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DrMatthewAshton
- @Northernruth Apparently it was politician's, the media and the public's fault, and to quote a banker friend "we didn't do anything wrong" 50 minutes ago
- @Northernruth and when I ask them about the financial crisis it's never the banking sectors fault 52 minutes ago
- @Northernruth My basic problem with bankers is that when I go to dinner parties all they do is whine about how unfairly they've been treated 52 minutes ago
- @Northernruth Well I suspect many of them were busy mis-selling PPI or trying to fix the Libor rate (when not handing out record bonuses) 1 hour ago
- @Northernruth Could we have the billions we pumped into the banking system back then if they're not going to lend it? 1 hour ago
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Tag Archives: filn
Great political movies (No18) In the Loop
There is a long history in Britain of trying to turn sitcoms into movies and failing miserably. The 1970s seemed by the height of this trend, with adaptations of Dad’s Army, Are you Being Served, Steptoe and Son, Porridge and On the Buses. The one thing … Continue reading →
Posted in American politics, British politics, Review
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Tagged Are you being served, Armando Iannucci, art, Cheers, culture, Dad's Army, David Rasche, entertainment, filn, Friends, In the Loop, James Gandolfini, life, Linton Barwick, Malcolm Tucker, Matt Le Blanc, Matthew Ashton, Mimi Kennedy, movies, Nottingham Trent University, On the buses, Peter Capaldi, political satire, politics, Porridge, Simon Foster, sitcoms, Sledgehammer, Steptoe and son, Taxi, television, The thick of it, War in Iraq, WMDs
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