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On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters
to compare with the 70-year-olds from yesterday.
The plumber Ashley was outstanding from the first
second he walked onto the job. The rest of the
20-year-olds were such a appalling example of
"today's yoof" they could be poster-childs for
any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum
campaign.

JGH
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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 05:26:25 +0100, "Brian Gaff"
wrote:

Is this series propaganda by any chance. The bit I saw smacked of set up.

Brian


If it appears on BBC, then yes, I agree. These two programmes have
attempted to show how we can all work into our 70s, as that is what
the government keeps telling us is going to be necessary. But the
truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't have the
stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as 20-year-olds.

The results of the programmes are going to throw the government's
plans haywire. The pensioners shown were probably above average. There
are going to be many thousands who canot stand for longer periods, do
not have the dexterity to manipulate small items, cannot concentrate
too well and so on, exhibiting all the signs of natural aging in fact.
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think of the whole concept of
capitalism, because it is now coming to the end of its useful life as
fewer and fewer jobs are available due to mechanisation and robot
processes.

As for the young people in the second programme, what a bunch of
dropouts, largely!

MM
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In article ,
MM wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 05:26:25 +0100, "Brian Gaff"
wrote:


Is this series propaganda by any chance. The bit I saw smacked of set up.

Brian


If it appears on BBC, then yes, I agree. These two programmes have
attempted to show how we can all work into our 70s, as that is what
the government keeps telling us is going to be necessary. But the
truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't have the
stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as 20-year-olds.


The results of the programmes are going to throw the government's
plans haywire. The pensioners shown were probably above average. There
are going to be many thousands who canot stand for longer periods, do
not have the dexterity to manipulate small items, cannot concentrate
too well and so on, exhibiting all the signs of natural aging in fact.
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.


but they do seem to drive tour busses. ;-(

--
From KT24

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.18

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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going to be
necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

http://pensions-service.direct.gov.u...calculator/hom
e.asp

Currently anyone younger than 34 won't get their State Pension until they
are 68 but the rules they are a changing. Particularly for those between
34 and 50 odd.

But the truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't
have the stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as
20-year-olds.

Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.


How did we jump from 70 (which is 2 years on from the current State
Pension age) to 75?

My late father was still very fit and active into his late 70's. The FiL
has slowed down in the last few years, he is also in his late 70's. I'm
not saying that people should have to work to 75 but that isn't,
currently, what HMG are saying. They are saying 68.

Strokes and heart attacks aren't just "old persons" illness's.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think of the whole concept of
capitalism, because it is now coming to the end of its useful life as
fewer and fewer jobs are available due to mechanisation and robot
processes.


There does need to be a massive kick up the backside of the extremes of
capitalism. The banks and financial institutions have become too
separated from reality.

The government is certainly crapping itself about the potential size of
the Pensions bill in the coming years, that's the primary mover for
pushing up the State Pension age and trying to push it's value down.
Anyone with any sense should be making their own private Pension
provision, the earlier you start the less strain it is to build up a
decent pot, even if that does seem a contradiction with the previous
para.

--
Cheers
Dave.





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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 09:32:52 +0100, Dave Liquorice
wrote:

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going to be
necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(
http://pensions-service.direct.gov.u...calculator/hom
e.asp

Currently anyone younger than 34 won't get their State Pension until they
are 68 but the rules they are a changing. Particularly for those between
34 and 50 odd.

But the truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't
have the stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as
20-year-olds.

Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.


How did we jump from 70 (which is 2 years on from the current State
Pension age) to 75?

My late father was still very fit and active into his late 70's. The FiL
has slowed down in the last few years, he is also in his late 70's. I'm
not saying that people should have to work to 75 but that isn't,
currently, what HMG are saying. They are saying 68.

Strokes and heart attacks aren't just "old persons" illness's.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think of the whole concept of
capitalism, because it is now coming to the end of its useful life as
fewer and fewer jobs are available due to mechanisation and robot
processes.


There does need to be a massive kick up the backside of the extremes of
capitalism. The banks and financial institutions have become too
separated from reality.

The government is certainly crapping itself about the potential size of
the Pensions bill in the coming years, that's the primary mover for
pushing up the State Pension age and trying to push it's value down.
Anyone with any sense should be making their own private Pension
provision, the earlier you start the less strain it is to build up a
decent pot, even if that does seem a contradiction with the previous
para.

The pension age will doubtless drift upwards. I will get state pension at
65 and after various increases in age my wife will now get hers a week
before her 65th birthday. Fortunately we can get by on savings and private
pensions since neither of us is now working.
There is a big difference between people continuing to work through rather
than having 8 years retired and then going back as happened in the TV
programme. Personally many years of stress did my head in and I gave up
before I reached 60. Similarly a lot of people would be incapable of
demanding work by late 60s I suspect.
Of course if the government did not have its dogma over immigration we
would only need a third of anticipated austerity measures and the
retirement date would not have to go up so quickly.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...s-7939667.html
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On 13/07/2012 08:54, MM wrote:
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.

Any bus or coach driver over 65 has a compulsory medical every year, and
the slightest doubt about their fitness to drive removes their licence.
We have a few drivers over 70 working for us, and they are as good at
their job, within their limits, as the younger ones.

They normally potter around on school contracts and local work for a few
hours a day, leaving us younger ones to get on with the touring and
other jobs that need more stamina.

They also seem to have less trouble with the kids' behaviour than the
young drivers, but that's another thread.

--
Tciao for Now!

John.
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In article ,
MM wrote:
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.



Well, yes. But these proposals are of course from politicians. And it
would make no difference to anything if they had a heart attack or stroke
on the job. Apart from the noise level in the H of C, possibly.

--
*Marathon runners with bad footwear suffer the agony of defeat*

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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MM wrote
Brian Gaff wrote


Is this series propaganda by any chance.
The bit I saw smacked of set up.


If it appears on BBC, then yes, I agree. These two programmes have
attempted to show how we can all work into our 70s, as that is what
the government keeps telling us is going to be necessary. But the
truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't have the
stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as 20-year-olds.


But may well be a hell of a lot more employable than plenty of those.

The results of the programmes are going to throw the government's
plans haywire.


Nope.

The pensioners shown were probably above average.
There are going to be many thousands who canot
stand for longer periods,


So you use them for work that doesn't require them to do that.

do not have the dexterity to manipulate small items,


So you use them for work that doesn't require them to do that.

cannot concentrate too well


Likely they can do a lot better at that than the average stupid kid.

and so on, exhibiting all the signs of natural aging in fact.


Who cares if they don't look as good as the average bimbo ?

Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school?
They could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.


So can the 55 year olds too.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think
of the whole concept of capitalism,


Nope, every time we've tried that, we haven't been
able to do any better.

because it is now coming to the end of its useful life


Mindlessly silly, comrade. Its actually what you prefer that has instead.

as fewer and fewer jobs are available due
to mechanisation and robot processes.


The US still managed an unemployment rate of just 4.x% with
an immense legal and illegal immigration rate, and the participation
rate at an all time historic high, just before the clowns were allowed
to completely implode much of the world's financial system, again.

Nice theory, pity about the real world.

As for the young people in the second programme,
what a bunch of dropouts, largely!


Plenty who try to employ them find that.

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jgharston wrote:
On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters
to compare with the 70-year-olds from yesterday.
The plumber Ashley was outstanding from the first
second he walked onto the job. The rest of the
20-year-olds were such a appalling example of
"today's yoof" they could be poster-childs for
any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum
campaign.

JGH


I have watched it.

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with this
one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is good at
his job. And for some reason I liked him the moment I met him (just the way
he spoke to me when we met did the trick).

He cannot afford to insure a car so he takes the train to Doncaster and then
bikes it from the train station to the unit. He is an absolute pleasure to
talk to and is just superb in every aspect of his work. In fact he is
causing problems because he is fitting the gear faster than we can get it
delivered! And everything he has installed is perfect.

Much better than the tosser that was fired yesterday (that was the one I
punched in the ******** a couple of months ago).


--
Adam




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Strokes and heart attacks aren't just "old persons" illness's.


Very true. My wife runs some services for the Stroke Association, and
her youngest client is 29.


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There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?


It won't be a matter of whether you want to work at 70. It will be a
matter of necessity (for most people). However you slice the cake, you
have retired people and working people, and all pensions (whether funded
or not) involve a transfer of income from workers to retired. If that
imposte becomes too great, the workers will simply revolt and refuse to
pay it. Apart from an annual cull, the only way to keep down the
proportion of retired people in the population is to raise the
retirement age.


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ARWadsworth wrote:
There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.


My knees have already crapped out and I'm in my mid-40s. Light
switches I can do. Sockets and underfloor wiring leaves me
in agony.

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with this
one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is good at
his job.


They do exist! Seems the same as the one in six rate on the TV.

JGH
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On 13/07/2012 12:44, jgharston wrote:
ARWadsworth wrote:
There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.


My knees have already crapped out and I'm in my mid-40s. Light
switches I can do. Sockets and underfloor wiring leaves me
in agony.



I've just done some insulation and boarding in my son's loft. A cross
between carpentry and yoga with all that stretching and crouching etc. I
reckon 3 hours maximum at my age (69) if I want to be able to move next day.
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On 13/07/2012 11:43, ARWadsworth wrote:
jgharston wrote:
On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters
to compare with the 70-year-olds from yesterday.
The plumber Ashley was outstanding from the first
second he walked onto the job. The rest of the
20-year-olds were such a appalling example of
"today's yoof" they could be poster-childs for
any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum
campaign.

JGH


I have watched it.

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with this
one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is good at
his job. And for some reason I liked him the moment I met him (just the way
he spoke to me when we met did the trick).

He cannot afford to insure a car so he takes the train to Doncaster and then
bikes it from the train station to the unit. He is an absolute pleasure to
talk to and is just superb in every aspect of his work. In fact he is
causing problems because he is fitting the gear faster than we can get it
delivered! And everything he has installed is perfect.


Hearing that has made my day. I'd like to meet his parents. They should
be appointed special advisors to the government


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In article o.uk, Dave
Liquorice writes
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn all
your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the best
of you?
--
fred
it's a ba-na-na . . . .
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fred wrote:
In article o.uk, Dave
Liquorice writes
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn all
your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the best
of you?


Take lots of E - apparently its the dogs ******** for that.


--
To people who know nothing, anything is possible.
To people who know too much, it is a sad fact
that they know how little is really possible -
and how hard it is to achieve it.
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going
to be necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that
far, just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


****ing hell.

--
Adam


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On Jul 13, 8:54*am, MM wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 05:26:25 +0100, "Brian Gaff"

wrote:
Is this series propaganda by any chance. The bit I saw smacked of set up..


Brian


If it appears on BBC, then yes, I agree. These two programmes have
attempted to show how we can all work into our 70s, as that is what
the government keeps telling us is going to be necessary. But the
truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't have the
stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as 20-year-olds.

The results of the programmes are going to throw the government's
plans haywire. The pensioners shown were probably above average. There
are going to be many thousands who canot stand for longer periods, do
not have the dexterity to manipulate small items, cannot concentrate
too well and so on, exhibiting all the signs of natural aging in fact.
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think of the whole concept of
capitalism, because it is now coming to the end of its useful life as
fewer and fewer jobs are available due to mechanisation and robot
processes.

As for the young people in the second programme, what a bunch of
dropouts, largely!

MM


They don't say what job exactly they expect you to be doing.

I suspect it'll be pensioners working for free in Poundland on the
tills or stacking shelves via the workfare scheme.

Probably will be nothing at all for younger unemployed who will have
to scrounge of mum and dad (if they can) or be left to rot dossing on
the streets.

Philip
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In article o.uk,
Dave Liquorice wrote:
Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


Bloody hell, Dave. Dunno what to say.

In 'our' job, some parts of it I can still do aged 67. But not holding a
pole over my head all day. A Fisher - just about. Or a heavy rig. Clipping
a mic on someone then recording that etc is ok - provided it's not too
cold.

--
*We waste time, so you don't have to *

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.


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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 11:43:59 +0100, ARWadsworth wrote:

jgharston wrote:
On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters to compare with the
70-year-olds from yesterday. The plumber Ashley was outstanding from
the first second he walked onto the job. The rest of the 20-year-olds
were such a appalling example of "today's yoof" they could be
poster-childs for any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum campaign.

JGH


I have watched it.

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with
this one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is
good at his job. And for some reason I liked him the moment I met him
(just the way he spoke to me when we met did the trick).

He cannot afford to insure a car so he takes the train to Doncaster and
then bikes it from the train station to the unit. He is an absolute
pleasure to talk to and is just superb in every aspect of his work. In
fact he is causing problems because he is fitting the gear faster than
we can get it delivered! And everything he has installed is perfect.

Much better than the tosser that was fired yesterday (that was the one I
punched in the ******** a couple of months ago).


Back in 2005 I advised on recruiting a helpdesk operator - I gave them a
technical test. The guy we chose had just finished Uni. In the holidays,
he advertised a PC-fix service, and because he couldn't drive, picked
them up and dropped them off by bus. He was very keen, very quick, and in
the space of a year got into developing, and then had a guy under him.

To be fair, my then boss was so impressed, he paid for him to have
driving lessons (passed first time).

So not all young'uns are a waste of space.
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message
ll.co.uk...
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going to be
necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


Things have changed. There are loads of treatments out there and at your age
you will be fine.
Take care.




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Owain wrote:
On Jul 13, 1:30 pm, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Take lots of E - apparently its the dogs ******** for that.


Ecstacy? Or Vitamin E?

XTC
Owain



--
To people who know nothing, anything is possible.
To people who know too much, it is a sad fact
that they know how little is really possible -
and how hard it is to achieve it.
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In article , The Natural Philosopher
writes
Owain wrote:
On Jul 13, 1:30 pm, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(
Take lots of E - apparently its the dogs ******** for that.


Ecstacy? Or Vitamin E?

XTC


If we start working on a time machine now we can go back to the 90s and
have at least some hope of getting some clean ones or maybe someone has
Alexander Shulgin's phone no?
--
fred
it's a ba-na-na . . . .
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On 13/07/2012 13:22, fred wrote:
In article o.uk, Dave
Liquorice writes
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn all
your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the best
of you?


The good news is that the surgical procedure which puts electrodes in
the brain stimulated by a battery can work extremely well: an
ex-colleague of mine has just had the op and has been transformed from a
drug-induced zombie.




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GB wrote

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.


Could I still do it? Why not?


It won't be a matter of whether you want to work at 70.
It will be a matter of necessity (for most people).


I don't buy that.

However you slice the cake, you have retired people and
working people, and all pensions (whether funded or not)
involve a transfer of income from workers to retired.


That doesn't mean that most people will be working at 70.

If that imposte becomes too great, the workers
will simply revolt and refuse to pay it.


The tax system doesn't work like that.

Apart from an annual cull, the only way to keep down the proportion
of retired people in the population is to raise the retirement age.


That's not right either. The other obvious way is to
accept immigrants that have more kids than the indigenous
population does. And that's precisely what the EU does in fact.

Even the Japanese, who have much lower levels of immigration
than anyone else, don't get the effect you claim is inevitable,
even when they have had a depression for 20 years now.
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jgharston wrote
ARWadsworth wrote


There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.


My knees have already crapped out and I'm in my mid-40s. Light
switches I can do. Sockets and underfloor wiring leaves me in agony.


Sure, there will always be some like that, but what matters is how many of
those in the mid 40s are like that. The short story is that not that many of
them are, and those that are can do work that suits their medical condition
too.

And while you may not be as capable of as much physical work
at 70 as you are at Adam's current age, many who are 70 can
still get more work done right than plenty of 20 year olds too.

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something
seriously wrong with this one. He is interested in what
he does, he is a quick learner and is good at his job.


They do exist!


Corse they do.

Seems the same as the one in six rate on the TV.


There have always been arguments about what the percentage is.

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"stuart noble" wrote in message
...
On 13/07/2012 11:43, ARWadsworth wrote:
jgharston wrote:
On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters
to compare with the 70-year-olds from yesterday.
The plumber Ashley was outstanding from the first
second he walked onto the job. The rest of the
20-year-olds were such a appalling example of
"today's yoof" they could be poster-childs for
any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum
campaign.

JGH


I have watched it.

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with
this
one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is good
at
his job. And for some reason I liked him the moment I met him (just the
way
he spoke to me when we met did the trick).

He cannot afford to insure a car so he takes the train to Doncaster and
then
bikes it from the train station to the unit. He is an absolute pleasure
to
talk to and is just superb in every aspect of his work. In fact he is
causing problems because he is fitting the gear faster than we can get it
delivered! And everything he has installed is perfect.


Hearing that has made my day. I'd like to meet his parents. They should be
appointed special advisors to the government


Its unlikely that they can do anything about transferring their genetics to
everyone else's kids.

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On Jul 13, 8:54*am, MM wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 05:26:25 +0100, "Brian Gaff"

wrote:
Is this series propaganda by any chance. The bit I saw smacked of set up..


Brian


If it appears on BBC, then yes, I agree. These two programmes have
attempted to show how we can all work into our 70s, as that is what
the government keeps telling us is going to be necessary. But the
truth is that even with healthy pensioners, they just don't have the
stamina and cannot be expected to be as flexible as 20-year-olds.

The results of the programmes are going to throw the government's
plans haywire. The pensioners shown were probably above average. There
are going to be many thousands who canot stand for longer periods, do
not have the dexterity to manipulate small items, cannot concentrate
too well and so on, exhibiting all the signs of natural aging in fact.
Imagine 75-year-old bus drivers driving your kids to school? They
could have a heart attack or stroke any minute.

No, what is needed is a fundamental re-think of the whole concept of
capitalism, because it is now coming to the end of its useful life as
fewer and fewer jobs are available due to mechanisation and robot
processes.

As for the young people in the second programme, what a bunch of
dropouts, largely!

MM


I think people should wind down slowly from work. A lot depends on
their job. It's one thing being sat behind a desk, quite another to be
running about on rooftops.
Eyesight can be an issue as well.
Probably do well in a supervisory position with their years of
experience.
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On Jul 13, 9:32*am, "Dave Liquorice"
wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:
These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going to be
necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. *B-(


I'm truely sorry to hear that Dave.


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On 13/07/2012 19:24, Rod Speed wrote:


"stuart noble" wrote in message
...
On 13/07/2012 11:43, ARWadsworth wrote:
jgharston wrote:
On tonight's episode they sent in some youngsters
to compare with the 70-year-olds from yesterday.
The plumber Ashley was outstanding from the first
second he walked onto the job. The rest of the
20-year-olds were such a appalling example of
"today's yoof" they could be poster-childs for
any Daily Wail young benfer scrounger scum
campaign.

JGH

I have watched it.

There is no way I can do what I do now when I am 70 at the same speed.

Could I still do it? Why not?

BTW we have a new apprentice. There is something seriously wrong with
this
one. He is interested in what he does, he is a quick learner and is
good at
his job. And for some reason I liked him the moment I met him (just
the way
he spoke to me when we met did the trick).

He cannot afford to insure a car so he takes the train to Doncaster
and then
bikes it from the train station to the unit. He is an absolute
pleasure to
talk to and is just superb in every aspect of his work. In fact he is
causing problems because he is fitting the gear faster than we can
get it
delivered! And everything he has installed is perfect.


Hearing that has made my day. I'd like to meet his parents. They
should be appointed special advisors to the government


Its unlikely that they can do anything about transferring their genetics
to everyone else's kids.


Assuming it is all genetic. I very much doubt that

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On 13/07/2012 13:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
fred wrote:
In article o.uk,
Dave Liquorice writes
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn
all your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the
best of you?


Take lots of E - apparently its the dogs ******** for that.


Make sure you get the right stuff. MPTP will _cause_ Parkinson's. And
since the MDMA you might get isn't exactly from a controlled source...

Andy
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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 09:32:52 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote:

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

These two programmes have attempted to show how we can all work into
our 70s, as that is what the government keeps telling us is going to be
necessary.


Aye, anyone younger than around their early 50's ought to look at what
the current projected state pensiojn age is for them. I'm 52 and won't
get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


I'm so sorry to hear that Dave.

My dad had that for about 20 years.

--
Frank Erskine
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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 13:30:58 +0100, The Natural Philosopher
wrote:

fred wrote:
In article o.uk, Dave
Liquorice writes
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 08:54:08 +0100, MM wrote:

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn all
your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the best
of you?


Take lots of E - apparently its the dogs ******** for that.


Apparently in parts of Yorkshire they take it by rubbing it in around
their teeth.

Usually known as "E by gum".

--
Frank Erskine
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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 09:32:52 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote:

I'm 52


Christ, you're six years younger than me. Forgive me for saying so, I
had assumed you were an old git.

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


Bugger.
Hey, a new career awaits you as Flashman Liq DJ.


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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 04:44:31 -0700 (PDT), jgharston
wrote:

My knees have already crapped out and I'm in my mid-40s. Light
switches I can do. Sockets and underfloor wiring leaves me
in agony.


Same here - ****ing sore.
I've been using my electric bike for a while; the other day I got on
it and pedalled the first couple of hundred yards with no power -
****ing Nora, the pain in the knees.
Funnily enough, when I've been using the motor and assisting it with
my own power, it's no problem after the first couple of miles to give
it laldy, not a twinge then. It's that first flexing motion that kills
me.
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Rod Speed wrote:
And while you may not be as capable of as much physical work
at 70 as you are at Adam's current age, many who are 70 can
still get more work done right than plenty of 20 year olds too.


What's really annoying is knowing that I will have to start
paying people to do the work that I frustratingly want to
tell myself that I /can/ do, but have to persuade myself to
accept that while I /know/ how to do it I can't /physically/
so it. Two weeks ago I almost passed out plastering a low
ceiling (lots of bending and kneeling) and sheepishly asked
the plumber I had in if he could finish it off for me.

It's a blow to the ego (and the pocket) to have to pay
somebody else to do "your job", especially if you find
youself standing over them and saying, no, don't do that,
look, do it this way, arghh! me knees!, etc.

JGH
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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 21:55:15 +0100, Frank Erskine wrote:

I'm 52 and won't get the State Pension until I'm 66. That's assuming I
make it that far, just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


I'm so sorry to hear that Dave.

My dad had that for about 20 years.


Well that takes me to 72. B-) Not quite what I'd have liked, my Dad
made 96 but was very frail for the last few years.

--
Cheers
Dave.



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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 15:34:20 +0100, newshound wrote:

Balls, sorry to hear that Dave. I hope you are making plans to burn
all your money doing as many fun things as you can before it takes the
best of you?


A substantial amount of money has been burnt on this place. Maybe there
is a bit of incentive to get it finished now...

The good news is that the surgical procedure which puts electrodes in
the brain stimulated by a battery can work extremely well: an
ex-colleague of mine has just had the op and has been transformed from
a drug-induced zombie.


Think you have to pretty far gone before they operate, I only have a
resting tremor in my right hand/arm. If I move it or even think about
moving it the tremor stops. It was the tremor that sent me to the GP and
thence consultant and DaT Scan.

--
Cheers
Dave.



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On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 22:47:12 +0100, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote:

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 09:32:52 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote:

I'm 52


Christ, you're six years younger than me. Forgive me for saying so, I
had assumed you were an old git.

That's assuming I make it that far,
just been diagnosed with Parkinson's. B-(


Bugger.
Hey, a new career awaits you as Flashman Liq DJ.


--
Cheers
Dave.



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