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Post by Deleted on Oct 8, 2008 12:25:00 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Oct 8, 2008 21:13:24 GMT
1. It's Johnson, not jhonson; 2. We capitalise the first letter of a proper noun and the first letter of a sentence; 3. We use something called punctuation marks, the most commonly used examples of which include the comma. 4. We write sentences that make grammatical sense, by which I mean observing verb forms depending on 1st/2nd/3rd person narrative and so on.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 8, 2008 21:40:23 GMT
1. It's Johnson, not jhonson; 2. We capitalise the first letter of a proper noun and the first letter of a sentence; 3. We use something called punctuation marks, the most commonly used examples of which include the comma. 4. We write sentences that make grammatical sense, by which I mean observing verb forms depending on 1st/2nd/3rd person narrative and so on. Oh, if only, if only! ;D ;D ;D
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Post by john on Oct 8, 2008 23:17:22 GMT
I hate it when people spell JOHN wrong It's not hard, especially when it's people you know who do it
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Post by lc1 on Oct 15, 2008 16:12:45 GMT
I hate it when people spell JHON wrong It's not hard, especially when it's people you know who do it Yeah I agree with you there Jhon Why people are moaning about fare increases is beyond me, just like Christmas they come round once a year. Personally I think BoJo is a breath of fresh air. Edited by JHON ;D Edited by lc1
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Post by Deleted on Nov 21, 2008 18:46:38 GMT
I agree we need to give Boris Johnson a chance. Fare increases are only once a year and you can travel miles for just £ 2.00. Not bad at all.
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Post by jrussa on Jan 25, 2009 19:47:04 GMT
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Johnson#Mayor_of_Londonwww.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/jan/07/boris-damian-greenBoris Johnson was informed in advance of the arrest of fellow Conservative MP Damian Green and told acting Metropolitan Police Commissioner Paul Stephenson that he did not regard the arrest as 'common sense policing'. A spokesman for Johnson says he told Stephenson he would need to see "convincing evidence that this action was necessary and proportionate," and that it would be better for police to spend their time preventing gun and knife crimes. As chair of the Metropolitan Police Authority Johnson's position means he is not permitted to be involved in operational matters. Additionally Johnson is prohibited by Section 3, Paragraph 2(d) of the London Assembly Code of Conduct from doing anything that compromises the impartiality of a police officer. Andy Hayman, former Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner, commented that Johnson "was informed of the Green arrest in his position as chairman of the police authority but chose to react in the role of prominent Tory politician" and called Johnson's actions "political interference in operational policing." A formal complaint against Johnson was filed on 6 December by Len Duvall, alleging that Johnson "is guilty of four 'clear and serious' code of conduct breaches by speaking to Green, an arrested suspect in an ongoing criminal investigation, and publicly prejudging the outcome of the police inquiry following a private briefing by senior officers" and that Johnson has brought the office of Mayor "into disrepute". Johnson admitted to telephoning Green after he had been bailed, an action which Duvall, a former Metropolitan Police Authority chairman, described as "absolutely astonishing and inappropriate," while Stephenson said it would be "entirely inappropriate" to prejudge an inquiry. Johnson had stated that he "had a 'hunch'" that Green would not be charged. The formal complaint gave investigators ten days to decide whether to submit Johnson to formal inquiry by the Standards Board for England, where a guilty verdict could have seen him suspended or removed as Mayor of London, or banned from public office for up to five years. On January 7th, 2009, several sources reported that the Greater London Authority and the Metropolitan Police Authority have decided to pursue a formal investigation of Johnson in-house.The GLA can impose a maximum penalty of three months suspension from office if it finds Johnson guilty
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Post by john on Jan 25, 2009 20:03:31 GMT
To me, this just sounds like the Boris Johnson that every knows, i.e, the buffon riding his bike through London saying absolutely stupid comments. I don't dislike the guy, just find his ways rather amusing at times
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Post by Deleted on Jan 25, 2009 22:20:12 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Jan 25, 2009 23:30:10 GMT
Relevance?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 26, 2009 19:49:04 GMT
Maybe Rob is pointing out that if Livingstone gets a four week suspension for a tasteless comment then Johnson should be barred from office for prejudicing a police investigation?
Although that cannot happen now as the Livingstone ruling was made by an independent judicial tribunal, while Johnson's case is only being conducted by GLA members and the police authority, neither of whom have the same powers.
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Post by jrussa on Jan 27, 2009 0:46:09 GMT
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Post by rnam on Feb 8, 2009 16:10:08 GMT
I met Boris Johnson, yesterday at the London Schools and The Black Child yesterday.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2009 16:56:38 GMT
I met Boris Johnson, yesterday at the London Schools and The Black Child yesterday. We all have our problems! 1. 2. 3. ;D
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2009 17:00:18 GMT
I met Boris Johnson, yesterday at the London Schools and The Black Child yesterday. Congratulations ;D
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