I'd suggest changing the spark plug, Craic. It's a lot quicker way of getting something going. Sometimes you need to change.
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The National Party solution would be to place the chainsaw out on the front verge to see if the 'market' would fix it. Or pay a consultant to look at it, and failing that, clean it up and try to sell it as is, for some pocket money.
Anyway, nine times out of ten, a spark plug change will be the quickest solution Craic.
Mathew Hooton 2/6/12
The English doctrine is that it is better to engineer a political environment where voters are urging the government to do more.* Ministers, as good democrats, can then be seen to respond.* This, he says, is the key to achieving sustainable policy change.
On superannuation, the doctrine appears in play.
Mr Key’s 2008 promise was remarkable for its extremity: “National will retain all the superannuation entitlements and eligibility rules that our senior citizens currently enjoy. We will keep this pledge and I will resign as prime minister, and as a member of our parliament, rather than break it.”
“What’s more,” Mr Key said, “as we cut taxes and grow average after-tax wages, we will progressively increase the amount of super paid to senior citizens.”
westerly
I might be right though, you're not changing plugs often enough, Craic. Anyway, a good spark plug would probably fire up that stale fuel, and everything will start working properly again.
Not to stray too far from this thread, it appears that the normal service life of a spark plug in a chainsaw is about 100 hours. Based on the number of your posts mentioning chainsaws, and even factoring in that you have enough of them to open a small chainsaw museum, you should at least have a look at the spark plug, Craic.
http://homeguides.sfgate.com/need-ch...aw-100576.html
Similarly, governments sometimes run past their use-by date, and three terms is about their limit.
Here are a couple of charts for you EZ.
Government debt to GDP levels under Clark v Key.
http://thestandard.org.nz/who-was-th...k-or-john-key/
Or just the level of government debt in a simple chart since 1993.
Key and Co sure know how to get the country in hock.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...0-2011.svg.png