Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWot don't modern ladies' ones do that???
"In clear", my ref to Victorian ladies' trains was because the metaphor is Victorian...I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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This all reminds me of a joke told by the local vicar during his weekly visit to the village primary school - 'Q: Why couldn't the engine sit down? A: Because it had a tender behind."
Another was "Q: Why did the lobster blush? A: Because it saw Queen Mary's bottom." (That one went rather above my head, not knowing anything about lobsters)
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhile some of us have been training ourselves to keep track of the topic and others of us railing against it in continuously welded manner, it occurs to me that another absurd phrase that I've heard in station announcements (albeit not one that I've encountered recently so perhaps it's been quietly consigned to the ballast) is "the service now standing at platform × is the twenty-three ten service for..."...
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostThey already are. In fact under privatisation railway services get more public funding than when they were publicly owned.
That's why there has to be more of it.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostCan you imagine just how much additional tax revenue it would take fully to fund the amounts currently paid in fares to all public transport service providers for everything from a humble short bus journey to a first class ticket from London to Auckland?!
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I think you will find it is going into the pockets of the employees, too. Thirty years ago, a job on the railways wasn't particularly well paid but it was good steady employment - i.e. you were not likely to get made redundant. I am told freight drivers can easily earn £75,000 a year nowadays.
In what other industry could anyone be paid for ten hours at triple time plus a day in lieu for ringing in to see whether they were required (and being told they weren't)?
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostThey already are. In fact under privatisation railway services get more public funding than when they were publicly owned.
But this thread is in danger of becoming political & therefore at risk of being shunted off to a siding.
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Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostI think you will find it is going into the pockets of the employees, too. Thirty years ago, a job on the railways wasn't particularly well paid but it was good steady employment - i.e. you were not likely to get made redundant. I am told freight drivers can easily earn £75,000 a year nowadays.
Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostIn what other industry could anyone be paid for ten hours at triple time plus a day in lieu for ringing in to see whether they were required (and being told they weren't)?
Ahem...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostHow so? Public transport of any and all kinds cannot replace that, can it? ...
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The prioritisation of efficient public transport services in cities, however, is something that I probably support as much as you do.Last edited by ahinton; 08-02-14, 10:24.
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