Housing 2
‘We want to settle down and have a housing crisis together.’
‘We want to settle down and have a housing crisis together.’
‘These are distressed and these are just slightly upset.’
‘Anyone sitting here?’
The American experiment Sir: One can test Nicholas Wade’s hypothesis that social and political life is genetically determined (‘The genome of history’, 17 May) by constituting a nation along European lines, admitting immigrants from all over the world, and measuring the extent to which these immigrants assimilate to the dominant culture. That experiment is called
Parliamentary privilege Some facts and figures about the European Parliament, according to the parliament: — The parliament annually costs €3.10 per citizen in EU member states (compared with €7.30 for Westminster). — It received 1.4 million visitors over the past four years, with 790,400 visiting the Parliamentarium. And some facts from Single Seat, the campaign
The Cold War was won by 26 words contained within article five of the Treaty of Washington, which founded Nato in 1949: ‘The Parties agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all.’ There was no wriggling and no qualification.
Home Demand for housing posed ‘the biggest risk to financial stability’ according to Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England. House prices rose by 8 per cent in the year to the end of March, according to the Office for National Statistics, and in London the increase was 17 per cent. The annual
‘ID?’
‘OK, guys… now what do we do?’
‘It’s amazing what she can do with striped toothpaste.’
‘How would you like your lamb slaughtered?’
‘It’s happened. The couch has finally taken over John!’
‘He started with just one box six months ago...’
‘Curses! It looks as if the replacement bus isn’t going to show up either.’
‘It’s one of his five a day.’