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Adrian@TORQEN

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Everything posted by Adrian@TORQEN

  1. Boarding a flight to Japan in LHR Terminal 5 for Tokyo Auto Salon 2020. Proud to see a copy of Banzai with the TORQEN new advert, featuring James’s 350z. Will be visiting TOMEI and Trust/GReddy factories, so stay tuned for pics and video from there and much more from TAS 2020. Much love to all!
  2. The year is not yet over, we're still here at TORQEN, working hard to feed your thirst and hunger for the best performance car parts in the Japanese market! As such, we're happy to announce TORQEN is now an authorised overseas distributor for TOMEI POWERED Japan. We will be visiting them in January when we will have a full tour of their insanely amazing factory and facilities. Sooooo looking forward to that! ❤️ Full range will be available here: https://www.torqen.uk/18_tomei Feel free to contact us if the part is not yet listed. TOMEI video here:
  3. Welcome along, post some pics with your new car!
  4. Wow, what a surprise https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/business-50719616
  5. You're actually reading that website?
  6. Have we covered this letter in this thread yet? ====== Economists’ letter to the Financial Times 25 November 2019 The UK economy needs reform. For too long it has prioritised consumption over investment, short-term financial returns over long-term innovation, rising asset values over rising wages, and deficit reduction over the quality of public services. The results are now plain. We have had ten years of near zero productivity growth. Corporate investment has stagnated. Average earnings are still lower than in 2008. A gulf has arisen between London and the South East and the rest of the country. And public services are under intolerable strain - which the economic costs of a hard Brexit would only make worse. We now moreover face the urgent imperative of acting on the climate and environmental crisis. Given private sector reluctance, what the UK economy needs is a serious injection of public investment, which can in turn leverage private finance attracted by the expectation of higher demand. Such investment needs to be directed into the large-scale and rapid decarbonisation of energy, transport, housing, industry and farming; the support of innovation- and export- oriented businesses; and public services. It is clear that this will require an active and green industrial strategy, aimed at improving productivity and spreading investment across the country. Experience elsewhere (not least in Germany) suggests a National Investment Bank would greatly help. With long-term real interest rates now negative, it makes basic economic sense for the government to borrow for this, spreading the cost over the generations who will benefit from the assets. As the IMF has acknowledged, when interest payments are low and investment raises economic growth, public debt is sustainable. At the same time, we need a serious attempt to raise wages and productivity. A higher minimum wage can help do this, alongside tighter regulation of the worst practices in the gig economy. Bringing workers onto company boards and giving them a stake in their companies, as most European countries do in some form, will also help. The UK’s outlier rate of corporation tax can clearly be raised, not least for the highly profitable digital companies. As economists, and people who work in various fields of economic policy, we have looked closely at the economic prospectuses of the political parties. It seems clear to us that the Labour Party has not only understood the deep problems we face, but has devised serious proposals for dealing with them. We believe it deserves to form the next government. Yours David G. Blanchflower Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College; Professor of Economics. University of Stirling; former member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee Victoria Chick Emeritus Professor of Economics, University College London Lord Meghnad Desai Emeritus Professor of Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science ========= Full letter here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1YD3R8a7Qi6t9MwSVHiuQ_b7lMmw5GhRO/view
  7. Imagine if she would send vans on the road with the very kind message: "In the UK illegally? Go home or face arrest!" like in the Operation Valken. Or if she would do some secret meetings in Israel without advising her boss, the PM. That would be absolutely terrible. Oh, wait!
  8. Sorry for the confusion, you must remember English is not my first language, sometimes I miss stuff or don't mean what it appears to be at a first glance.
  9. While I kindly agree with you, she's not technically anything right now, not an MP as the parliament has been dissolved nor a shadow secretary. I would imagine a new shadow cabinet will be announced after the elections or if Labour win, a new cabinet. I haven't seen her in front of the cameras in this campaign, perhaps for a reason.
  10. Yeah, forget about the lies and disaster tories did in 9 years through austerity and brexit, forget about the Labour policies and manifesto, let's focus on some people Labour might bring in government. Makes a very valid point to me why I would vote for Conservatives. As if Priti Patel, Nicky Morgan, Michael Gove are any different. Short reminder (I know, Corbyn propaganda...)
  11. Last hurrah... https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/10/investigation-finds-88-tory-ads-misleading-compared-0-labour-11651802/
  12. +1 on this, super deal, should be sold in the next 24hrs
  13. I'm sure by now you've seen this leaked document from the Treasury, impartial civil servants, yet part of current government: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/corbyn-boris-johnson-brexit-deal-leaked-government-documents-election-a9235326.html https://news.sky.com/story/general-election-jeremy-corbyn-says-treasury-document-proves-there-will-be-n-ireland-checks-11879518
  14. NFU Mutual added. Anyone else you guys used? Please recommend it in this thread and I'll add it in the first post: https://www.nfumutual.co.uk/insurance/motor-insurance-a/car-insurance/
  15. We're being played again, Umair. It's worse than that. Andrew Neil is the chairman of Press Holdings Media Group, aka Spectator, see here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Neil https://www.linkedin.com/company/press-holdings-media-group/about/ https://media.info/organisations/names/press-holdings Boris worked for the Spectator from 1999 to 2005, see here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Johnson The Spectator is owned by Barclay Brothers, very ardent Brexit supporters, well, for a reason: https://novaramedia.com/2019/12/04/predatory-poisonous-vacuous-to-understand-boris-johnson-start-with-the-spectator/ What Andrew Neil did here is just some entry music, drum roll for Boris: https://apple.news/AN5jcf3I3Sq6Jp5sDsmu2lQ This is just for show, Boris will definitely come for the interview, I have no doubt in that, and he will argue that of course he's trustworthy because he said he was happy to be interviewed by anyone and here he is. And everyone will tune in and lap up every word because the whole thing's been so hyped up.
  16. No, it won’t, you’re missing the point, it’s a prerogative that can be used to overrule the parliament, just as he tried, after lying to the queen. We’re in very dangerous territory if the judicial review won’t be available anymore.
  17. This general election is about more than just Brexit. Brexit wont be done by January 31st, just as it hasn’t be done in July or October. Brexit will take 10-15 years to sort out, for a properly negotiated deal with EU, and specially if the people won’t be asked again in a referendum based on the information we know now. This general election is about having a fairer society, for being able to put food on the table, to prevent unnecessary pain and suffering, to take care of our planet for our kids and future generations, it’s for dealing child poverty, homelessness and mental health issues, for dealing with violent crimes and home brewed terrorism and so much more. It’s time we started carrying about everyone in the society and close the divide between us, generated by the fat cats, newspapers and a selected number of politicians. Do the right thing, Dan, think it through again.
  18. Still waiting to be shown why Corbyn is "unelectable", some facts and links would be amazing. I genuinely want to understand.
  19. Did you actually read the Conservative manifesto? Here's the link from their website: https://assets-global.website-files.com/5da42e2cae7ebd3f8bde353c/5dda924905da587992a064ba_Conservative 2019 Manifesto.pdf Check page 48: "We will ensure that judicial review is available to protect the rights of the individuals against an overbearing state, while ensuring that it is not abused to conduct politics by another means or to create needless delays." Does this mean Boris Johnson's decisions could not be ruled illegal, the only person with this status in UK, or am I reading it wrong? Forget 2000 years of legal precedent, the human rights laws, any equality considerations or any new law made by MPs? How about the separations of powers? As I read it, the ancient rights of royal prerogative could/would be used to overrule the parliament, so that the government and Prime Minister could act illegally, without any chance of stopping it. Remember when he tried to close Parliament for 5 weeks at a time of crisis, being ruled illegal? Or when May wanted to trigger Article 50 without parliamentary consent? Not a law specialist, but I'd love to hear what the specialists are saying about this paragraph with regards to the judicial reviews. Anything but Corbyn you say?
  20. Does that mean you're going to reconsider your opinion / your vote, now that you can see facts / implications?
  21. On the NHS sale: "Start with the shocking privatisation in 2013 of the NHS blood plasma supplier, on which thousands of patients depend. To protect the quality of the blood product, David Owen, as health secretary in 1975, took blood plasma collection into public ownership as Plasma Resources UK. But Jeremy Hunt, as health secretary, sold that off for £200m to a US private equity firm, Bain Capital, while Britain kept a 20% stake. Co-founded by Mitt Romney in 1984, Bain has over the years acquired such well known health products as Burger King, Dunkin Donuts, Dominos Pizza and much else. Protesters, David Owen among them, warned that the company had a predatory reputation for asset stripping, but Bain promised it would develop the company into a “life sciences champion” in Hertfordshire. Instead, it sold it on to a Chinese company in 2016 for £820m. Was there any protest from our government, losing its last remnant of control? Not a word. Instead, an irony, the US government is expressing concern at China taking over a vital US-owned health asset." https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/25/boris-johnson-conservatives-nhs-funding Piece by piece, until the last piece.
  22. Braum Racing Alpha X awesome seats now available in fabric, too! As usual, these are exclusively available in Europe at TORQEN: https://www.torqen.uk/specials/braum/sport-seats/alpha-x-series/21757-braum-alpha-x-series-racing-seats-black-cloth-pair-brr5-bfgs.html https://www.torqen.uk/specials/braum/sport-seats/alpha-x-series/21758-braum-alpha-x-series-racing-seats-red-cloth-pair-brr5-rfbs.html
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