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Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire had been on my ‘to do’ list for many years but time, distance and the affects of disability had conspired to prevent me from getting there until earlier this year. I was not disappointed as I found myself wandering around the ruins like a slack-jawed yokel, just marvelling at the sheer size of the place. More than once I was heard to say f*** me! But at least I had the good taste to spell the rude word with a letter ‘q’.

 

To understand my awe you have to remember that I live in Norfolk and I am well familiar with the remains of Castle Acre Priory, Binham Priory and the single huge arch which is all that is left of Walsingham Abbey. Fountains Abbey was built on a wholly different scale to these religious buildings, both vertically and horizontally. In its prime it was a site of vast and serene grandeur. Even now it retains the ability to affect a visitor. It certainly affected me.

 

For perhaps the first time I was confronted with overwhelming evidence (and a better understanding of the claims made by historians) that King Henry VIII was the greatest vandal in English history. His agents took a wrecking ball to dozens of magnificent buildings and strip-mined them for materials and money. Many, like Fountains, ended up just being used as stone quarries.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/albums/7215771634122... to see the full set.

 

Fountains was one of the many religious houses suppressed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of his master, the King. King Henry had broken with the Church of Rome in the 1530s over the matter of his divorce and remarriage to Anne Boleyn. Henry also needed to improve his cashflow. The church owned vast tracts of the richest land in Britain and wielded great influence over the hearts and minds of the King’s people. If Henry wanted to make himself head of the new Church of England he would need to line his pockets, build defences against a possible Papal invasion and destroy the ability of the great religious houses to put up a theological - or martial - defence against him.

 

It is no coincidence that the start of the Dissolution of the Monasteries was met almost immediately by a popular rebellion in 1536 which then led to the Pilgrimage of Grace:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrimage_of_Grace

 

It is also no coincidence that among the 216 known executions following the uprisings of 1536/37 were many monks and churchmen - including the former Abbot of Fountains, William Thirsk.

 

Henry VIII’s right-hand man Thomas Cromwell had started small by closing or amalgamating just the humbler or allegedly corrupt religious houses with the money going into the King’s coffers. Following Catholic rebellions the King and Cromwell appear to have regarded the untouched larger abbeys in much the same way as Adolph Hitler regarded Communism in WW2. Idealogical resistance from the heart of the church led to Henry VIII issuing the equivalent of Hitler’s ‘shoot the commissars’ order. Close the abbeys, turf out the abbots and execute any who opposed Henry’s supremacy. The Abbot of Glastonbury paid just such a price by being hung, drawn and quartered.

 

Thus it was that Fountains was closed and pillaged in 1539. Portable valuables such as gold or silver plate and vestments were taken away and sold off while the buildings and 500 acres (200 hectares) of land were sold to MP Sir Thomas Gresham, a former Lord Mayor of London. This was an epic shift in policy for Gresham as he had previously gifted tapestries to Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court and even paid for the poor Cardinal’s funeral when King Henry turned against Wolsey. Gresham was a man who could see which way the new wind was blowing. He went with it.

 

A full history of Fountains Abbey, once the richest Cistercian abbey in England, can be found here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_Abbey

It is well worth a read.

 

Today Fountains is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Although owned by the National Trust, English Heritage membership cards are accepted in full as EH also looks after the Studley Royal church on the same site.

 

Disability footnote: despite the well laid paths, etc, Fountains is not an easy site for the disabled. The main ruins are some distance from the entrance while the rest of the Studley Royal park is vast and was not visited by me. Pace yourself as I found getting out up the paths at the end while very tired rather difficult.

 

Into the climb of the Cullerin range, on near continuous curves.

Some locomotive preservation groups earn much needed cashflow by leasing their restored and operational heritage diesels for commercial work, usually on work trains. 4716 and 4204 are two such locos.

Financial Advisor Postcard design template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.

 

A financial advisor or planner focused in providing sound financial and investment advice to clients can use this postcard to give a company overview. The vibrant blue highlights allow the headlines to pop out, while the family-oriented photos add a personal touch.

Reverting back to Normal

 

Day 1 ++ www.flickr.com/photos/ayos/sets/72157633430876001/

 

Story Plot Intent Revisited

www.traderscamp.org/forum/index.php/topic,230.msg24421.ht...

 

-Bazinga!- BHI

www.boulevardholdings.com/

 

This is in the eyes of the ff.

CEOs Chief Negotiator - growth for company

Corporate Strategist - anchoring to peripheral business and PNOY's mandate

Equities Sales Director - more trades more commissions

Investment Relations Officer - maintain pump stock performance as showcase

Risk Officer - hedge calculate reward return and cost of capital time frames

Credit Loan Administrator's Desk - syndicated load for funding

Underwriter - as buyout swap etc

Brokers (both offshore local) - front run to fundies glocal

Fund Manager (Odisiy-Manulife-Sunlife) - accumulation for placement holders

Inner Cirlce - Both ALI and BHI - information is king money is the byproduct

Leeches - Extended newtork of inner circle - opportunist

THE PUBLIC; BIGGEST FOOLS + Speculators - bandwagon gossipers evesdroppers

 

Newbies and New Online Traders: Welcome to the Darkside (put in 20% of intended capital)

Experts: Viva Espanya Paquito!

 

note:

Implied Volatility Correction: -12.1% to -22.8% eto ang pwede e baba

Average True Range: +- 9.6% ( -9% to +26%) eto ang agos ng presyo

Alpha: 6.25% Risk Free RTB 6.25%+54.7% Sector Rate of Return = 60.95% eto ang balik sa property stocks

Margin of Safety: -5.2% trailing regression line @.1700 centavos eto ang higit na ligtas ng pag bili

(E)MA: Updtrend pa akyat ang tungo ng presyo

RSI: Respected indikasyon ng kakayahang bumili at benta sobra na o kulang pa

Pivot: .1690 to .1640 floor limits / .38 .42 .56 ceilings dagsaan ng bentahan at bilihan

Volume: consistent above 200 million shares Php50-150million Pesos ++(heavily traded) kwenta

Negative Income Negative Cashflow kapital at kita negatibo

Enterprise Value: Location Location Location (superior product) Walang kasing tulad taob ang iba

All Star Cast: JP Morgan Macquari BDO SBSec Citisec DW Cap Abacus DALUBHASA ng Merkado

For Sale @.1730 centavos per share

Upside 50% to 250% gain kikita in

Downside -15%++ loss ang pwedeng talunin o ti isin

Insurance: Return of Capital in 12 Months pag balik ng pera

Requirement: DEAD MONEY perang hindi kailangan

Timeframe 10 to 60 Trading Days yugto ng agos

 

So What Drives the Stock?

Greeed! Better Known as ECONOMICS or Aggregate Demand Supply Foreplay

Greed for ALI to Dwarf SM Prime's SMLand Inc., ALPHA's Balesin, and AGI's GERI

Greed for Broker's making a killing with frequency, volatility, and volume

Greed for Traders both retail institutional to build and sustain critical mass

Greed for the biggest fool to experience that multi ceiling returns in 20 to 40 days

 

PLOT . STORY . INTENT . PLAY

TOR (Terms of Reference Foreplay) Preamble to Ascencion

Financial Planner Letterhead design template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.

 

A financial planner could utilize this letterhead to convey a professional, organized image.

Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire had been on my ‘to do’ list for many years but time, distance and the affects of disability had conspired to prevent me from getting there until earlier this year. I was not disappointed as I found myself wandering around the ruins like a slack-jawed yokel, just marvelling at the sheer size of the place. More than once I was heard to say f*** me! But at least I had the good taste to spell the rude word with a letter ‘q’.

 

To understand my awe you have to remember that I live in Norfolk and I am well familiar with the remains of Castle Acre Priory, Binham Priory and the single huge arch which is all that is left of Walsingham Abbey. Fountains Abbey was built on a wholly different scale to these religious buildings, both vertically and horizontally. In its prime it was a site of vast and serene grandeur. Even now it retains the ability to affect a visitor. It certainly affected me.

 

For perhaps the first time I was confronted with overwhelming evidence (and a better understanding of the claims made by historians) that King Henry VIII was the greatest vandal in English history. His agents took a wrecking ball to dozens of magnificent buildings and strip-mined them for materials and money. Many, like Fountains, ended up just being used as stone quarries.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/albums/7215771634122... to see the full set.

 

Fountains was one of the many religious houses suppressed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of his master, the King. King Henry had broken with the Church of Rome in the 1530s over the matter of his divorce and remarriage to Anne Boleyn. Henry also needed to improve his cashflow. The church owned vast tracts of the richest land in Britain and wielded great influence over the hearts and minds of the King’s people. If Henry wanted to make himself head of the new Church of England he would need to line his pockets, build defences against a possible Papal invasion and destroy the ability of the great religious houses to put up a theological - or martial - defence against him.

 

It is no coincidence that the start of the Dissolution of the Monasteries was met almost immediately by a popular rebellion in 1536 which then led to the Pilgrimage of Grace:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrimage_of_Grace

 

It is also no coincidence that among the 216 known executions following the uprisings of 1536/37 were many monks and churchmen - including the former Abbot of Fountains, William Thirsk.

 

Henry VIII’s right-hand man Thomas Cromwell had started small by closing or amalgamating just the humbler or allegedly corrupt religious houses with the money going into the King’s coffers. Following Catholic rebellions the King and Cromwell appear to have regarded the untouched larger abbeys in much the same way as Adolph Hitler regarded Communism in WW2. Idealogical resistance from the heart of the church led to Henry VIII issuing the equivalent of Hitler’s ‘shoot the commissars’ order. Close the abbeys, turf out the abbots and execute any who opposed Henry’s supremacy. The Abbot of Glastonbury paid just such a price by being hung, drawn and quartered.

 

Thus it was that Fountains was closed and pillaged in 1539. Portable valuables such as gold or silver plate and vestments were taken away and sold off while the buildings and 500 acres (200 hectares) of land were sold to MP Sir Thomas Gresham, a former Lord Mayor of London. This was an epic shift in policy for Gresham as he had previously gifted tapestries to Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court and even paid for the poor Cardinal’s funeral when King Henry turned against Wolsey. Gresham was a man who could see which way the new wind was blowing. He went with it.

 

A full history of Fountains Abbey, once the richest Cistercian abbey in England, can be found here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_Abbey

It is well worth a read.

 

Today Fountains is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Although owned by the National Trust, English Heritage membership cards are accepted in full as EH also looks after the Studley Royal church on the same site.

 

Disability footnote: despite the well laid paths, etc, Fountains is not an easy site for the disabled. The main ruins are some distance from the entrance while the rest of the Studley Royal park is vast and was not visited by me. Pace yourself as I found getting out up the paths at the end while very tired rather difficult.

 

Businessman on a ladder managing the growth of a money as a dollar sign on stacked books, concept

 

License at www.paya.com/photos/1110984

Financial Advisor Envelope design template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.

 

A financial advisor or planner focused in providing sound financial and investment advice to clients can use this envelope. The vibrant blue highlights allow the headlines to pop out, while the family-oriented photos add a personal touch.

Aldi muesli, my signature apple-ginger-lime compôte, orange juice, black coffee, medications, and (TA-DAAH!) a red grapefruit. Almost finished the no-added-sugar muesli, back to normal soon and you know where you can stick those Statins. (Yes there IS a story. And a rant.)

 

The grapefruit was an unexpected triumph; 18p in Tesco at Monday's Yellow Sticker Event. Still perfectly fresh but looking a bit unloved because of some discoloured skin. People can be SO fussy.

 

Today, March 29th, is the day on which I balance my books for the year and finalise the essential budgets and cashflow forecast for the coming year. Why March 29th? Well, my workplace pension pays out on the 29th, so that's effectively the end of the month, and the various public bodies who can stake a claim mostly run their fiscal year from April thru March (or close enough). Therefore it's as close to an accurate prediction and balancing opportunity as there can be. With most bills on a monthly cycle, the 13 x 4-weekly State Penion payout doesn't provide a readily convenient closure point.

 

And the good news is that with my customary prudence I do expect to survive until March 2023 even in the light of swingeing increases by the utility bods, and even with the purportedly temporary removal of the State Pension "Triple Lock". However if that latter isn't reinstated per the current "one year only" promise, given what's happening to the RPI/CPI right now 2023-24 might turn out to be a bit of a challenge. This year though, having completed yet-another lap around the field I am pleased to report there was a small budget surplus, and now there is an additional (small) discretionary budget available too.

 

In this spirit I plan to view 2022-23 as my Lap Of Honour.

 

Much as I enjoy some of their oeuvre, though, and even though a reference here is not necessarily a recommendation, I'm not cueing *that* Queen record. No. Even I have got standards.

No. I have decided instead to give my age away. (But you knew that already, right?) www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtijl8SWV-A

 

As regards future finances and the World Situation, dare I say to tune in next year? www.youtube.com/watch?v=a01QQZyl-_I

Businessman on a ladder managing the growth of a money as a dollar sign on stacked books, concept

 

License at www.paya.com/photos/1110983

Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire had been on my ‘to do’ list for many years but time, distance and the affects of disability had conspired to prevent me from getting there until earlier this year. I was not disappointed as I found myself wandering around the ruins like a slack-jawed yokel, just marvelling at the sheer size of the place. More than once I was heard to say f*** me! But at least I had the good taste to spell the rude word with a letter ‘q’.

 

To understand my awe you have to remember that I live in Norfolk and I am well familiar with the remains of Castle Acre Priory, Binham Priory and the single huge arch which is all that is left of Walsingham Abbey. Fountains Abbey was built on a wholly different scale to these religious buildings, both vertically and horizontally. In its prime it was a site of vast and serene grandeur. Even now it retains the ability to affect a visitor. It certainly affected me.

 

For perhaps the first time I was confronted with overwhelming evidence (and a better understanding of the claims made by historians) that King Henry VIII was the greatest vandal in English history. His agents took a wrecking ball to dozens of magnificent buildings and strip-mined them for materials and money. Many, like Fountains, ended up just being used as stone quarries.

 

Fountains was one of the many religious houses suppressed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of his master, the King. King Henry had broken with the Church of Rome in the 1530s over the matter of his divorce and remarriage to Anne Boleyn. Henry also needed to improve his cashflow. The church owned vast tracts of the richest land in Britain and wielded great influence over the hearts and minds of the King’s people. If Henry wanted to make himself head of the new Church of England he would need to line his pockets, build defences against a possible Papal invasion and destroy the ability of the great religious houses to put up a theological - or martial - defence against him.

 

It is no coincidence that the start of the Dissolution of the Monasteries was met almost immediately by a popular rebellion in 1536 which then led to the Pilgrimage of Grace:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrimage_of_Grace

 

It is also no coincidence that among the 216 known executions following the uprisings of 1536/37 were many monks and churchmen - including the former Abbot of Fountains, William Thirsk.

 

Henry VIII’s right-hand man Thomas Cromwell had started small by closing or amalgamating just the humbler or allegedly corrupt religious houses with the money going into the King’s coffers. Following Catholic rebellions the King and Cromwell appear to have regarded the untouched larger abbeys in much the same way as Adolph Hitler regarded Communism in WW2. Idealogical resistance from the heart of the church led to Henry VIII issuing the equivalent of Hitler’s ‘shoot the commissars’ order. Close the abbeys, turf out the abbots and execute any who opposed Henry’s supremacy. The Abbot of Glastonbury paid just such a price by being hung, drawn and quartered.

 

Thus it was that Fountains was closed and pillaged in 1539. Portable valuables such as gold or silver plate and vestments were taken away and sold off while the buildings and 500 acres (200 hectares) of land were sold to MP Sir Thomas Gresham, a former Lord Mayor of London. This was an epic shift in policy for Gresham as he had previously gifted tapestries to Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court and even paid for the poor Cardinal’s funeral when King Henry turned against Wolsey. Gresham was a man who could see which way the new wind was blowing. He went with it.

 

A full history of Fountains Abbey, once the richest Cistercian abbey in England, can be found here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_Abbey

It is well worth a read.

 

Today Fountains is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Although owned by the National Trust, English Heritage membership cards are accepted in full as EH also looks after the Studley Royal church on the same site.

 

Disability footnote: despite the well laid paths, etc, Fountains is not an easy site for the disabled. The main ruins are some distance from the entrance while the rest of the Studley Royal park is vast and was not visited by me. Pace yourself as I found getting out up the paths at the end while very tired rather difficult.

  

Acanthus spinosus, Actaea matsumurae 'White Pearl', Baptisia 'Blueberry Sundae', Clematis 'Carnaby', Clematis 'Sprinkles', Clematis 'Zohapbi', Cucurbita pepo CASHFLOW, Dahlia 'All that Jazz', Dahlia 'Country Sweetheart', Dahlia 'HS Flame', Dahlia 'Inflammation', Dahlia 'Jersey Beauty', Dahlia 'Margaret Duross', Dahlia 'Mary Jo', Dahlia 'Melqua Nebula', Dahlia 'Patricia Ann's Sunset', Dahlia 'Teddy', Dahlia 'Wildwood Marie', Hemerocallis 'Carolyn Criswell', Hemerocallis 'Geo. Caleb Bingham', Hemerocallis 'Ginger Whip', Hemerocallis 'Mountain Snow', Hemerocallis 'Optimism', Hemerocallis 'Organdy Eve', Hemerocallis 'Patio Parade', Hemerocallis 'Polly Posey', Hemerocallis 'Saucy Flourish', Hemerocallis 'Silver Fan', Hemerocallis 'Summer Wine', Hemerocallis 'Washingtons Park', Hemerocallis 'Yellowstone', Hibiscus 'Peppermint Schnapps', Magnolia 'Jane', Paeonia s. 'Kinshi' ('Golden Bird'), Paeonia x 'Abalone Pearl', Solanum lycopersicum BLACK KRIM, Thuja orientalis 'Franky Boy', Weigela florida 'Red Princess'

Business graphs showing progress and sucess, with business people silhouettes

G-MSJF, Boeing 737-7Q8 (CN 30710) of Flyglobespan.com approaches Edinburgh Airport’s runway 24. Flyglobespan - the airline offshoot of Edinburgh based Globespan Travel began oprerations in 2003 from Edinburgh and Glasgow. The airline ceased operations in December 2009 owing to cashflow difficulties. Joining Flyglobespan from new in February 2007, the aircraft moved on to AIRES Columbia as HK-4695 in March 2010, transfering to LAN Columbia in December 2011 and since March 2014 has flown for Ethiopian Airlines as ET-ARD.

Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire had been on my ‘to do’ list for many years but time, distance and the affects of disability had conspired to prevent me from getting there until earlier this year. I was not disappointed as I found myself wandering around the ruins like a slack-jawed yokel, just marvelling at the sheer size of the place. More than once I was heard to say f*** me! But at least I had the good taste to spell the rude word with a letter ‘q’.

 

To understand my awe you have to remember that I live in Norfolk and I am well familiar with the remains of Castle Acre Priory, Binham Priory and the single huge arch which is all that is left of Walsingham Abbey. Fountains Abbey was built on a wholly different scale to these religious buildings, both vertically and horizontally. In its prime it was a site of vast and serene grandeur. Even now it retains the ability to affect a visitor. It certainly affected me.

 

For perhaps the first time I was confronted with overwhelming evidence (and a better understanding of the claims made by historians) that King Henry VIII was the greatest vandal in English history. His agents took a wrecking ball to dozens of magnificent buildings and strip-mined them for materials and money. Many, like Fountains, ended up just being used as stone quarries.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/albums/7215771634122... to see the full set.

 

Fountains was one of the many religious houses suppressed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of his master, the King. King Henry had broken with the Church of Rome in the 1530s over the matter of his divorce and remarriage to Anne Boleyn. Henry also needed to improve his cashflow. The church owned vast tracts of the richest land in Britain and wielded great influence over the hearts and minds of the King’s people. If Henry wanted to make himself head of the new Church of England he would need to line his pockets, build defences against a possible Papal invasion and destroy the ability of the great religious houses to put up a theological - or martial - defence against him.

 

It is no coincidence that the start of the Dissolution of the Monasteries was met almost immediately by a popular rebellion in 1536 which then led to the Pilgrimage of Grace:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrimage_of_Grace

 

It is also no coincidence that among the 216 known executions following the uprisings of 1536/37 were many monks and churchmen - including the former Abbot of Fountains, William Thirsk.

 

Henry VIII’s right-hand man Thomas Cromwell had started small by closing or amalgamating just the humbler or allegedly corrupt religious houses with the money going into the King’s coffers. Following Catholic rebellions the King and Cromwell appear to have regarded the untouched larger abbeys in much the same way as Adolph Hitler regarded Communism in WW2. Idealogical resistance from the heart of the church led to Henry VIII issuing the equivalent of Hitler’s ‘shoot the commissars’ order. Close the abbeys, turf out the abbots and execute any who opposed Henry’s supremacy. The Abbot of Glastonbury paid just such a price by being hung, drawn and quartered.

 

Thus it was that Fountains was closed and pillaged in 1539. Portable valuables such as gold or silver plate and vestments were taken away and sold off while the buildings and 500 acres (200 hectares) of land were sold to MP Sir Thomas Gresham, a former Lord Mayor of London. This was an epic shift in policy for Gresham as he had previously gifted tapestries to Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court and even paid for the poor Cardinal’s funeral when King Henry turned against Wolsey. Gresham was a man who could see which way the new wind was blowing. He went with it.

 

A full history of Fountains Abbey, once the richest Cistercian abbey in England, can be found here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_Abbey

It is well worth a read.

 

Today Fountains is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Although owned by the National Trust, English Heritage membership cards are accepted in full as EH also looks after the Studley Royal church on the same site.

 

Disability footnote: despite the well laid paths, etc, Fountains is not an easy site for the disabled. The main ruins are some distance from the entrance while the rest of the Studley Royal park is vast and was not visited by me. Pace yourself as I found getting out up the paths at the end while very tired rather difficult.

 

Business Finance and Cashflow Services offer a unique and specialised service in enabling Businesses to address their Business Finance and Cashflow needs.

maps.google.co.uk/maps/place?cid=12152541154195017908&...

Cash, a checkbook, credit cards and a calculator.

 

Image by Articles for Small Business (AFSB)

 

Free download for personal or business use. Please give credit to the AFSB website.

 

articles4smallbusiness.com/finance-category/

 

Financial Advisor Letterhead design template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.

 

A financial planner could utilize this letterhead to convey a professional, organized image.

Everybody who wanted to use the transit autobahn to Berlin had to buy a transit ticket for 5 West German marks. Think about it; 5 DM for every car on the three transitautobahnen, day in, day out! It must have been a steady cashflow in hard currency for years on. Nevertheless, the roads were in a terrible state!

Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire had been on my ‘to do’ list for many years but time, distance and the affects of disability had conspired to prevent me from getting there until earlier this year. I was not disappointed as I found myself wandering around the ruins like a slack-jawed yokel, just marvelling at the sheer size of the place. More than once I was heard to say f*** me! But at least I had the good taste to spell the rude word with a letter ‘q’.

 

To understand my awe you have to remember that I live in Norfolk and I am well familiar with the remains of Castle Acre Priory, Binham Priory and the single huge arch which is all that is left of Walsingham Abbey. Fountains Abbey was built on a wholly different scale to these religious buildings, both vertically and horizontally. In its prime it was a site of vast and serene grandeur. Even now it retains the ability to affect a visitor. It certainly affected me.

 

For perhaps the first time I was confronted with overwhelming evidence (and a better understanding of the claims made by historians) that King Henry VIII was the greatest vandal in English history. His agents took a wrecking ball to dozens of magnificent buildings and strip-mined them for materials and money. Many, like Fountains, ended up just being used as stone quarries.

 

Fountains was one of the many religious houses suppressed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of his master, the King. King Henry had broken with the Church of Rome in the 1530s over the matter of his divorce and remarriage to Anne Boleyn. Henry also needed to improve his cashflow. The church owned vast tracts of the richest land in Britain and wielded great influence over the hearts and minds of the King’s people. If Henry wanted to make himself head of the new Church of England he would need to line his pockets, build defences against a possible Papal invasion and destroy the ability of the great religious houses to put up a theological - or martial - defence against him.

 

It is no coincidence that the start of the Dissolution of the Monasteries was met almost immediately by a popular rebellion in 1536 which then led to the Pilgrimage of Grace:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrimage_of_Grace

 

It is also no coincidence that among the 216 known executions following the uprisings of 1536/37 were many monks and churchmen - including the former Abbot of Fountains, William Thirsk.

 

Henry VIII’s right-hand man Thomas Cromwell had started small by closing or amalgamating just the humbler or allegedly corrupt religious houses with the money going into the King’s coffers. Following Catholic rebellions the King and Cromwell appear to have regarded the untouched larger abbeys in much the same way as Adolph Hitler regarded Communism in WW2. Idealogical resistance from the heart of the church led to Henry VIII issuing the equivalent of Hitler’s ‘shoot the commissars’ order. Close the abbeys, turf out the abbots and execute any who opposed Henry’s supremacy. The Abbot of Glastonbury paid just such a price by being hung, drawn and quartered.

 

Thus it was that Fountains was closed and pillaged in 1539. Portable valuables such as gold or silver plate and vestments were taken away and sold off while the buildings and 500 acres (200 hectares) of land were sold to MP Sir Thomas Gresham, a former Lord Mayor of London. This was an epic shift in policy for Gresham as he had previously gifted tapestries to Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court and even paid for the poor Cardinal’s funeral when King Henry turned against Wolsey. Gresham was a man who could see which way the new wind was blowing. He went with it.

 

A full history of Fountains Abbey, once the richest Cistercian abbey in England, can be found here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_Abbey

It is well worth a read.

 

Today Fountains is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Although owned by the National Trust, English Heritage membership cards are accepted in full as EH also looks after the Studley Royal church on the same site.

 

Disability footnote: despite the well laid paths, etc, Fountains is not an easy site for the disabled. The main ruins are some distance from the entrance while the rest of the Studley Royal park is vast and was not visited by me. Pace yourself as I found getting out up the paths at the end while very tired rather difficult.

  

Versatile Financial Advisor Letterhead design template by Octavian Belintan.Showcased on Inkd.com.

 

A financial planner helping families and other clients make choices regarding their money and finances can use this letterhead. The simple layout with a hint of blue and green give the letterhead a professional undertone appropriate for the financial industry.

OK now we get to the nitty gritty as to why I dropped the Smart Doll Plus naming. Our background is making fashion dolls - and I think we do it pretty well - in the 3 short years that Smart Doll has been on the market, we have managed to gain 82% of the market share for fashion dolls in the 1/3 scale. I account this to our strong marketing strategy of targeting and creating a new market instead of aiming for a small niche group of doll hobbyists.

 

Our availability strategy means that we can grow our market share constantly through images and videos of our products that are consistent. Our recent coverage on CBS news brought in a huge wave of new customers giving us a 91% share of the US market.

 

Now - to understand our strengths, we must understand our weaknesses and I admit that making robots is not our forte - we have spent millions of yen developing prototypes which I didn't feel were market ready. For example, a consumer would expect a robotic arm to be replaceable just by pulling it off because they say C3P0 do it - this requires an engineering feat and millions more yens which we do not have in terms of cashflow or knowhow.

 

View more at www.dannychoo.com/en/post/27636/Mirai+Mannequin+Machine.html

izmir underground hiphop life 2008-2010

See your life in your mind's eye and it'll be shaped around you. 💠✴💠✴💠✴💠✴💠✴💠✴💠✴💠✴💦✴💠💦💠💦💠💦💠💦💠💦💦💦 #cashflow #businesswomen #leadsonline #laptoplifestyle #bizop #affiliatemarketing #instagood #homebusiness #workfromhome #onlinemarketing #ugipchallenge #entrepreneur #MLMleads via Instagram ift.tt/21a7JJq

Indy Flow - Cash Flow - Cover album design - Cash Flow Album

 

Author: Indy Flow (Zuania Velez)

Album: Cash Flow

Year: 2018

 

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I present to you a portion of my success/business inspirational book collection. ta da! :)

The logo for Eagle West Investments

Just thought you guys would be interested in knowing what happened during my first week of being unemployed/useless/bored/apathetic....

 

Date: 12/10/07 (yesterday)

Place: El Porto

Incident: On a wave, wave closed out, surfboard fin smacked me right in the face

 

I was on the wave; board smacked me on the face. Instantly, about half a pint of blood was lost. Saw another surfer and was like, "Shit, I broke my nose." However broken, I noticed that it felt all flappy (like a stingray) so I was a little concerned. Waved down the lifeguard and coincidentally he was the same lifeguard that helped me when I got stung by a stingray (unlike a nose)!

 

Him: I remember your name. Didn't I help you with the stingray?

Me: Yes

Him: Let's hope this doesn't become a pattern

Me: I hope I never see you again. Tell you what though, if I do, next time I'm bringing you a fruitcake.

 

With no cashflow, I decided to drive myself to the ER rather than taking an ambulance, or a cab, or a rickshaw. There I am, in my truck and there's construction going on in the parking lot -- cement mixers and everything. Went out of my car, yelled at the foreman and ten minutes later I was on the road towards the hospital; clutching onto Noseagra Falls with my left hand and clutching onto the clutch with my left foot.

 

At the hospital, I waited three hours, in my wetsuit, full of sand and blood and water and bad hair and then the ER doc finally cleans up my nose (requiring 10 shots of local anesthesia). It was then that he deemed the injury to be a partial amputation and concludes that he can't handle the procedure. Therefore, I have to drive, in traffic, to Brentwood to go see a specialist.

 

The doctor sewed on over 25 stitches to my nose and now it's in a cast. Believe me when I tell you, SHIT HURT. They also took pictures of it (attached). I had about 16 more injections at this office (mouth, eye socket, about 10 more on the nose alone).

 

Cast is coming off tomorrow and I'll be able to go back into the water after a month. However, I'm done with surfing until I get full insurance again. What else...uhhhh...oh yeah, ok, what's the bright side?

 

Sexy scar? Nope, hideous. I was kind of hoping that the injury would mess up my tastebuds so that bacon would start to taste like vomit and brusselsprouts would taste like Jessica Alba. Not that either. I'm still trying to unmask the blessing, but for now I will say that the best treatment for any ailment is the company and support of good friends.

 

That, my friends, comes with no copay.

Now closed and the children transferred to a new-build on the other side of town, this ex-school building was home to the ICR group for a short while, but they've had cashflow probs of a nature and pulled out.

 

It would be fun to get in there and take some photos of what school architecture that remains.

PlanningForce is probably the only planning tool that has been conceived to help managers have a clearer idea of the real expected added value of new projects, in relation to the rest of the portfolio.

TURN-KEY Investment Properties by Mel Kim Realty buy-income-properties.com Income Properties in Florida Including Miami, Orlando, Tampa, St Petersburg, Fort Lauderdale and beyond. WE SELL RENTED & Managed Properties with 1 Year Rental & Management Included and 20% Leaseback. Bank Owned REO NNN Triple Net Lease and Foreclosed Homes with POSITIVE Cash Flow rentals from DAY # 1

Be mindful!

 

Husband the earth. Protect

her from greed and violence. Build

humbly, plant trees, grow flowers and clothe her

with dignity. Respect all her creatures. Honour her

natural laws and the universe which cradles her.

Above all, heartily worship the Source of All that is.

 

This world needs secret heroes! Be brave, speak the truth,

heal the sick, make peace. Be strong, serve patiently, love

generously, live simply. Enjoy fellowship, eat and drink modestly,

celebrate the festivals. Breathe deeply, sing and make music,

walk often, cycle and recycle. Be thrifty, prefer cashflow to

possession, give good measure. Let your work be your prayer.

 

Put on the whole armour of light! Unearth the beauty in

everything. Inhale the Spirit of Goodness. Kindle kindness,

especially toward yourself, embracing the sweet

silence of your own soul. Fear nothing. Accept

what you are and — while you have

breath — give thanks.

 

John Rogers

izmir underground hiphop life 2008-2010

Business Finance and Cashflow Services offer a unique and specialised service in enabling Businesses to address their Business Finance and Cashflow needs.

      

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G-DLCH, Boeing 737-8Q8 (CN 30040) of FlyGlobespan.com approaches Edinburgh Airport’s runway 24. Flyglobespan - the airline offshoot of Edinburgh based Globespan Travel began oprerations in 2003 from Edinburgh and Glasgow. The airline ceased operations in December 2009 owing to cashflow difficulties. G-DLCH was delivered new to Flyglobespan in April 2004 and operated until the airline closed. In August 2010 it moved to Midwest Airlines Egypt as SU-MWE before joining Kharkiv Airlines as UR-CLP in July 2013. Laterally the aircraft has flown with Norwind Airlines as VP-BOW.

note: a draft CAPM will confirm price action.

 

Newbies and Returnees; Here you have a Thumbsheet of the ff.

Trading plan

Simple clean chart trajectory

Fundamental checklist macro micro sentiment

Industry scenario

Calculated risk reward outcome

 

This is how odisiy (odyssey) manulife, philam moneytree, and every UITF xyz; pool in deposits placements and invest in equities as part of the balance aggressive fund.

 

the rolling points or gains of your fund is based on the underlying performance of the stocks in a fund.

 

essentially the 30/60/90 day or q1 earnings determines cashflow of a company's performance to expand and utilize working capital to generate more revenue which pumps the stock price.

How? more income divided by over number of shareholders; ROE

 

in the realm of BANKING the more branches the more depositors loan applicants and higher volume of spreads generated.

 

Who thinks long term? Only the CEO that's why he's all alone up there

Who thinks mid term? BOD Board of Directors

Who thinks short term? Traders FUND MANAGERS who need to flip rollover funds.

Who thinks like a gambler? Insiders manipulators who avail of T3++ facility

 

If you think like a CEO: do portfolio buy and forget

If you think like a BOD: average trade either way the market moves

If you think like a trader: never ever hold on to a stock too long (30-90 days)

If you think like a gambler: we all know one day wonders are not sustainable. You will end up pawning your watch, car, jewelry to your broker, instead of trading stocks.

  

izmir underground hiphop life 2008-2010

Gem Croft's piece as part of the Physical Theatre Scotland Graduate showcase, 'Cashflow'.

Real estate investors during the housing bubble put their money to work on faith. There is no logical reason to believe house prices only go up. In fact, there have been two prior periods in California’s recent history where house prices did, in fact, go down. However, with kool aid... at The folly of negative-cashflow investment

  

Visit the OC Housing News, and read the OC Housing News blog. Learn why you should use a home guide. Meet the Akason Realty Consulting home guides and housing market analysts, and read our real estate agent testimonials. Discover why you should register with the OC Housing News and how to use the OC Housing News. Utilize the advanced property search, or the MLS map search.

 

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Also read Renter News, SD Housing News, Housing Bubble News & Information, Housing Market Forecast US, Housing Market News & Information, Real Estate Ruin, USA Housing News, California Real Estate News, Housing Market News, USA Foreclosure News, Mortgage and Foreclosure News, Mortgage Refinance News, Real Estate Loan News, Debt Default News, Ponzi Debt, Loan Modification and Default News, Mortgage News Clips, and Fay Mortgage News.

  

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