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  4. England is just about bankrupt too...

England is just about bankrupt too...

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  • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

    Actually it is only recently that England != Britain if you check historically England was used as a description of the united kingdom, it has only become seperated due to the nationalistic Scots etc wanting to distance themselves from England. Its perception rather than fact, a lot of laws refer to England yet apply to the whole country. Oh and if England is Bankrupt what would that make Scotland? :mad:

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    hairy_hats
    wrote on last edited by
    #9

    Alex hogarth wrote:

    if you check historically England was used as a description of the united kingdom,

    Define "historically"? I think you're wrong. Look back to Tudor times, for example: laws were passed "in Anglia et Cornubia", i.e. "in England and Cornwall", because Cornwall was recognised as having a separate identity and legal status. England has only been used by the English (and foreigners unaware of the actual situation) to mean the whole UK.

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    • T ToddHileHoffer

      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/iainmartin/4295219/Gordon-Brown-brings-Britain-to-the-edge-of-bankruptcy.html[^] So it seems when our financial system collapses the Brits will be their to suffer with us. Misery loves company.

      I didn't get any requirements for the signature

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      R Giskard Reventlov
      wrote on last edited by
      #10

      Put aside all the windy rhetoric for a moment but what would actually be the consequence of the banking system being allowed to fail and the country, essentially, becoming insolvent? Is that the road to anarchy? Should I pop down the road and purchase that 9mm and stock up on beans and bottled water? Or would Brown, for whom history appears to be not something he ever learns from, start a war or somesuch to distract the populace? I worry that we really are sleepwalking to disaster being led by a dead-man-walking and I don't believe we are a long way from it.

      me, me, me

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      • H hairy_hats

        Alex hogarth wrote:

        if you check historically England was used as a description of the united kingdom,

        Define "historically"? I think you're wrong. Look back to Tudor times, for example: laws were passed "in Anglia et Cornubia", i.e. "in England and Cornwall", because Cornwall was recognised as having a separate identity and legal status. England has only been used by the English (and foreigners unaware of the actual situation) to mean the whole UK.

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        Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
        wrote on last edited by
        #11

        Oh Tudor! maybe due to a little fact that Scotland was a seperate COUNTRY may have something to do with it, maybe? certainly if you check back 100 years you will find England used to refer to the UK. As to your point about Cornwall - surely this is now refered to as England so contradicting your poiint?

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        • H hairy_hats

          Alex hogarth wrote:

          if you check historically England was used as a description of the united kingdom,

          Define "historically"? I think you're wrong. Look back to Tudor times, for example: laws were passed "in Anglia et Cornubia", i.e. "in England and Cornwall", because Cornwall was recognised as having a separate identity and legal status. England has only been used by the English (and foreigners unaware of the actual situation) to mean the whole UK.

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          R Giskard Reventlov
          wrote on last edited by
          #12

          I think the difference only means anything to those that don't live in England (where the vast majority of Brits live). For my part I am quite comfortable either way since I know what the person means and would not be upset by something quite so trivial.

          me, me, me

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          • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

            Oh Tudor! maybe due to a little fact that Scotland was a seperate COUNTRY may have something to do with it, maybe? certainly if you check back 100 years you will find England used to refer to the UK. As to your point about Cornwall - surely this is now refered to as England so contradicting your poiint?

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            hairy_hats
            wrote on last edited by
            #13

            Cornwall's head of state is legally the Duke of Cornwall, not the British monarch, so strictly no, it isn't, although central government ignores the legal status and suppresses discussion of it in case it "embarrasses a member of the Royal Family". The powers of the Cornish stannary parliament to overturn Westminster legislation within Cornwall has never been revoked... :) England is still used to refer to the UK by people who don't know any better, but it's not correct usage.

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            • R R Giskard Reventlov

              I think the difference only means anything to those that don't live in England (where the vast majority of Brits live). For my part I am quite comfortable either way since I know what the person means and would not be upset by something quite so trivial.

              me, me, me

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              hairy_hats
              wrote on last edited by
              #14

              Go to a Welsh-speaking area of Wales and call a Welshman "English" to his face in a crowded pub and see if he considers it "trivial". :D

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              • H hairy_hats

                Cornwall's head of state is legally the Duke of Cornwall, not the British monarch, so strictly no, it isn't, although central government ignores the legal status and suppresses discussion of it in case it "embarrasses a member of the Royal Family". The powers of the Cornish stannary parliament to overturn Westminster legislation within Cornwall has never been revoked... :) England is still used to refer to the UK by people who don't know any better, but it's not correct usage.

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                Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
                wrote on last edited by
                #15

                My point is that it is only recently that there has been a distinction between the two, it was similar to using United Kingdom and Britain, there is a difference but generaly they are interchangable - yes they are becoming seperate enitities but my point is that it is still valid to refer to the country as england. The fact that a defeated sub region would like it to be different does not make it so

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                • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

                  My point is that it is only recently that there has been a distinction between the two, it was similar to using United Kingdom and Britain, there is a difference but generaly they are interchangable - yes they are becoming seperate enitities but my point is that it is still valid to refer to the country as england. The fact that a defeated sub region would like it to be different does not make it so

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                  hairy_hats
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #16

                  Errr no. I would not say "it is only recently that there has been a distinction between the two", I would say that there was only ever a brief period (now over) where Scotland and Wales were included under the title "England", and even then it was only by a subset of the population. The English dreams of Empire are over and they should just get used to being a rather small, very bankrupt nation with a damn good rugby team. :beer:

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                  • H hairy_hats

                    ToddHileHoffer wrote:

                    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/iainmartin/4295219/Gordon-Brown-brings-**Britain**\-to-the-edge-of-bankruptcy.html\[^\]

                    Britain != England and England != Britain :mad:

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                    ToddHileHoffer
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #17

                    Steve_Harris wrote:

                    Britain != England and England != Britain

                    Sorry about that. It was just laziness on my part. I understand that Great Britain includes England, Scotland and Wales. The UK is the above and Northern Ireland, correct? But I don't know how your political system works. Gordon Brown is the Prime Minister of Britain. Does that include Scotland and Wales?

                    I didn't get any requirements for the signature

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                    • R R Giskard Reventlov

                      Put aside all the windy rhetoric for a moment but what would actually be the consequence of the banking system being allowed to fail and the country, essentially, becoming insolvent? Is that the road to anarchy? Should I pop down the road and purchase that 9mm and stock up on beans and bottled water? Or would Brown, for whom history appears to be not something he ever learns from, start a war or somesuch to distract the populace? I worry that we really are sleepwalking to disaster being led by a dead-man-walking and I don't believe we are a long way from it.

                      me, me, me

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                      ToddHileHoffer
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #18

                      As a libertarian in America I believe in free markets. It saddens me that both here and over there the government refuses to the let the rich go broke. I guess its always been that way though...

                      I didn't get any requirements for the signature

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                      • T ToddHileHoffer

                        Steve_Harris wrote:

                        Britain != England and England != Britain

                        Sorry about that. It was just laziness on my part. I understand that Great Britain includes England, Scotland and Wales. The UK is the above and Northern Ireland, correct? But I don't know how your political system works. Gordon Brown is the Prime Minister of Britain. Does that include Scotland and Wales?

                        I didn't get any requirements for the signature

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                        hairy_hats
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #19

                        Yes. And yes.

                        An owl in a sack troubles no man.

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                        • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

                          Actually it is only recently that England != Britain if you check historically England was used as a description of the united kingdom, it has only become seperated due to the nationalistic Scots etc wanting to distance themselves from England. Its perception rather than fact, a lot of laws refer to England yet apply to the whole country. Oh and if England is Bankrupt what would that make Scotland? :mad:

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                          Colin Angus Mackay
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #20

                          Alex hogarth wrote:

                          Oh and if England is Bankrupt what would that make Scotland? :mad:

                          I'm assuming you have some notion of what the answer should be considering you added a :mad: emoticon. Would you care to share your opinions on that particular matter. Or shall I just assume that it was the typical ignorant knee jerk little englander reaction to do with anything regarding the subject of Scots self-government.

                          * Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference * The Blog of Colin Angus Mackay


                          Vogon Building and Loan advise that your planet is at risk if you do not keep up repayments on any mortgage secured upon it. Please remember that the force of gravity can go up as well as down.

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                          • C Colin Angus Mackay

                            Alex hogarth wrote:

                            Oh and if England is Bankrupt what would that make Scotland? :mad:

                            I'm assuming you have some notion of what the answer should be considering you added a :mad: emoticon. Would you care to share your opinions on that particular matter. Or shall I just assume that it was the typical ignorant knee jerk little englander reaction to do with anything regarding the subject of Scots self-government.

                            * Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference * The Blog of Colin Angus Mackay


                            Vogon Building and Loan advise that your planet is at risk if you do not keep up repayments on any mortgage secured upon it. Please remember that the force of gravity can go up as well as down.

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                            Johnny
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #21

                            Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                            Or shall I just assume that it was the typical ignorant knee jerk little englander reaction

                            Maybe I'm reading things differently to you, but this seems to be the only knee jerk reaction here.

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                            • H hairy_hats

                              Go to a Welsh-speaking area of Wales and call a Welshman "English" to his face in a crowded pub and see if he considers it "trivial". :D

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                              R Giskard Reventlov
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #22

                              I take your point, but, then, the Welsh are a strange bunch.

                              me, me, me

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                              • R R Giskard Reventlov

                                I take your point, but, then, the Welsh are a strange bunch.

                                me, me, me

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                                hairy_hats
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #23

                                Funny, the British Celts think that of the English, too. Beer?

                                An owl in a sack troubles no man.

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                                • H hairy_hats

                                  Funny, the British Celts think that of the English, too. Beer?

                                  An owl in a sack troubles no man.

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                                  R Giskard Reventlov
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #24

                                  Good job I'm only mostly British or I'd get offended by everything.

                                  me, me, me

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                                  • R R Giskard Reventlov

                                    Put aside all the windy rhetoric for a moment but what would actually be the consequence of the banking system being allowed to fail and the country, essentially, becoming insolvent? Is that the road to anarchy? Should I pop down the road and purchase that 9mm and stock up on beans and bottled water? Or would Brown, for whom history appears to be not something he ever learns from, start a war or somesuch to distract the populace? I worry that we really are sleepwalking to disaster being led by a dead-man-walking and I don't believe we are a long way from it.

                                    me, me, me

                                    K Offline
                                    K Offline
                                    KaRl
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #25

                                    digital man wrote:

                                    start a war or somesuch to distract the populace?

                                    Nah, that's a right-wing trick.

                                    Sie wollen mein Herz am rechten Fleck, doch Seh' ich dann nach unten weg Da schlägt es links!

                                    Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                                    • J Johnny

                                      Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                                      Or shall I just assume that it was the typical ignorant knee jerk little englander reaction

                                      Maybe I'm reading things differently to you, but this seems to be the only knee jerk reaction here.

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                                      B Offline
                                      Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #26

                                      You seem to have hit a nerve there! Remember the Scots have a no sense of humor when its about self rule. I do agree that his reaction was definitely high horse

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                                      • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

                                        You seem to have hit a nerve there! Remember the Scots have a no sense of humor when its about self rule. I do agree that his reaction was definitely high horse

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                                        Johnny
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #27

                                        Alex hogarth wrote:

                                        You seem to have hit a nerve there!

                                        So it seems. I guess we should always remember that the English are evil and the Scottish/Irish/Welsh/Anyone-else-with-a-chip-on-their-shoulder are downtrodden and unfairly treated... it's a terrible world.

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                                        • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

                                          You seem to have hit a nerve there! Remember the Scots have a no sense of humor when its about self rule. I do agree that his reaction was definitely high horse

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                                          C Offline
                                          Colin Angus Mackay
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #28

                                          Alex hogarth wrote:

                                          You seem to have hit a nerve there!

                                          You assume too much.

                                          Alex hogarth wrote:

                                          Remember the Scots have a no sense of humor when its about self rule.

                                          Scots have plenty humour - You should try visiting.

                                          Alex hogarth wrote:

                                          I do agree that his reaction was definitely high horse

                                          I don't have a high horse. Or any horse for that matter. My comment was mearly in response to the :mad: red faced angry emoticon which seemed to indicate a certain level of emotion with regard to the subject.

                                          * Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference * The Blog of Colin Angus Mackay


                                          Vogon Building and Loan advise that your planet is at risk if you do not keep up repayments on any mortgage secured upon it. Please remember that the force of gravity can go up as well as down.

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