides required treatment for broken bones and cuts after the fight. The Algerians were upset at what they saw as the partiality of the Thai referee, who later awarded Malaysia a 19-11 victory, according to a report on the match from Radio Algerie. Malaysian Rugby Union (MRU) general manager Mazuri Sallehudin blamed the organisers of the tournament but accepted that his body, which sanctioned the event, could expect to be held to account by World Rugby. "I believe the Algerian players could have been frustrated due to communication issues with the referee whose English was hard to understand," he told the New Straits Times. "From the feedback we have received, the organisers did not have enough security personnel on hand ... to quell the situation quickly. "(One of our players) was attacked by six Algerians and it was at that point that the spectators went in to help him. "We have already filed a police report on the incident and will have a council meeting to decide what action to take soon. "Unfortunately, MRU and possibly the national team could also face disciplinary action from World Rugby and ARFU but we do not know yet." http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/international/69453367/Islamic-international-rugby-final-abandoned-after-mass-brawl
  3. " i just can't help putting out a counter-point, it needs to be done." that's right !
  4. What the planes should do, is have big seats at the front and slowly they get smaller as you get to tiny ones at the back. That way, all the important people, (Wives, Children, small men Politicians) are protected most, in case of a crash. And all us fellas get to make the plane front-heavy, which'll make it go faster right? Saving fuel and time.
  5. Yep and the excess baggage gets moor room in the hold, having paid for it. Should do, I think that would be fair, along with a smaller seat. I'd (and you'd) be better off with larger seats. Actually, between you and your wife, you'd average two normal fares Now if only they could get you a large seat and your wife a smaller one.
  6. What Pretendingtobemale said. and also I've woken up in much worse condition than I should have, sometimes I put it down to really crap G&Ts, sometimes I thought I had been drugged, but still had my money, not sure. I suppose it's eminently possible that my forays into mind altering experiences when young, had predisposed me to some measure of control and theretofore the charming little pixies had no opportunity to rob me, if I was a victim of spiked drinks. But I guess I'll never know.
  7. If we're going to open the 'fatties pay more' argument, I say this - If I'm three times the weight and I'm paying three times the price, I want three times the space, three times the food and three times the G&Ts. Thats how it works. And three times the obsequious smiles, while we're at it. Think Mr Creosote.
  8. Reminds me, I must get myself 'wormed' again.
  9. Heres one on climate change http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11465003 NZ should expect more droughts.
  10. Not those evil Aussies though http://englishnews.thaipbs.or.th/indonesia-waives-visa-requirements-for-45-countries and Vietnam soon too.... http://www.ttrweekly.com/site/2015/06/vietnam-extends-visa-free-list/
  11. "...the vessel hit her while reversing." One of the basic tenets of good boat handling is 'keeping a good look out'
  12. Coss

    Like Hairy?

    Actually feel a little sorry for this one. http://phoenixfloe.tumblr.com photo at the link
  13. I plead constipation, the 2nd amendment
  14. I'm so glad that he's wearing a woolly hat, this leading man from Japan, he's experiencing being a prat, and showing he definitely can.
  15. Nice to see Brosnan in this type of role, he's getting better as he gets older.
  16. Survivor 2015 - Milla Jojovich Pierce Brosnan, both very good in this, modern day explosions, intelligence people, well worth a watch.
  17. Sure - "reduced yields and thus higher prices." no arguments with that The myth, however, goes - we will all starve and die, economies will crumble to dust and the very existence of the human race will be threatened. That, is what I'm disproving.
  18. Only in terms of ease of use, there're also plenty of non bee pollinators who'd step in to fill the role if domestic honey bees were gone. Nature abhors a vacuum.
  19. I think we all remember the alarmist stories that the domestic honey bee was in decline and therefore the world food supply was under threat and we'd all starve to death... Apart from the fact that things like rice, wheat, corn, feed grass for cows etc are all wind pollinated, here's another reason those scaremongers are idiots. http://www.agprofess...e-honeybee-free Populations of imported European honeybees, relied upon for centuries in American agriculture, continue to decline under pressure from an array of pathogens, parasites and other problems. Danforth said honeybee hive managers are seeing losses at 30 to 40 percent each year, with damages during the worst “colony collapse†years topping 70 percent. With that key agricultural resource insecure, apple growers in New York – the nation’s No. 2 apple-producing state – face a future of higher hive rental costs or limits on honeybee availability. As one of the nation’s leading advocates for native bees as an agricultural asset, Danforth is among 11 faculty members who rely upon Cornell Orchards for research support. Since 2008, he and members of his lab have been surveying bee activity at 20 upstate orchards, including Cornell’s Ithaca and Lansing sites. His team has found more than 100 wild bee species at these orchards, far more than previously thought, with often surprising levels of diversity and abundance. Danforth’s group has detected a total of 26 wild bee species at Cornell’s Ithaca orchard alone. more at the link...
  20. Dear national Police Chief Captain General Colonel Vice Regal Admiral 1st class Right Honourable Companion of the Order of Meritorious Lions of the Golden Water, Somchai Police officer, your beloved Mr Thaksin, has exhibited behaviour that damages the dignity and reputation of police, by allowing, during his tenure, the Police to continue to be nepotistic, corrupt and feckless. This has lead to the police being widely regarded, both domestically and internationally, as 'Keystone cops with consequences'. Your continued defence of this position, and loyalty to your progenitor, demonstrates only your short sighted hopes that the Thaksin family will one day resume the reigns of power in Thailand and that at that time you hope to be rewarded. Your are sir, the representation of everything a properly defined police force, should not be. Kind regards Coss
  21. The Nation BANGKOK: -- NATIONAL police chief General Somyot Poompanmuang said Friday he has sent back a request for him to strip former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra of his rank as a police lieutenant colonel to the police committee that considered the issue. The panel had failed to thoroughly determine how Thaksin's behaviour deserved the action, he said. Previously, Somyot sent back a request to strip Thaksin of his rank on grounds that a panel member failed to sign his name to endorse the decision. "I insist that I'm not buying time. I don't fear [anything]. Everything must go through the process in accordance with the regulations," Somyot told reporters. According to the 2004 regulation on police rank, an officer is to be stripped their rank if they violate the regulation through behaviour that damages the dignity and reputation of police, he said. Source: http://www.nationmul...e-30261704.html
  22. "While the IQ of pre-school students is acceptable, IQ drops as primary schooling commences," Now there's your problem, it's the schooling!
  23. Debt-ridden Thailand being sucked into whirlpool of deflation Thanong Khanthong BANGKOK: -- Disinflation - or negative inflation - has hit Thailand for the past five months in a row. In the first quarter of this year, inflation was minus-0.5 per cent. The situation worsened in April, with inflation at negative-1.04 per cent. In May the disinflation surged to -1.27 per cent, prompting growing concern as to whether deflation is waiting on the horizon. While disinflation is a temporary phenomenon of price decline, deflation represents a general collapse in prices and demand, aggravated by a lack of fresh investment and a marked slowdown in the velocity of money (its speed of circulation). Once an economy plunges into a deflationary spiral, it is extremely difficult to perk it up again. A dose of fiscal expansion and sharp rate cuts will have to be met with renewed confidence and fresh investment to create employment. The advanced economies - the United States, the UK, Japan and most recently Europe - have embarked on this policy of Keynesian spending and zero interest rates to pull themselves out of the severe slump, yet despite seven years of unorthodox methods a recovery is nowhere in sight. Indeed, a recovery can never come under the current insurmountable level of indebtedness. Global debt has reached $200 trillion, or three times the size of the global GDP of $70 trillion. The global economy can't grow with more debt. Without debt restructuring, any recovery is out of the question. Most Thai economists agree that deflation is not on the table yet, as the marginal fall in prices, caused by weak oil and food prices, will hit rock bottom soon after the economic pickup. "We expect headline inflation to bottom out and then pick up gradually from June onwards," Phatra Securities reported on Tuesday. "However, we expect that headline inflation will not turn positive until the fourth quarter of 2015." Disinflation and deflation aside, Thailand is entering a dangerous period of economic slump and geopolitical risks. The downturn is caused by weak demand, both internally and externally. Household debt has reached Bt10.4 trillion, in a Thai economy whose total size is Bt13 trillion. Thai consumers no longer have much room to buy. To consume more they will have to further leverage their household balance sheet. They can't create more debt. This has resulted in an overcapacity or oversupply situation in the economy. Businesses do not want to invest further because they can't sell their goods or products. Banks are more reluctant to lend for fear of bad debts. Small and medium-scale enterprises are being hit hard by the lack of fresh credit and weak consumer demand. Externally, the Thai export sector, which has been the engine of the Thai growth, is sputtering. The export sector has also registered shrinkage five months in a row, with figures for the first quarter of 2015 showing minus-4.3 per cent growth. The explanation is either weak overseas demand or a lack of competitiveness in Thai industries. If overseas demand is the problem, there is nothing much we can do. If we cut the prices - by lowering the baht exchange rate - other countries can do the same, triggering a currency war. If the problem lies in exports' loss of competitiveness, then Thai industries have to take responsibility. So what should be the appropriate policy response from Thai authorities? Government spending grew almost 30 per cent in the first quarter of this year, offering a degree of economic stimulus. But we all know that fiscal stimulus has its limitations. One can't expect the government to create a heavy debt burden year in and year out in order to perk up the economy. Japan and other welfare states have tried this medicine before and all ended up with unsustainable public debt. In the case of Japan, the government debt to GDP has reached a staggering 240 per cent. Creating more debt risks destroying the value of the yen, now hanging by a thread and on life support provided by the Bank of Japan's government bond-buying programme. Then it comes to the efficacy of monetary policy. The Bank of Thailand acted as if it had blood in its eyes when it cut its benchmark rate twice in a row to 1.50 per cent. The banking authorities must have seen disturbing signs in the economy, prompting them to cut the rates in a hurry. First, they want to send out a signal that they are providing an accommodative environment to stimulate domestic demand and growth. Second, they want to encourage the banks to extend further credit, particularly to the SMEs. Third, they want to rely on exchange rate targeting to boost exports. In macroeconomic management, we can't overdo both the fiscal expansion and the monetary stimulus. Government overspending will create debt burden for future generations. Besides, disbursements are not timely enough. At the same time, monetary stimulus, if it is overcooked, discourages businesses, industry, households and the private sector in general from making appropriate adjustments to the actual prices. For the Bank of Thailand's low interest rate policy carries a double-barrel effect: lowering the cost of borrowing and weakening the baht. But we can see that the banks have not cut their borrowing rates to match the central bank's rate reduction. Thai banks' profit margins remain at a historic high compared to banks in other countries, with profits of Bt50 billion in the first quarter of this year. A quick calculation projects bank profits at Bt200 billion this year. Banks are fattening their pocketbooks at the expense of the general economy and Thai borrowers. That's why Bank of Thailand governor Prasarn Trairatvorakul was rather emotional when he found out that the banks had maintained their borrowing rates intact. That means Thai consumers are not benefiting from this round of rate cuts. Now we come to the exchange rate targeting. The baht is losing value in a hurry under the Bank of Thailand's deliberate policy to weaken the currency. Last month alone, the baht weakened by 4 per cent, almost touching Bt34 to the dollar. Siam Commercial Bank recently predicted exchange rate targeting could drive the baht down to Bt35 before the end of the year. Destroying currency value is a bad money policy, but, strangely enough, most central bankers have adopted it in earnest. Weakening a country's currency might benefit the domestic export sector in the short term, but overall it harms the nation's purchasing power. Inflation will strike back with a vengeance. Under good money policy, the value of the currency remains stable over time. This benefits not only grass-roots citizens but also the overall economy, because all the participants do not have to play catch-up with runaway inflation. A low interest rate environment, coupled with a weakening currency, discourages the economy from making the necessary adjustments. Bad companies, which should have folded, remain on the scene to create future burden. They use resources that they don't deserve access to. A low interest rate policy also drives away savings. Capital accumulation gives way to speculative investment in the stock market or real estate. Retirees or pensioners earn nothing from their bank savings. They do not deserve this kind of punishment from bad money policy, in which they almost earn nothing from interest returns while at the same time the baht's value diminishes steadily and harms their purchasing power. In the end, the way out for Thailand is a combination of appropriate doses of fiscal and monetary medicine that allow the economy to adjust at its own pace. Thailand has already fallen into a debt trap, with combined private and government debt to GDP reaching 130 per cent. This high debt level will have to be brought down via restructuring, because raising incomes to pay down the debt looks almost impossible now given the global outlook. The government can tax the rich more to help out the poor. The banks must make less profit. The Bank of Thailand must not be tempted into a monetary trap, which would risk plunging the country into a zero interest rate environment. By that time it would be too late to save the baht. Source: http://www.nationmul...o-30261656.html
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