skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Suboptimal Planet
Tuesday, 13 April 2010
Debt Clock comes to Oxford
When I went past Gloucester Green this morning, the clock showed £782,126,849,656 — an increase of £614.5 million since the tour started
yesterday
.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
►
2014
(2)
►
June
(1)
►
February
(1)
►
2013
(35)
►
December
(1)
►
October
(1)
►
July
(1)
►
May
(3)
►
April
(3)
►
March
(7)
►
February
(7)
►
January
(12)
►
2012
(112)
►
December
(7)
►
November
(1)
►
October
(4)
►
September
(4)
►
July
(13)
►
June
(12)
►
May
(19)
►
April
(4)
►
March
(8)
►
February
(16)
►
January
(24)
►
2011
(258)
►
December
(15)
►
November
(39)
►
October
(23)
►
September
(17)
►
August
(15)
►
July
(25)
►
June
(30)
►
May
(26)
►
April
(15)
►
March
(29)
►
February
(16)
►
January
(8)
▼
2010
(329)
►
December
(16)
►
November
(27)
►
October
(22)
►
September
(27)
►
August
(11)
►
July
(32)
►
June
(49)
►
May
(71)
▼
April
(36)
Is Cameron refusing the poisoned chalice?
A broadcast from the Popular Front?
X-Factor, round 3
Voluntary sterilisation for drug addicts
Pat Condell: Vote small, think big
The Last Ditch: Party X
The second leaders' debate
Eurocrats salivate at Clegg ascendancy
Tom Clougherty on the IMF’s bank tax proposals
Starkey's fairy story debated
Guardian: New global 'FAT' tax to rein in banks
When God flicked his cigarette...
David Starkey's fairy story
Mind the elephant
Will the Clegg bubble destroy the Conservatives?
Luke Johnson: the country is living beyond its means
Let's raze the whole edifice to the ground
Norman Tebbit's choice cuts
Welfare reform through Friendly Societies
It is time for something better
Debt Clock comes to Oxford
Your share of the national debt
New Labour, proud to the end
UK Debt Clock Tour
Political correctness and the Great Ignored
Randall: Honesty is the first casualty when there'...
Why work?
Wash-up 2010: Labour get their way on DNA
Wash-up 2010: broadband tax gone, for now
The People vs Larry Flynt
The political function of inflation
6 May 2010
B&Bs and the right to refuse trade
It didn't occur to me that drugs would be nice
If the public sector bore the brunt of cuts
The counterproductive effects of labour laws
►
March
(20)
►
February
(12)
►
January
(6)
►
2009
(22)
►
December
(4)
►
November
(7)
►
October
(11)
Labels
alcohol
(26)
bailouts
(2)
bbc
(89)
books
(1)
broadband for all
(3)
budget 2010
(8)
budget 2011
(4)
canada
(2)
china
(1)
communism
(1)
corporatism
(2)
crime and punishment
(19)
csr 2010
(4)
debt
(37)
democracy
(22)
drugs
(15)
economics
(94)
education
(20)
election 2010
(39)
election 2015
(2)
electoral reform
(13)
environment
(40)
eu
(121)
fake charities
(12)
falklands
(3)
fat
(1)
food
(1)
free trade
(4)
freedom of speech
(22)
greece
(3)
guns
(3)
h2g2
(4)
health
(29)
hope
(9)
hs2
(3)
iceland
(3)
inflation
(20)
international aid
(4)
ireland
(8)
labour
(1)
localism
(3)
marriage
(4)
multiculturalism
(11)
nanny state
(36)
new york times
(4)
nhs
(12)
politics
(294)
pork barrel
(9)
quangoland
(2)
religion
(19)
rights and freedoms
(47)
rule of law
(3)
salt
(2)
scotland
(11)
sugar
(1)
tax
(42)
tech
(18)
terrorism
(4)
thatcher
(2)
thuggery
(3)
tobacco
(9)
unions
(11)
usa
(3)
utilitarianism
(2)
war
(21)
welfare
(22)
No comments:
Post a Comment