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    • Hi everyone, Thanks for the responses. Just a few follow up questions in light of what's been said:   If I dont appeal to PPM, who can I appeal to?   Why should the PCN been attached to the windscreen? Is this written in law?   I assumed the document I had received was the NTK, if this is not the case, what does a NTK look like?   Regarding the compliance with the Protection of Freedoms Act, could the "period" of parking not be argued either way? The legislation doesnt state it must have a start/end time of parking, which I assumed an ANPR camera would pick up if it had one. Is 4 minutes not technically enough to show the vehicle was parked?    Thanks !
    • I see jenrick has stuck his head up with them, and I'm sure this wont faze their nasty rhetoric one wit-less UK growth since 2010 has been lacklustre and largely driven by immigration, says report UK growth since 2010 has been lacklustre and largely driven by immigration, says report | Economic growth (GDP) | The Guardian WWW.THEGUARDIAN.COM Resolution Foundation report suggests parties are dodging the economic challenges facing the country   Net migration is more than two and a half times the 2010 figure despite a string of Tory pledges to reduce it Immigration: how 14 years of Tory rule have changed Britain – in charts | General election 2024 | The Guardian WWW.THEGUARDIAN.COM Net migration is more than two and a half times the 2010 figure despite a string of Tory pledges to reduce it    
    • Will get them done asap My job changes week to week so at the time I didn’t know. 
    • You will probably get a couple more reminders followed by further demands fro unregulated debt collectors with even increasing amounts to pay. They are all designed to scare you into paying.  Don't. It's a scam site and they do not know who was driving and they know the keeper is not liable to pay the PCN. Also the shop was closed so they have no legitimate interest in keeping the car park clear. So to charge £100 is a penalty as there is no legitimate interest which means that the case would be thrown out if it went to Court.  Keep your money in your wallet and be prepared to ignore all their letters and threats. Doubtful they would go to Court since a lot more people would not pay when they heard  MET lost in Court. However they may just send you a Letter of Claim to test your resolve.  If yoy get one of those, come back to us and we will advise a snotty letter to send them.  You probably already have, but take a look through some of our past Met PCNs to see how they are doing.
    • Hello, been a while since I posted on here, really hoping for the same support an advice I received last time :-) Long, long story for us, but basically through bad choices, bad luck and bad advice ended up in an IVA in 2016. The accounts involved all defaulted, to be expected. In 2018, I got contacted by an 'independent advisor' advising me that I shouldn't be in an IVA, that it wasn't the solution for our circumstances and that they would guide us through the process of leaving the IVA and finding a better solution. I feel very stupid for taking this persons advice, and feel they prey on vulnerable people for their own financial gain (it ended with us paying our IVA monthly contribution to them)-long and short of it our IVA failed in 2018. At the same time the IVA failed we also had our shared ownership property voluntarily repossessed (to say this was an incredibly stressful time would be an understatement!) When we moved to our new (rented) property in August 2018, I was aware that creditors would start contacting us from the IVA failure. I got advice from another help website and started sending off SARs and CCAs request letters. I was advised not to bury my head and update our address etc and tackle each company as they came along. Initially there was quite a lot of correspondence, and I still get a daily missed call from PRA group (and the occasional letter from them), but not much else. However, yesterday i had a letter through from Lowell (and one from Capital One) advising that they had bought my debt and would like to speak with me regarding the account. There will be several.of these through our door i suspect, as we did have several accounts with Capital One. Capital One have written to us with regular statements over the last 5 years, and my last communication with them was to advise of of our new address (June 2019), I also note that all of these accounts received a small payment in Jan2019 (i'm assuming the funds from the failed IVA pot). Really sorry for the long long post, but just thought id give (some of) the background for context.... I guess my question at the moment is.....how do I respond to Lowell...do I wait for the inevitable other letters to arrive then deal with them all together or individually...? Do I send them a CCA?  Many thanks
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Euro Situation Explained.


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For anybody who doesn’t fully understand the Euro situation ,

 

 

it is explained very simply in the picture below...

 

 

 

 

 

 

and the following info.

 

Euro.jpg

 

Pythagoras's theorem - 24 words.

 

 

Lord's Prayer - 66 words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Archimedes' Principle - 67 words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10 Commandments - 179 words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

US Declaration of Independence - 1,300 words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

US Constitution with all 27 Amendments - 7,818 words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EU regulations on the sale of cabbage - 26,911 words

 

 

If all else fails, kick them where it hurts and SOD'EM;)

 

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I was wondering about that. I think we should be at the bottom with a shovel - clearing up the mess that the idiots who dreamed up this hair brained scheme have created. We're paying for it even if though we chose not to be a part of this madness. If the unelected and undemocratic Europeans get their way, we will end up paying even more too.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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I don't think it's about the currency (even though I have put 'Euro' in the title).

I think it's more about the European Union, and they still have a large say in what happens here.

 

I was just passing on something I recieved.....Please don't shoot the messenger.:razz:

 

 

If all else fails, kick them where it hurts and SOD'EM;)

 

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I don't think it's about the currency (even though I have put 'Euro' in the title).

I think it's more about the European Union, and they still have a large say in what happens here.

 

I was just passing on something I recieved.....Please don't shoot the messenger.:razz:

 

Don't worry, I won't. If I could shoot anybody it would be the [edit]hole politicians who refuse to give us a vote on this matter because they know we will vote to leave this corrupt union.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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Hm not a very accurate picture. Of course Germany, France etc have profited from the Euro but Greece for instance doesn't even have a Cadastral Office and pays pensions to long dead retired people. They just need to reform some systems in the countries going bankrupt.

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Hm not a very accurate picture. Of course Germany, France etc have profited from the Euro but Greece for instance doesn't even have a Cadastral Office and pays pensions to long dead retired people. They just need to reform some systems in the countries going bankrupt.

 

Is that it then? We just have to stop paying for dead Greeks and it will all be OK?

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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There was a very unconventional, but interesting article in the ny times by the way, i can't seem to post the link, just go to their website and search for "germay, to save the euro leave it"

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Whoops.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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I think this thread follows up on the very British tradition of blaming all to the foreigners. Can anybody give a look at this:

http://www.usdebtclock.org/world-debt-clock.html

and compare UK external debt/GDP ratio with the one of Greece? See, Britain is way more bankrupt than Greece.

"Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for Poundland"

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I think this thread follows up on the very British tradition of blaming all to the foreigners. Can anybody give a look at this:

http://www.usdebtclock.org/world-debt-clock.html

and compare UK external debt/GDP ratio with the one of Greece? See, Britain is way more bankrupt than Greece.

 

Then why is our money being used to bail Greece out?

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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Then why is our money being used to bail Greece out?

 

For starters the money is not 'ours', because Britain is bankrupt and the BoE have printed money out of thin air. So in this case we are talking of 'virtual' money bailing out a 'virtual debt' made of toxic CDO's and CDS. The bulk of the real money to pay for Greece bailout comes from the Germans taxpayers and they are not very happy.

 

Let me point out another thing: Britain has benefited from the Euro crisis as due to the austerity measures in Greece, Italy, Spain and Ireland, more dirty money has been deposited in UK or spent on properties. Have you given a look at the top range of property market in London? It's in a bubble. Rich Greeks and Italians have moved money out their countries to buy already overpriced houses. Please don't fall into that simplistic Daily Mail analysis.

"Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for Poundland"

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For starters the money is not 'ours', because Britain is bankrupt and the BoE have printed money out of thin air. So in this case we are talking of 'virtual' money bailing out a 'virtual debt' made of toxic CDO's and CDS. The bulk of the real money to pay for Greece bailout comes from the Germans taxpayers and they are not very happy.

 

Let me point out another thing: Britain has benefited from the Euro crisis as due to the austerity measures in Greece, Italy, Spain and Ireland, more dirty money has been deposited in UK or spent on properties. Have you given a look at the top range of property market in London? It's in a bubble. Rich Greeks and Italians have moved money out their countries to buy already overpriced houses. Please don't fall into that simplistic Daily Mail analysis.

 

OK, I'll stick the, so much cleverer, Guardian analysis. The fact remains that we are helping to bail out Greece though. It is also a fact that we would be better off leaving the EU altogether.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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OK, I'll stick the, so much cleverer, Guardian analysis. The fact remains that we are helping to bail out Greece though. It is also a fact that we would be better off leaving the EU altogether.
we spent the best part of 30 years trying to get into the eu, when the going gets tough, despite huge amounts of money invested in uk by europe, there are calls for us to get out.

we could leave, but where we would trade as easily as being in europe I dont know. there are lots of things wrong with the eu model but sticking our heads up our ar*e and running for cover is not the answer

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we spent the best part of 30 years trying to get into the eu, when the going gets tough, despite huge amounts of money invested in uk by europe, there are calls for us to get out.

we could leave, but where we would trade as easily as being in europe I dont know. there are lots of things wrong with the eu model but sticking our heads up our ar*e and running for cover is not the answer

 

We spent the best part of 30 years trying to get into the common market, not into a federal superstate. Also, we put a lot more in than we take out. Europe has not invested huge amounts of money in the UK, it is actually the other way around, so rather than us running for cover, I think it would be more of a case of refusing to put any more good money after bad. What evidence is there to suggest that we would no longer trade with the EU if we left?

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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There's no such a thing as an old-style common market any more, after the Maastricht treaty you're either in or out of the EU, unless you build a Tier1 with Euro+ full fledged political union and tier2 EU without Euro and old style EEC, which is technically possible. There remains to be seen if and when Germany would agree to this scenario.

"Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for Poundland"

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There's no such a thing as an old-style common market any more, after the Maastricht treaty you're either in or out of the EU, unless you build a Tier1 with Euro+ full fledged political union and tier2 EU without Euro and old style EEC, which is technically possible. There remains to be seen if and when Germany would agree to this scenario.

 

We should have been given a referendum on the Maastricht treaty and the EU constitution and weren't. Thatcher failed us on Maastricht and Brown and Blair blatantly lied to us on the EU Constitution, having promised a referendum on it. The majority of people in this country want out of this undemocratic organisation but the Politicians lie and cheat at every turn because "they know better".

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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just for you fred

 

  • Foreign direct investment, and the presence of foreign owned firms, have had a beneficial effect on the UK's national income and constitute a crucial part of the UK's economic success, and high levels of foreign investment could be threatened by British withdrawal from free access to EU markets. Estimates suggest that trade with EU countries now accounts for over 60 per cent of UK's trade (compared to 16 per cent for the United States), and 3.2 million jobs, or 12 per cent of the entire UK economy, are directly associated with exports of goods and services to the EU. Any withdrawal could have negative impact on these positions.

 

  • The economic consequences could also mean a more disruptive split over trade with EU countries, including a possible impact on availability and prices of EU products.

 

  • The practical and legal complexities of withdrawal would be daunting and could take several years. Many UK companies now have partnerships with EU companies, or own European companies or have contracts with such companies. EU structures aid these relationships. Untying all this would be a field day for lawyers but costly for those paying the bill. Investors could lose out if firms in what remained of the EU decide to stick with EU trading partners, depriving UK companies of valuable contracts.

 

  • Fear of the unknown - however "bloated the bureaucracy" or "crazy the community", investors hate change and even more uncertainty.

 

  • Rise of China, India and maybe Brazil/Latin America as economic powerhouses needs the counterbalance of a strong united Europe. Again, the investment take is that the EU trading and negotiating block carries more clout than the UK alone. And would the rest of the EU put up with the UK, a major economy, riding on its coat tails - even if this works for Norway, a far smaller economy and one largely dependent on gas and other natural resources?

 

  • An isolated UK would be less attractive to inward investment because those looking to take a stake would not get access (or as much access) to the wider European market.

 

  • The UK would be an afterthought - and no longer able to influence matters in Europe. It would also be excluded from foreign policy decisions on matters such as security, dealing with Russia and extension of the EU to the east - primarily the question of Turkish accession which the UK supports. Investors in emerging markets need to assess these factors.

 

  • Leaving the EU would jolt markets in a negative direction. International investors would take fright at the unknowns involved.

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I guess the man on the street is too simple to understand complicated economic theories. They want to see things in black and white: in or out, let them all in or kick them all out, and so on.

 

The reality is that we live in a globalised world based on fiat currencies and run by the IMF, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank and being in or out of any political or monetary union makes little difference.

"Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for Poundland"

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just for you fred

 

  • Foreign direct investment, and the presence of foreign owned firms, have had a beneficial effect on the UK's national income and constitute a crucial part of the UK's economic success, and high levels of foreign investment could be threatened by British withdrawal from free access to EU markets. Estimates suggest that trade with EU countries now accounts for over 60 per cent of UK's trade (compared to 16 per cent for the United States), and 3.2 million jobs, or 12 per cent of the entire UK economy, are directly associated with exports of goods and services to the EU. Any withdrawal could have negative impact on these positions.

 

  • The economic consequences could also mean a more disruptive split over trade with EU countries, including a possible impact on availability and prices of EU products.

 

  • The practical and legal complexities of withdrawal would be daunting and could take several years. Many UK companies now have partnerships with EU companies, or own European companies or have contracts with such companies. EU structures aid these relationships. Untying all this would be a field day for lawyers but costly for those paying the bill. Investors could lose out if firms in what remained of the EU decide to stick with EU trading partners, depriving UK companies of valuable contracts.

 

  • Fear of the unknown - however "bloated the bureaucracy" or "crazy the community", investors hate change and even more uncertainty.

 

  • Rise of China, India and maybe Brazil/Latin America as economic powerhouses needs the counterbalance of a strong united Europe. Again, the investment take is that the EU trading and negotiating block carries more clout than the UK alone. And would the rest of the EU put up with the UK, a major economy, riding on its coat tails - even if this works for Norway, a far smaller economy and one largely dependent on gas and other natural resources?

 

  • An isolated UK would be less attractive to inward investment because those looking to take a stake would not get access (or as much access) to the wider European market.

 

  • The UK would be an afterthought - and no longer able to influence matters in Europe. It would also be excluded from foreign policy decisions on matters such as security, dealing with Russia and extension of the EU to the east - primarily the question of Turkish accession which the UK supports. Investors in emerging markets need to assess these factors.

 

  • Leaving the EU would jolt markets in a negative direction. International investors would take fright at the unknowns involved.

 

That's one view and it contains lots of "coulds", "mights" and "maybes". Here's an alternative view: "http://www.mindfulmoney.co.uk/8093/economic-impact/what-are-the-economic-benefits-of-the-uk-leaving-the-eu.html". The truth is, nobody really knows, but if I was given the chance I would vote to get out.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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its the magically, 'my life will be so much better if'' they kick out the immigrants, they stop benefit scroungers, single mothers, council housing for working people earning over a certain amount...etc etc...what they fail to understand is their life would be little to no different, they would still get shafted all ends by those holding the reins of power no matter which political persuasion

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its the magically, 'my life will be so much better if'' they kick out the immigrants, they stop benefit scroungers, single mothers, council housing for working people earning over a certain amount...etc etc...what they fail to understand is their life would be little to no different, they would still get shafted all ends by those holding the reins of power no matter which political persuasion

 

You might well be right, but at least we'd be able to kick out the people who make most of the laws we are governed by. We can't at the moment.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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