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Programación en general => Programación Web => Base de Datos => Mensaje iniciado por: lehan6144 en Septiembre 28, 2013, 07:22:22 am
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Sorry about that. But they seem to be fine again now.Here's some reaction to the the Cameron/Clegg Q&A.James Kirkup at the Telegraph says Cameron and Clegg had quite a grim offering for the electorate.As the PM put his jacket back on and wound up the event, there weren't many smiles visible on the faces of the audience: many of the questions put to the two men boiled down to saying: when are you going to stop talking and actually do something to sort this mess out? If Britain was ever charmed by the Coalition's leading couple, the loving feeling is now long gone.From the Daily Mail's Tim Shipman on TwitterThat relaunch looked to me about as successful as the North Korean missile launch.
Though a criminal conviction would damage her career (she's a supply teacher doing an Open University course and voluntary work to improve her CV), she's ended up in a squat after leaving an abusive relationship. That experience may have given her the articulate skills to stand up to Today's John Humphrys better than many a minister.No, she insisted, squatting isn't denying an owner the right to use their property in the way that car theft is, because the owner can use the civil courts to get it back when they want it. Her squat is in a house that has been left empty for years, has no water or electricity and leaking roofs. "The crime is surely leaving houses empty when there is a shortage.
But neither the Foreign Office nor the Ministry of Defence has anyone looking solely at subsequent reconstruction.Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary, called the revelation "startling and deeply worrying". ? Sue Cameron in the Financial Times (subscription) says Steve Hilton, David Cameron's policy guru, is getting the blame in Downing Street for "dud policies" like the Big Society and health reform.Early on there seems to have been a row over the Big Society, Mr Hilton's pet project. "Many civil servants were full of goodwill for the Big Society," says one insider. "But they've been frustrated by Hilton's inability to put it forward in a way that is do-able. Officials aren't sure what it's about.
She accused the paper of "collusion" with "people who were suspected of killing Daniel Morgan".? Chris Bryant, the Labour former minister, has said the phone hacking scandal will eventually be seen as "the single largest corporate case in this country for more than 250 years". In a major speech in Westminster Hall in the Commons, he also said that the cover-up at News International extended to James Murdoch and that the new chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, Lord Hunt,cnnhkids.com (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), had misled the Leveson inquiry. (See 12.19pm.)? Barclays has confirmed that it is the bank using two tax avoidance schemes closed in a surprise move by the Treasury. "Barclays takes its responsibilities as a corporate citizen very seriously.
He was ignored, and we have been getting it wrong in spades over the last ten to 15 years."We have set up a system where a young girl who goes to work decently and honestly, and works hard…she will be making less money than her sister, who goes off and has three kids with three different men. That is the system we have established, and it is the very thing against which Beveridge warned. I can't understand why people will not go back and read Beveridge, and understand.Vernon Coaker, a Labour police spokesman, said Cameron's speech showed "he doesn't know the difference between police reform and police cuts".The prime minister is taking people for fools if he tries to pass off cutting officers on the beat as reform.
"4.32pm: Towards the end of her speech, May mentioned the government's decision to consider a possible clampdown on the use of instant message services in riot situations. A colleague wonders whether William Hague is in favour. In February, Hague said it was a "huge mistake" for Egypt to shut down the internet.Jeff Jarvis, the internet guru, has made a similar point in a post for Comment is free:Cameron also said, according to a Guardian tweet, that he would look at asking online services to take down offending photos. Again, who decides that content is offending? If you give authority to government and telco and social companies to censor that,marc jacobs wallets (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), what else can and will they censor?Beware, sir.
He called it "a time-limited graduate tax", one in which "no one pays up-front fees." Hmmm. How tough is that?At this point, let's switch to the sober analysis of "how the coalition works" provided to the Hansard Society last night by Professor Robert Hazell and his young sidekick, Ben Yong, government-watchers at UCL's Constitution Unit.It was complicated, and some people (including most prime ministers) get easily bored with the machinery of government questions,kate spade outlet (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), so I'll stick to the "junior coalition partners" side of the briefing.Basically, it's all been easier than Oliver Letwin feared when he predicted that the dispute-resolving coalition committee would be in "almost permanent session".