Family Life1 min ago
Those Churchill Cranes
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-29 30818/A nger-BB C-Churc hill-do cumenta ry-dock er-s-cl aim-ope rators- paid-lo wer-cra nes.htm l
I was watching a documentary about Churchill's funeral today and there was a docker interviewed who claimed that they were paid to dip the cranes. I assumed this must be a repeat and was common knowledge but it seems to have got the Daily Mail steamed up. And after the initial denial, a further piece by the lovely Simon Heffer slamming the 'in patriotic strikes'
That'll be the BBC sold off then :-)
I was watching a documentary about Churchill's funeral today and there was a docker interviewed who claimed that they were paid to dip the cranes. I assumed this must be a repeat and was common knowledge but it seems to have got the Daily Mail steamed up. And after the initial denial, a further piece by the lovely Simon Heffer slamming the 'in patriotic strikes'
That'll be the BBC sold off then :-)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Indeed not, Marshy.
I was only remarking to Mrs New Judge when the photographs and footage of the dipping cranes appeared this week that Hay's Wharf is unrecognisable today. The walk along the south bank of the river between London and Tower Bridges is a delight with its various watering holes and restaurants, the Galleria, open air theatre, HMS Belfast and City Hall bang opposite the Tower. It seems a century ago that the old wharfs were there and Tooley Street was a place you would not want to venture to on a dark night.
I was only remarking to Mrs New Judge when the photographs and footage of the dipping cranes appeared this week that Hay's Wharf is unrecognisable today. The walk along the south bank of the river between London and Tower Bridges is a delight with its various watering holes and restaurants, the Galleria, open air theatre, HMS Belfast and City Hall bang opposite the Tower. It seems a century ago that the old wharfs were there and Tooley Street was a place you would not want to venture to on a dark night.
Total hypocrites all those who thought him to be the best thing since 'sliced bread', while he was in charge of keeping the Hun from the door, and then to kick him in the back when it was all over, and they were at last sleeping comfortably, and peacefully safe in their beds once again.
Continue to rest in peace, the greatest Englishman of all times.
Continue to rest in peace, the greatest Englishman of all times.
I don't think you can justify that AOG. He didn't win the war on his own. And it is perfectly reasonable to agree with/approve of someone regarding one aspect and not with another. If it were not so we'd all be unable to escape being considered hypocrites. One doesn't 'win' unquestioned total support forever due to something achieved in the past.
Old_Geezer
/// I don't think you can justify that AOG. He didn't win the war on his own. ///
Of course he didn't win the war on his own, and neither did I say he did, thinking that would be plain silly.
But would you have cared to carry on your shoulders all the responsibility he carried on his shoulders so as to achieve such a victory?
/// I don't think you can justify that AOG. He didn't win the war on his own. ///
Of course he didn't win the war on his own, and neither did I say he did, thinking that would be plain silly.
But would you have cared to carry on your shoulders all the responsibility he carried on his shoulders so as to achieve such a victory?
Just because he was a great leader in a crisis, doesn't make him a great politician in peacetime. He wasn't, like us all, he had his strengths and weaknesses. Yes, he deserved all the praise and accolades for what he achieved but history has a habit of bringing perspective to leadership and that should be recognised and he should not been immune to looking and learning from his disasters. Should we just mention Gallipoli for starters.....
From your rabid-pinkie-socialist-realist-world citizen of a Tory, AOG/youngmafbog.....
From your rabid-pinkie-socialist-realist-world citizen of a Tory, AOG/youngmafbog.....
I love it when papers like the Mail state things like 'Anger. At xyz ... ' and 'there was shock last night as ...'
I envisage one of their hacks looking out of the window at Wail Towers to see a large cloud of shock drifting past.
To be really want TV documentaries to be Soviet-style whitewashed versions of the truth?
I envisage one of their hacks looking out of the window at Wail Towers to see a large cloud of shock drifting past.
To be really want TV documentaries to be Soviet-style whitewashed versions of the truth?
I saw the footage of the cranes dipping (before I heard the man saying they were paid to do it) and thought it was an incredibly moving gesture. Ridiculously, I was welling up even though I'm no Churchill fan.
But, why shouldn't they be paid to come in and operate machinery? These were men who had precious little time off and not a lot of money. Why is the DM getting all steamed up about it?
But, why shouldn't they be paid to come in and operate machinery? These were men who had precious little time off and not a lot of money. Why is the DM getting all steamed up about it?
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