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Re: when all this is over....
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Re: when all this is over....
Goodness Less....that is NEAT next to what he did to my hair.
I have to tell you it was over fifty years ago when the rosy blush of romance was still strong....but it still took some forgiving. It is just a good job that at the time I knew nothing of the powers of cut chilliest, or fibreglass insulating material. Had I been more worldly wise he would have suffered. |
Re: when all this is over....
Things must be getting back to normal, this is the second day in a row I've had junk mail through the letterbox.
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Re: when all this is over....
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Apologies - seem to be getting in a rant mode stuck indoors would rename meself Victor Meldrew if I wasn't such a shortarse. |
Re: when all this is over....
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If it's the more affluent in society then they have been doing that for generations, it's called starvation wages a system still foolishly employed in many of the third world countries even today. |
Re: when all this is over....
The banks want to eliminate the use of cash because card transactions make them money.
The government want to eliminate the use of cash because cash does not leave a trail.....you are tracked when you use a card...your purchasing habits can be sold on to companies that will target you on your past purchases. Jimmy...I agree with every word...and I do not consider it a rant. |
Re: when all this is over....
A completely cashless society would not work. For instance, during those dreadful bushfires in Australia all the ATMs were down and only people with actual CASH were able to purchase petrol to get them out of the area...those bits of plastic were absolutely useless. There's been a few times when the power has gone off and the people who have forsaken cash for card were left completely lost, you could say they were powerless (pardon the pun), same thing when ATMs have been 'down', especially out-of-hours. So for practical purposes alone it would be ridiculous to eliminate using cash.....
...and yes, if it wasn't beneficial for them the banks wouldn't be pushing the issue. |
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I take it that you don't like the obvious next step where instead of product adverts being targeted at you, you simply get a receipt and the product. |
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Re: when all this is over....
And paying with an app on your phone.....what is that all about.
I would not trust the security of a phone to do either my banking or my shopping. I will consider a smart phone when it will load the washer, put the washing on the line, iron it and put it awayuntil then I will continue with bits of paper (although they are plastic now aren't they) with the queens head on them. A cashless society also penalises those who are poor and have either no bank account or one where they do not qualify for a debit card because of a poor credit score. |
Re: when all this is over....
My son and daughter-in-law went out for dinner a little while ago and though they usually use plastic to pay (as most young ones do) they had some cash in the house so they thought they would use that instead. When the waitress brought the little machine for their card they gave her cash instead - she looked bemused and didn't seem like she knew what to do with it. Apparently none of her customers had ever used actual cash.
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Re: when all this is over....
if its called smart ignore it. if they want card trasactions resist it. big brother is certainly watching you in more than one form. used to trust people far more than i do now. i,ve got to a stage where i consider everything and everyone as a scam and its their difficult job to persuade me that it isn,t one. her indoors as well as me have been scammed once and its our lifetime ambition to make sure it does not happen again.
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Re: when all this is over....
Touching on the subject of hair, I'm at the age where preening in front of the mirror is a no, no for me, so when I caught a glimpse of myself after 5 weeks of social avoidance, I was suprised at the length both my hair and my beard have now reached (in fact I'm beginning to suspect there could be birds nesting in my beard).
The most shocking growth however has to be my eyebrows, another 2 inches and I may well be tripping over them. I think I'll move hairdressing up my priority list and therefore do it myself in the next month or so. |
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