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1946 Raleighs
http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
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#2
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1946 Raleighs
Op 5-5-2012 13:22, AMuzi schreef:
http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made Nice! Thanks. Those were the days. Lou |
#3
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1946 Raleighs
On Sat, 05 May 2012 14:45:45 +0200, Lou Holtman
wrote: Op 5-5-2012 13:22, AMuzi schreef: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made Nice! Thanks. Those were the days. Lou Gripping yarn! Boffo! |
#4
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1946 Raleighs
Lou Holtman wrote:
Op 5-5-2012 13:22, AMuzi schreef: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made Nice! Thanks. Those were the days. At 6:58, see the swastika? Workers showing their support for Philip Battenberg's engagement? |
#5
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1946 Raleighs
On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote:
http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tツコm Shermツェn - 42.435731ツーN, 83.985007ツーW Post Free or Die! |
#6
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1946 Raleighs
Op zaterdag 5 mei 2012 19:54:16 UTC+2 schreef Tom $herman (-_-) het volgende:
On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tコm Shermェn - 42.435731ーN, 83.985007ーW Post Free or Die! Geezzz, is this the first thing you think of when you seen this clip? Man, you must have a miserable life... Lou |
#7
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1946 Raleighs
On 5/5/2012 1:11 PM, Lou Holtman wrote:
Op zaterdag 5 mei 2012 19:54:16 UTC+2 schreef Tom $herman (-_-) het volgende: On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tツコm Shermツェn - 42.435731ツーN, 83.985007ツーW Post Free or Die! Geezzz, is this the first thing you think of when you seen this clip? Man, you must have a miserable life... Lou Do not be too smug - there is a concerted effort to dismantle the current systems in Western Europe and make them much more like the US. Go across the English Channel to see the most advanced case. And the ECB is having it's way with Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece, with austerity for workers, and subsidies for investment bankers. -- Tツコm Shermツェn - 42.435731ツーN, 83.985007ツーW Post Free or Die! |
#8
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1946 Raleighs
Tom $herman (-_-) wrote:
On 5/5/2012 1:11 PM, Lou Holtman wrote: Op zaterdag 5 mei 2012 19:54:16 UTC+2 schreef Tom $herman (-_-) het volgende: On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tツコm Shermツェn - 42.435731ツーN, 83.985007ツーW Post Free or Die! Geezzz, is this the first thing you think of when you seen this clip? Man, you must have a miserable life... Lou Do not be too smug - there is a concerted effort to dismantle the current systems in Western Europe and make them much more like the US. Go across the English Channel to see the most advanced case. And the ECB is having it's way with Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece, with austerity for workers, and subsidies for investment bankers. As Margaret Thatcher pithily noted, socialism works until you run out of other people's money. Europe's party is over. Europe is at least honest in its profligacy. It's not better here, we merely have The Big Lie and a faster printing press. The foreseeable end will be a debacle in both cases when the music stops. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#9
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1946 Raleighs
On 5/5/2012 3:09 PM, A. Muzi wrote:
Tom $herman (-_-) wrote: On 5/5/2012 1:11 PM, Lou Holtman wrote: Op zaterdag 5 mei 2012 19:54:16 UTC+2 schreef Tom $herman (-_-) het volgende: On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tテつコm Shermテつェn - 42.435731テつーN, 83.985007テつーW Post Free or Die! Geezzz, is this the first thing you think of when you seen this clip? Man, you must have a miserable life... Lou Do not be too smug - there is a concerted effort to dismantle the current systems in Western Europe and make them much more like the US. Go across the English Channel to see the most advanced case. And the ECB is having it's way with Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece, with austerity for workers, and subsidies for investment bankers. As Margaret Thatcher pithily noted, socialism works until you run out of other people's money. Europe's party is over. Thatcher is a criminal who should be breaking rocks in a labor camp, and one of the primary persons responsible for destroying British industry and degrading quality of life of those unconnected to the City (i.e. Corporation of the Crown). We have socialism for investment bankers, where taxes from wages earned by labor pay for their losses. Indeed, that is unsustainable. Europe is at least honest in its profligacy. It's not better here, we merely have The Big Lie and a faster printing press. The foreseeable end will be a debacle in both cases when the music stops. If you think the US is run by anything other than the organized crime ring known as the super-rich (who are too wealthy to be listed Forbes and other mass-media outlets on their lists), you are sadly misinformed. The problem is not lack of actual wealth, but a financial system that is rigged to benefit a few thousand people at the expense of the other 7 billion. We are, as war criminal Henry Kissinger said, nothing by "worthless eaters" in their eyes. -- Tツコm Shermツェn - 42.435731ツーN, 83.985007ツーW Post Free or Die! |
#10
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1946 Raleighs
Tom $herman (-_-) wrote:
On 5/5/2012 3:09 PM, A. Muzi wrote: Tom $herman (-_-) wrote: On 5/5/2012 1:11 PM, Lou Holtman wrote: Op zaterdag 5 mei 2012 19:54:16 UTC+2 schreef Tom $herman (-_-) het volgende: On 5/5/2012 6:22 AM, A. Muzi wrote: http://film.britishcouncil.org/how-a-bicycle-is-made The absence of safety glasses and machine guards, as well as the amount of non-automated labor) is striking to someone who has worked in a more modern factory. Labor was inexpensive, as the British worker at the time was still poor [1] compared to a couple of decades later, and could barely afford to buy the bicycles they made. Management was short-sighted, as profits went to a select few stockholders, instead of being re-invested in modernization. British executives who visited Japan in the 1960's were shocked to see how far behind they were, and were unable to react when the Japanese started exporting in earnest to the "West" in the late 1960's. [1] The profits of the British Empire always having gone to the highly secretive Corporation of the Crown (owner of the City of London [2]), and not being shared among the people, who were actually taxed to support the Corporation. [2] Not to be confused with the much large metropolis of London surrounding it:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London. -- Tテつコm Shermテつェn - 42.435731テつーN, 83.985007テつーW Post Free or Die! Geezzz, is this the first thing you think of when you seen this clip? Man, you must have a miserable life... Lou Do not be too smug - there is a concerted effort to dismantle the current systems in Western Europe and make them much more like the US. Go across the English Channel to see the most advanced case. And the ECB is having it's way with Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece, with austerity for workers, and subsidies for investment bankers. As Margaret Thatcher pithily noted, socialism works until you run out of other people's money. Europe's party is over. Thatcher is a criminal who should be breaking rocks in a labor camp, and one of the primary persons responsible for destroying British industry and degrading quality of life of those unconnected to the City (i.e. Corporation of the Crown). We have socialism for investment bankers, where taxes from wages earned by labor pay for their losses. Indeed, that is unsustainable. Europe is at least honest in its profligacy. It's not better here, we merely have The Big Lie and a faster printing press. The foreseeable end will be a debacle in both cases when the music stops. If you think the US is run by anything other than the organized crime ring known as the super-rich (who are too wealthy to be listed Forbes and other mass-media outlets on their lists), you are sadly misinformed. The problem is not lack of actual wealth, but a financial system that is rigged to benefit a few thousand people at the expense of the other 7 billion. We are, as war criminal Henry Kissinger said, nothing by "worthless eaters" in their eyes. Margaret Thatcher Fan Club chart: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datab...-spending-1963 I rest my case -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
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