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  4. VB kicks C++'s arse

VB kicks C++'s arse

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Back Room
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  • V Vuemme

    If being a fireman is so confortable and so simple, why don't you join them? They are paid for the work they do (with no regular schedule and working during nights, weekends, and holydays) and for the fact that they risk their life during everyday work. I don't know the problems that forced them to do this kind of strike but I think that people who risk their life and choose this kind of job should have a good reason to do such a strike. Why should they get £30,000 when I'll leave University with masses of government debt to pay off? Because they work to let you finish your studies alive? -- Looking for a new screen-saver? Try FOYD: http://digilander.iol.it/FOYD

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    David Wulff
    wrote on last edited by
    #40

    Vuemme wrote: If being a fireman is so confortable and so simple, why don't you join them? Because the chances of actually getting in are so slim - thousands of people try and fail each year. Besides which, it is an individuals choice which career they choose to follow, at least in some countries. I'd be no good as a fireman as my skills and more importantly my interests lie elsewhere. Vuemme wrote: I don't know the problems that forced them to do this kind of strike but I think that people who risk their life and choose this kind of job should have a good reason to do such a strike. The cause of the strike was the union telling them to strike. The men and women themselves have no real choice in the matter. Indeed many, many of them are breaking picket lines to go out on call still. They don't want to be there: they've been told to be there. The reason for the strike... well if you find out be sure to tell Andy Gilchrist (the leader of the FBU) as he sure as hell doesn't seem to know. The fairy tales he keeps coming out with can't be upheld, and then he pulls out of negotiations like a little girl thowing her food on the floor because she is denied her dolly. Vuemme wrote: Because they work to let you finish your studies alive? Are they though? :| To all intents and purposes - despite the best efforts of the union thugs and hand full of sympathisers - the army, navy, police and retained firefighters are doing a bloody good job in their place. It seems the firefighters weren't as badly missed as Mr. Gilchrist had hoped. Still, he can keep putting pennies on the railway tracks and areosols on aeroplanes and hope for a major national incident like 11/9 to blind people into worshipping the ground he shits on. Many - and I for one - won't be so quick to swallow it though.


    David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

    David Wulff Born and Bred.

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    • K KaRl

      Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: My brother-in-law was in Rwanda - and he got 90 PENCE a day danger money It's not because your relative was outrageously exploited that others should accept to be f*cked as well. With this argument, you could justify quiet anything, as long as there will be children in China working for 1$ per week.


      Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #41

      The firefighters are NOWHERE near being f*cked! Most of them are only striking because their union tells them too, and they daren't cross the picket line for fear of being victimised. This is 2002, not 1977. And you missed my point - some firefighters have been COMPLAINING about the job the military have been doing - yet here are people who do a MUCH more dangerous job for MUCH less money WITHOUT complaining about it. The way the armed forces have been portrayed by some firefighters is disgusting. You might think it is OK for essential services to strike, I do not. What price do you put on human life Karl? If people die because of this strike, does it still make it worthwhile? This is NOT some noble "oppressed worker vs exploitive management" dispute. You will find plenty of people that agree that the firefighters deserve some more money - but you won't find that many that think a strike is the solution.


      When I am king, you will be first against the wall.

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      • L Lost User

        The firefighters are NOWHERE near being f*cked! Most of them are only striking because their union tells them too, and they daren't cross the picket line for fear of being victimised. This is 2002, not 1977. And you missed my point - some firefighters have been COMPLAINING about the job the military have been doing - yet here are people who do a MUCH more dangerous job for MUCH less money WITHOUT complaining about it. The way the armed forces have been portrayed by some firefighters is disgusting. You might think it is OK for essential services to strike, I do not. What price do you put on human life Karl? If people die because of this strike, does it still make it worthwhile? This is NOT some noble "oppressed worker vs exploitive management" dispute. You will find plenty of people that agree that the firefighters deserve some more money - but you won't find that many that think a strike is the solution.


        When I am king, you will be first against the wall.

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        KaRl
        wrote on last edited by
        #42

        Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: What price do you put on human life Karl The price of the dignity. All the difference is here. Perhaps have I a disproportionate sense of honor, however I disavow nor my latin and celtic genes nor my french culture of contestation and fight :) Hasta la victoria siempre ! ;P


        Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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        • D David Wulff

          KaЯl wrote: This one can't be a valuable argument, please refer to my answer to Mr. Caldecott below. Oh it is a perfectly valid arguement: by comparison other workers should be paid about sixty percent more to equal that the firefighters are getting for the same amount of work. :wtf: KaЯl wrote: Nothing came, nothing come, without fighting Rubbish. The last time I checked we didn't live in a Victorian society - the people in the last part of the last century learned that they, the meek populous, can affect change if it is really needed. We live in a, *cough*, democracy, and the lack of support by the public should show the union fighters very clearly that they ain't gonna win this one. Even if we did pay them more, Britian would return to the early nineties tenfold - nay twenty fold! They are holding us ransom for an impossible fee.


          David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

          David Wulff Born and Bred.

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          KaRl
          wrote on last edited by
          #43

          David Wulff wrote: by comparison other workers should be paid about sixty percent more to equal that the firefighters are getting for the same amount of work If these workers think they deserve better, they should strike too, instead of being jealous of others. David Wulff wrote: We live in a, *cough*, democracy, and the lack of support by the public should show the union fighters very clearly that they ain't gonna win this one Glad for you it works like this in your country, in mine it wasn't. Every social progress resulted from solidarity, strikes and hard battles, sometimes deads. The conditions of life for the worker class at the end of the XIXth are well described in "Germinal", from Emile Zola (and a great movie too). About the democracy, you have always a House of Lords, haven't you ? Are you always a subject, and not a citizen ? How could you dare speaking about democracy accepting these kind of feudal laws ? ;P


          Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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          • K KaRl

            David Wulff wrote: by comparison other workers should be paid about sixty percent more to equal that the firefighters are getting for the same amount of work If these workers think they deserve better, they should strike too, instead of being jealous of others. David Wulff wrote: We live in a, *cough*, democracy, and the lack of support by the public should show the union fighters very clearly that they ain't gonna win this one Glad for you it works like this in your country, in mine it wasn't. Every social progress resulted from solidarity, strikes and hard battles, sometimes deads. The conditions of life for the worker class at the end of the XIXth are well described in "Germinal", from Emile Zola (and a great movie too). About the democracy, you have always a House of Lords, haven't you ? Are you always a subject, and not a citizen ? How could you dare speaking about democracy accepting these kind of feudal laws ? ;P


            Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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            David Wulff
            wrote on last edited by
            #44

            KaЯl wrote: If these workers think they deserve better, they should strike too, instead of being jealous of others. They're not jealous because they earn a decent living wage, just as the fire fighters do. Just where do you think the money to pay the firefighters' forty percent figure would come from? It can't come from the employers - they don't have it. It can't come from the people - we don't have it. It can't come from the government - even they don't have it. We can't even ask Europe for it. It can however be made up from other areas of the public service sector, so the choice is now ours to make: which do we no longer need... hospitals or schools. Because one *will* have to go to fund the increase. I don't think you realise just how close giving in to this strike would be to the collapse of Britian. In fact I don't believe there is any closeness in it at all - it is a certainty. Is this not covered at all by your media?! :wtf: AFWIW, the House of Lords is by and large a very sucessful way of running the system. If it works there's no need to replace it.


            David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

            David Wulff Born and Bred.

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            • K KaRl

              Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: What price do you put on human life Karl The price of the dignity. All the difference is here. Perhaps have I a disproportionate sense of honor, however I disavow nor my latin and celtic genes nor my french culture of contestation and fight :) Hasta la victoria siempre ! ;P


              Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #45

              You're joking right? :confused: You must be? Or do you really think it's acceptable for people to DIE in fires because the fireman are striking??? For the sake of a bit more cash??? Oh dear. I think this form of politics died out many, many years ago!!! :-D :-D :-D Hasta la victoria siempre! I have a T shirt with this on. I bought it in Cuba!!! ;P


              When I am king, you will be first against the wall.

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              • L Lost User

                You're joking right? :confused: You must be? Or do you really think it's acceptable for people to DIE in fires because the fireman are striking??? For the sake of a bit more cash??? Oh dear. I think this form of politics died out many, many years ago!!! :-D :-D :-D Hasta la victoria siempre! I have a T shirt with this on. I bought it in Cuba!!! ;P


                When I am king, you will be first against the wall.

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                KaRl
                wrote on last edited by
                #46

                Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: for people to DIE in fires because the fireman are striking At the first place, these people are dying because they are caught in a fire (or a car crash, an accident...). Unless the firemen light the fire or push the victims into it, I can't see how they can be held for responsible! Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: I bought it in Cuba :-D


                Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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                • D David Wulff

                  KaЯl wrote: If these workers think they deserve better, they should strike too, instead of being jealous of others. They're not jealous because they earn a decent living wage, just as the fire fighters do. Just where do you think the money to pay the firefighters' forty percent figure would come from? It can't come from the employers - they don't have it. It can't come from the people - we don't have it. It can't come from the government - even they don't have it. We can't even ask Europe for it. It can however be made up from other areas of the public service sector, so the choice is now ours to make: which do we no longer need... hospitals or schools. Because one *will* have to go to fund the increase. I don't think you realise just how close giving in to this strike would be to the collapse of Britian. In fact I don't believe there is any closeness in it at all - it is a certainty. Is this not covered at all by your media?! :wtf: AFWIW, the House of Lords is by and large a very sucessful way of running the system. If it works there's no need to replace it.


                  David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                  David Wulff Born and Bred.

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                  KaRl
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #47

                  David Wulff wrote: Is this not covered at all by your media?! Very few, as probably are french, german, italian, or spanish news covered by yours. David Wulff wrote: AFWIW, the House of Lords is by and large a very sucessful way of running the system. If it works there's no need to replace it. I didn't deny that, I just said it's far from being democratic :) David Wulff wrote: would be to the collapse of Britian The collapse of the perfidious Albion will come when we will activate the laser we hide in the Eiffel Tower. Muuhahahaha :-D


                  Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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                  • K KaRl

                    David Wulff wrote: Is this not covered at all by your media?! Very few, as probably are french, german, italian, or spanish news covered by yours. David Wulff wrote: AFWIW, the House of Lords is by and large a very sucessful way of running the system. If it works there's no need to replace it. I didn't deny that, I just said it's far from being democratic :) David Wulff wrote: would be to the collapse of Britian The collapse of the perfidious Albion will come when we will activate the laser we hide in the Eiffel Tower. Muuhahahaha :-D


                    Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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                    David Wulff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #48

                    KaЯl wrote: Very few, as probably are french, german, italian, or spanish news covered by yours. Indeed, but from the way you were attacking it it sounds a lot like it was being seriously misrepresented in your press. KaЯl wrote: The collapse of the perfidious Albion will come when we will activate the laser we hide in the Eiffel Tower. Muuhahahaha Ha, we Brits are not fools! We have a giant mirror in geostationary orbit above France and when you fire the laser all our people will flood the streets with hand mirrors, reflecting the laser beam back directly to Paris! :rolleyes:


                    David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                    David Wulff Born and Bred.

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                    • D David Wulff

                      KaЯl wrote: Very few, as probably are french, german, italian, or spanish news covered by yours. Indeed, but from the way you were attacking it it sounds a lot like it was being seriously misrepresented in your press. KaЯl wrote: The collapse of the perfidious Albion will come when we will activate the laser we hide in the Eiffel Tower. Muuhahahaha Ha, we Brits are not fools! We have a giant mirror in geostationary orbit above France and when you fire the laser all our people will flood the streets with hand mirrors, reflecting the laser beam back directly to Paris! :rolleyes:


                      David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                      David Wulff Born and Bred.

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                      KaRl
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #49

                      David Wulff wrote: Indeed, but from the way you were attacking it it sounds a lot like it was being seriously misrepresented in your press. My point were more generic than especially on this strike. I know also we have totally different social cultures :) For example, some of my rights, guaranteed by laws: * 5 weeks of payed vacation per year * 35 hours of work per week * Between 5 to 10 days off per year (according to the years) for traditional dates and celebrations. Disgusting, isn't it ? :laugh: You live to work, we work to live :-D [edit] Being in Toulouse, I have no objection to see Paris destroyed, I would perhaps even applause :rolleyes: [/edit]


                      Ohé Partisans, Ouvriers et Paysans C'est l'alarme! Le Chant des Partisans

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