Thank you both for the kind comments. Were it not for the almost certainty that anyone in charge of the RFH receiving my comments would immediately file them in their waste paper basket, I would take the trouble of finding out to whom I should be writing. I would have thought the self-evident drop in attendance numbers should be apparent whoever is in charge.
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I loved the RFH in Ken Livingstone's time over 40 years ago ,when they opened up the first floor and there were lots of interesting things going on. I can't understand why some trendies have to come along and ruin everything. I've never been back to S.Pancras Satation since its alteration. All it needed was a lick of paint.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWere it not for the almost certainty that anyone in charge of the RFH receiving my comments would immediately file them in their waste paper basket, I would take the trouble of finding out to whom I should be writing.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThank you both for the kind comments. Were it not for the almost certainty that anyone in charge of the RFH receiving my comments would immediately file them in their waste paper basket, I would take the trouble of finding out to whom I should be writing. I would have thought the self-evident drop in attendance numbers should be apparent whoever is in charge.
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There is a new (to me) habit of people conducting telephone calls on their mobile phone in public (e.g. on a train) in 'speaker' mode, so that both sides of the conversation are audible to all - usually at volume. And the same antisocial habit with watching a film or sports event with commentary. No headphones or buds, so....
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I share your loathing . Another trend is to plug the phone into the car stereo so that the other person's voice is boomed out to the neighbourhood. I suppose they do this so that they can still use their phone in the car without breaking the law, but, like so many people's behaviour nowadays, it shows lack of consideration for others.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostThere is a new (to me) habit of people conducting telephone calls on their mobile phone in public (e.g. on a train) in 'speaker' mode, so that both sides of the conversation are audible to all - usually at volume. And the same antisocial habit with watching a film or sports event with commentary. No headphones or buds, so....
It'll be interesting to see just how quiet it is!
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI share your loathing . Another trend is to plug the phone into the car stereo so that the other person's voice is boomed out to the neighbourhood. I suppose they do this so that they can still use their phone in the car without breaking the law, but, like so many people's behaviour nowadays, it shows lack of consideration for others.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post...The general view that "children should be seen but not heard" came to be viewed as repressive from the 1960s on, but sadly it was replaced by an opposite one that saw acting out as spiritually or psychologically liberating...
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
I've just booked seats for a train journey later this month, and was a bit surprised to be offered the option of a Quiet carriage: I thought they'd been phased out.
It'll be interesting to see just how quiet it is!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostIt's not uncommon now for parents to let very small children scream in public, sometimes repeatedly, without restraint or reproof.
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Continuing the Santander PIN saga - not yet managed to get to a Santander ATM machine. However yesterday I thought I was close to a bank office I used to know - and it should have been an easy diversion to vistt that branch to get things sorted. Didn't work out well - as in the end we discovered the branch had closed. So I still have one credit card which at the moment I can't use. I hope that eventually I will be able to get this restored.
This is quite a nuisance, but is likely to prompt us to transfer most of our funds to yet another bank. Bank branch closures and ATM closures, and the shift towards not always such good online services, really are not serving customers well - and it's not only one bank which is operating in this way - many of the few that are left are almost as unhelpful.
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Dyson is to move its manufacturing operations to Malaysia, making half its UK workforce redundant. Why? Because in the final analysis there awaits a cheap, compliant workforce glad of the work. If ever there was an example of us living under a multinationals' dictatorship it was never more clearly illustrated. People on the right will say: well, British workers out price themselves in the jobs market and don't work hard enough, when deep down they know that technological advance is the main factor that increases productivity. But apologists for the capitalist system have to ask themselves: do they want a consumerist society, with all that that entails in fulfilling peoples dreams for home ownership and unsustainable living? Or do they want what Karl Marx pointed out to the be basis of a "healthy" capitalism: maximisation of profits and competitive advantage - which was the order of things before someone thought up the idea of buying off working class integrity with blandishments and a so-called "stake" in society, disregardful of all the insecurities involved?
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