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# we will be back one day
The joke will all be on you all, when we come back to power (at some point)

We WILL have our time again
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 17:55, archived)
# I do not respond well to threats, Mr Howard.
Although you do realise how odd it looks, your political views taking the form of a threat?
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 17:57, archived)
# I really hope the flux capacitor is broken Marty
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 17:58, archived)
# Are you sure you're a tory
and not a member of the Illuminati?
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 17:59, archived)
# you left off the
"Mwa-hahahahaha!!!"
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 17:59, archived)
# I thought that the idea was....
..... that the party in power worked for the good of the country, and had little to do with 'having our time' and 'power' etc. Maybe the Tories are just power crazed neo-nazis after all.
besides which, there are no nationalised industries to sell off now, to artificially, and temporarily, stimulate the economy, as Thatcher did. Oh, and Blair's getting slagged for fighting a third world country, so the Tories can't even do that one now
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 18:02, archived)
# I'm inclined to think that selling off nationalised industries
permanently improved the economy, by reducing the amount of tax needed to support them and removing their artificial advantage. On the other hand Major artificially and temporarily stimulated the economy by borrowing lots of money and caused a recession a few years later. trafficconeshotlinearseface
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 18:07, archived)
# Perhaps in things like telecommunications
[I would hate to think I was still stuck with the Post Office for my telephone] the increased competition has been beneficial; in essential services such as electricity, gas and water it definitely has not - higher prices, especially for the poorest on 'card meters' who actually pay more per unit than the rich.

And don't even mention trains.
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 18:10, archived)
# The trains
(mentions trains) are hampered by rules designed to create competition where there shouldn't be any competition. That kind of thing really irritates me. "Ooh, these people all offer the same service, and by rights there should only be one company offering it, but that would be a monopoly and we know monopolies are bad, don't we children, so let's force them to work seperately and then they'll lower their prices, just like competition in the real world."
Trains compete against other transport services, in reality. Possibly this means there shouldn't be any trains, or possibly if there was only one train company (or two) it would be a success. But making a pretence of a competetive market where there's no reason for one is just naive.
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 18:14, archived)
# Yikes! *hides*
told you not to mention them
(, Sun 10 Apr 2005, 18:15, archived)