I don't think so, I think he thought the whole company was going.stumuzz wrote:Well done Ralph.
It seems you may have been seriously underestimating your importance to the company.
Still, Ralph, glad to hear that you still have a job.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
I don't think so, I think he thought the whole company was going.stumuzz wrote:Well done Ralph.
It seems you may have been seriously underestimating your importance to the company.
Nah... I have a gut feeling that 2012 will be the year that everything changes. I'm coming to think maybe events won't just be dramatic, but downright WEIRD, I mean so weird that people will be questioning their own sanity.mobbsey wrote:2012 will be just like 2011, except the excuses from the political and corporate world will look even more threadbare than they do today.
I am only important because everybody else with any IT skills jumped ship 2 years ago...Ludwig wrote: I don't think so, I think he thought the whole company was going.
Still, Ralph, glad to hear that you still have a job.
Yep, I think I'll go with this view. When events/changes are sufficiently different from normal, people will literally find it hard to believe. This causes people to question their sanity..... of course this won't happen to us as we are not expecting BAU!Ludwig wrote:Nah... I have a gut feeling that 2012 will be the year that everything changes. I'm coming to think maybe events won't just be dramatic, but downright WEIRD, I mean so weird that people will be questioning their own sanity.mobbsey wrote:2012 will be just like 2011, except the excuses from the political and corporate world will look even more threadbare than they do today.
Well, BP are around 10% down on the year, but Shell are up by a similar amount. Gold prices, rather than collapsing are up around 16% (in dollars). No one's pulled out of the Euro (yet) and the BBC hasn't been sold off. Pakistan is closer to military rule now than a year ago - but not quite there yet. No major US earthquake. No dramatic increase in truck hijacking I've heard of. 2011 isn't the hottest year, the projection a couple of weeks ago from Durban was that 2011 will tie for 10th hottest. Despite there actually being very little rainfall in most of England, it has been a drought but I don't think prices have been hiked (or hosepipes even banned).ziggy12345 wrote:BP will turn out to be a great investment
Shell shares will skyrocket once they have off-loaded there Nigerian onshore fields
Gold prices will collapse
One or more EU countries will decide to pull out of the Euro
UK Gov will sell off the BBC (then maybe it will stop harping on about global bloody warming)
Pakistan will go back to military rule
There will be a major earthquake in the USA
Truck Hijacking will increase dramatically in Europe and UK
It will be the hottest year since record began (again)
At the first sign of the sun in May all of the water companies will announce its a drought and hike their bills
I may be wrong, but from recent reading I'm wondering if things might get even weirder than we have been expecting - whether in fact some of our basic misconceptions about existence may be revealed. I think there are powerful people out there who know far more than they have ever let on.snow hope wrote: Yep, I think I'll go with this view. When events/changes are sufficiently different from normal, people will literally find it hard to believe. This causes people to question their sanity..... of course this won't happen to us as we are not expecting BAU!
I also agree that trying to continue BAU will cause additional harm and make the downslope ever steeper.
It will be great if we decline gently, but no matter how hard I try, I just can't make myself believe it.... There are too many Dominoes waiting to fall.
Ziggy made the mistake of being too specific in his predictions, but they weren't unreasonable ones. (Not sure about the gold price mind you.)clv101 wrote: I'd be interested to know why you think 2011 didn't pan out how you'd expected, and in light of that what you now think will happen in 2012?
Nice post. The collapse of the euro would surely be a colossal event that may even reduce the oil price for some considerable time, something that may be perceived as a good thing but would in fact cause more problems further down the line. That is if the growth economies of the rest of the developed and developing worlds survive it.Ludwig wrote:
I make no specific predictions except that I think there will be one or more truly colossal events in 2012, that will overshadow anything from 2011; and none of these events will be what they seem.