Essentially as of this weekRwanda is a penal colony?
Essentially as of this weekRwanda is a penal colony?
Wow those French police really bust a gut to stop that boat leaving today. FFS. This is where the problem lies.
Maybe.I think that sadly, at the moment, we do need to increase defence spending. We just need to avoid all the jingoistic nonsense that goes with it and deploy resources sensibly.
I think the RAF has 10 heavy drones to the USA’s 500. It’s not really a deterrent.
The reason for the mockery is that Das Reich was thrown off NSC about a year ago, the bell end. But (you can guess the rest, now you have been tolled).It’s our success, not are.
Our country, not are
A family member works in the building industry and has some contracts with the MOD. Obviously they have signed the OSA but what they have has said is that the absolute wastage of money and lack of oversight (left hand doesn't know what the right is doing) is truly shocking. Everyone knows it and the military even joke about it. Several times they've demolished something recently built or built something that on completion is now no longer needed. British incompetence at it's best MOD spending, apparently.Maybe.
But Sunk's plan is an open chequebook that will enrich the arms industry, with our arms procurement folk a load of boggle eyed push-overs.
Someone who knows what he's talking about, on the radio, just explained how the people in charge of our procurement are clueless oafs who act like schoolboys in a sweet shop whenever mummy gives them any money to spend.
You thought our PPI procurement was bad....
Edit: but luckily none of this will happen and in 3 years time none of us will remember who Sunk was.
Yes we are.I see no thread on Sunk's new declaration that we are going to spend, spend, spend to become the world's most super-armed nation in Europe. Only we are no longer in Europe. So that's even better. With a Labour government to do the spending, obviously.
Does this man even have straw in his head? My money is on space dust and chewing gum wrappers.
Welcome to the world of Public Sector procurement.A family member works in the building industry and has some contracts with the MOD. Obviously they have signed the OSA but what they have has said is that the absolute wastage of money and lack of oversight (left hand doesn't know what the right is doing) is truly shocking. Everyone knows it and the military even joke about it. Several times they've demolished something recently built or built something that on completion is now no longer needed. British incompetence at it's best MOD spending, apparently.
<sigh>Yes we are.
We are no longer in the EU though.
Yep, listened to that. To paraphrase, Labour think 700 million (or was it even billion) is currently being wasted by not having a central procurement system and they'd reinvest half of that on local officers to crack down on shoplifting gangs (as well as repealing the 'less than £200 isn't a crime' introduced by May).Welcome to the world of Public Sector procurement.
See Emily Thornberry's statement on Procurement within the Police (Today/Radio 4 this am)
Yeah right'o folks from this country cant get on the housing ladder, never mind build more and house refugees.so instead of building walls etc we need to build more houses and the like.
Reform’s Ben Habib would let them drown, a policy that’s too toxic even for Julia Hartley-Brewer
He doesn’t look like he’s familiar with much, other than hate.Ben clearly isn't familar with the UN convention on the Law of the Sea.
Why do politicians always think that making organisations bigger will save money? They've been doing it for decades, and it didn't work in the days before internet and it works even less now. A small organisation has someone in charge of paperclips who buys them at £4 per thousand. A large organisation has a team who negotiate a deal to buy them at £3.90 per thousand and has another team to supervise the invoicing and distribution and payment. The politicians see a 0.01p per paperclip reduction and think they are saving money.Yep, listened to that. To paraphrase, Labour think 700 million (or was it even billion) is currently being wasted by not having a central procurement system and they'd reinvest half of that on local officers to crack down on shoplifting gangs (as well as repealing the 'less than £200 isn't a crime' introduced by May).
My jaw was dropping further and further open at each point in that piece. People worrying about immigrants while shops are literally losing money every day (and their staff being threatened) to organised gangs with a drug habit, taking advantage of bad legislation and wasteful administration.
The real economy of scale - always - is throwing emplyees on the scrapheapWhy do politicians always think that making organisations bigger will save money? They've been doing it for decades, and it didn't work in the days before internet and it works even less now. A small organisation has someone in charge of paperclips who buys them at £4 per thousand. A large organisation has a team who negotiate a deal to buy them at £3.90 per thousand and has another team to supervise the invoicing and distribution and payment. The politicians see a 0.01p per paperclip reduction and think they are saving money.
It’s the police federation’s figures.Why do politicians always think that making organisations bigger will save money? They've been doing it for decades, and it didn't work in the days before internet and it works even less now. A small organisation has someone in charge of paperclips who buys them at £4 per thousand. A large organisation has a team who negotiate a deal to buy them at £3.90 per thousand and has another team to supervise the invoicing and distribution and payment. The politicians see a 0.01p per paperclip reduction and think they are saving money.