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Thread: Cost Of Living Crisis

  1. #51

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Cyril, who's batting for Team Klaus most days here, knows it's true but is desperate for the Teletubbies to remain in denial by staring at Netflix shite for 12 hours per day.

  2. #52

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    The most someone with £500 can lose is £500.

    I remarked in another thread Turkey's annual inflation rate is 70%. Asif with a million lira tucked away has lost 700k of his wealth, while Ahmed who has 500 lira to his name has lost 350 lira of his. They both lost an identical percentage of their purchasing power but who do you think has the longest face?

    I guess you think it's the richer guy, but it's Ahmed as he will starve first.

  3. #53

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by lardy View Post
    I guess you think it's the richer guy, but it's Ahmed as he will starve first.
    Ahmed can't even buy a coat with what he's got left while Asif still owns his coat production factory and is drowning in pot noodles.

  4. #54

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    I can only repeat my info suggests social and economic turmoil the like the world has never witnessed before will be triggered within the next nine weeks.

    High density population areas will burn first. Residents of cities and towns will flee. Eventually rural communities will be overwhelmed by those intent on living another day. Farmers will use their last shotgun cartridge on themselves.

    The strategy is to ensure those who survive the internecine bloodletting will not just welcome the solution offered to ease their suffering but demand they sacrifice everything they own in return for the promise of being allowed to exist as a worm-eating slave at a secure accommodation.

  5. #55

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    I'll be off soon to visit the barber and then proceed to get sloshed at two of my favourite drinking dens.

    Both have beer gardens. It's where I linger. I wait for the unwary to come within doom-mongering range. I don't care how happy/relaxed/content they are initially because I almost always ensure their mood soon becomes gloomy before depression sets in.

    I shall return tomorrow to submit messages, none of which will be happy-clappy.

  6. #56

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I'll be off soon to visit the barber and then proceed to get sloshed at two of my favourite drinking dens.

    Both have beer gardens. It's where I linger. I wait for the unwary to come within doom-mongering range. I don't care how happy/relaxed/content they are initially because I almost always ensure their mood soon becomes gloomy before depression sets in.

    I shall return tomorrow to submit messages, none of which will be happy-clappy.
    It's cute how you think you're bringing their mood down with hard truths when the reality is they went to the pub with friends and are annoyed that they're being bothered by an uninvited man holding a plastic bag and spittling while he talks

  7. #57

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by delmbox View Post
    It's cute how you think you're bringing their mood down with hard truths when the reality is they went to the pub with friends and are annoyed that they're being bothered by an uninvited man holding a plastic bag and spittling while he talks
    For the first time in a very long while, I think organ might be right. He almost certainly does bring their mood down.

  8. #58

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    During 2021 average workers' pay rose 4.4%, average consumer prices rose 8.5%, and average CEO pay (in 500 biggest corporations) rose 17%. Even in pandemic, capitalism deepens inequality. Gross!!!

    Get the Tory’s out, levelling up my arse.

  9. #59

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by lardy View Post
    For the first time in a very long while, I think organ might be right. He almost certainly does bring their mood down.
    I was stymied yesterday. The barber's was heaving and I didn't fancy waiting for hours. Both pubs were virtually empty. However, I believe I did manage to ruin one bloke's day. I would like to think before returning home he visited a supermarket to exit with a carrier bag in each hand weighed down with a load of tins.

    It seems you are determined to remain complacent. Time for one of my favourite quotes. It's from Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged: You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.

    If your plan is to Lewis Hamilton it to your nearest Tesco to fill the boot and back seats up with loads of grub within hours of learning of whatever event is planned to kickstart the collapse has happened, then you'll likely find yourself in a giant scrum down every aisle battling others for the last bag of frozen sprouts, etc.

  10. #60

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    I noticed last week a decline in pub punters' numbers, at least in those I attend, and there's been fewer in them this week.

    Yesterday and on Wednesday for the first time I noticed a marked decline of shoppers inside Tesco, Iceland and elsewhere. There were far fewer in the streets too. Also their quietness struck me.

    Fish and chip shops, takeaways, pubs and restaurants will be the first businesses to shutter as people begin to fasten their financial belt at an increasing rate.

  11. #61

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Mention of fish and chip shops being among the first to go belly up. It's begun.

    Lancashire chippy once named in UK's top 10 closes down as costs continue to surge - https://www.lancs.live/news/cost-of-...d-uks-24166490

  12. #62

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I noticed last week a decline in pub punters' numbers, at least in those I attend
    No comment

  13. #63

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by delmbox View Post
    No comment
    Bloody hell, is that Judge Dredd walking towards the pub? Drink up quick!

  14. #64

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by delmbox View Post
    No comment
    Contrary to what you may believe, when I socialise I don't ring a clanging bell while prophesying "the end is nigh."

    I do however always have a mouth organ on my person. My repertoire is glumness personified. About the most optimistic tune I play is Nearer, My God, to Thee.

  15. #65

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by cyril evans awaydays View Post
    Bloody hell, is that Judge Dredd walking towards the pub? Drink up quick!
    Less of your lip as well, boyo.

    The landlord in one of the boozers has of late foregone a nice earner by making the excellent juke box free. I overheard his wife remark they are loathe to raise their alcohol prices even though they are paying circa 10% more than a few months back, and he groaned yesterday about the increased cost of heating and lighting the joint.

    I popped into a Wetherspoon too and was surprised by their hike in prices. From what I could see there was a lot less on plates than there once was. That's known as shrinkflation.

    At your advanced age you likely know much more about shrinkage than many of us.

  16. #66

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    Less of your lip as well, boyo.

    The landlord in one of the boozers has of late foregone a nice earner by making the excellent juke box free. I overheard his wife remark they are loathe to raise their alcohol prices even though they are paying circa 10% more than a few months back, and he groaned yesterday about the increased cost of heating and lighting the joint.

    I popped into a Wetherspoon too and was surprised by their hike in prices. From what I could see there was a lot less on plates than there once was. That's known as shrinkflation.

    At your advanced age you likely know much more about shrinkage than many of us.
    I guess the free jukey playing Nearer, My God to Thee on a continuous loop did little to persuade the Landlord he is in the right game!

  17. #67

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    I intended to ask whether you had observed clues to the impending collapse. They are becoming difficult to ignore. Fuel/energy inflation appears to be the means employed to bring the hammer down.

    “The illusion of freedom will continue as long as it's profitable to continue the illusion. At the point where the illusion becomes too expensive to maintain, they will just take down the scenery, they will pull back the curtains, they will move the tables and chairs out of the way and you will see the brick wall at the back of the theater.” Frank Zappa.

  18. #68

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I intended to ask whether you had observed clues to the impending collapse. They are becoming difficult to ignore. Fuel/energy inflation appears to be the means employed to bring the hammer down.

    “The illusion of freedom will continue as long as it's profitable to continue the illusion. At the point where the illusion becomes too expensive to maintain, they will just take down the scenery, they will pull back the curtains, they will move the tables and chairs out of the way and you will see the brick wall at the back of the theater.” Frank Zappa.
    Was that the Frank Zappa that left a $40 million estate or some other anti-capitalist revolutionary?

  19. #69

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Historical fuel prices here ….. https://www.statista.com/statistics/...es-since-1976/

    How come the government are blaming the increases we are seeing on the current crisis in Ukraine when it’s cheaper than it was in 2013?

  20. #70

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    Less of your lip as well, boyo.

    The landlord in one of the boozers has of late foregone a nice earner by making the excellent juke box free. I overheard his wife remark they are loathe to raise their alcohol prices even though they are paying circa 10% more than a few months back, and he groaned yesterday about the increased cost of heating and lighting the joint.

    I popped into a Wetherspoon too and was surprised by their hike in prices. From what I could see there was a lot less on plates than there once was. That's known as shrinkflation.

    At your advanced age you likely know much more about shrinkage than many of us.
    Do you take advantage of Happy Hour?

  21. #71

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    I expected deflection.

    As mentioned in another post, on trips out for two days prior I noticed for the first time a marked drop in shoppers and people walking around shopping streets. I wouldn't say anyone looked suicidal, though I felt I sensed a growing feeling of despair. The virtual silence at times was quite eerie.

  22. #72

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Taunton Blue Genie View Post
    Do you take advantage of Happy Hour?
    I don't visit anywhere which has a happy hour. Well, I wouldn't, would I?

    From perusing so many of your messages, your happiest when increasing your carbon footprint. Klaus and friends are in a hurry to price you out of doing so.

  23. #73

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I don't visit anywhere which has a happy hour. Well, I wouldn't, would I?

    From perusing so many of your messages, your happiest when increasing your carbon footprint. Klaus and friends are in a hurry to price you out of doing so.
    Well, you are right in one respect. I'm getting used to the idea that one particular pastime of mine is becoming highly stigmatised.....

  24. #74

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    The most someone with £500 can lose is £500.

    I remarked in another thread Turkey's annual inflation rate is 70%. Asif with a million lira tucked away has lost 700k of his wealth, while Ahmed who has 500 lira to his name has lost 350 lira of his. They both lost an identical percentage of their purchasing power but who do you think has the longest face?
    so if someone loses everything they have, this isn't as bad as someone who only loses half of what they have.

    got it.

  25. #75

    Re: Cost Of Living Crisis

    Quote Originally Posted by DryCleaning View Post
    so if someone loses everything they have, this isn't as bad as someone who only loses half of what they have.

    got it.
    I gave a very simple example which you either could not comprehend or chose to misrepresent.

    350 Turkish lira is less than twenty quid, while 700k of the same currency is around 33 thousand pounds.

    Factor in how long it would take to earn those two sums and the timeframe to accumulate their original wealth. When you have you might be able to conclude just why Asif would have a face down to his arse, as Ahmed yawns and shrugs about his loss.

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