18-05-2018, 15:57
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#2716
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 14,229
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by RizzyKing
Damien despite what some people are constantly saying people did know what they were voting for total and complete withdrawal from the EU and everything that entails and quite a lot voted that way knowing we'd have a period of uncertainty and economic decline. We've been told numerous times that we're leaving the customs union and single market which is what we voted for and anything less then that is ignoring a rather large percentage of the UK public. As i said the damage that will be done if we don't leave fully and completely could be very bad for this country.
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Don't know where you got this idea from. Even Daniel Hannan says otherwise.
https://www.conservativehome.com/the...ds-brexit.html
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18-05-2018, 16:14
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#2717
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cf.addict
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 124
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Re: Brexit discussion
Did love this tweet about Brexit. Probably the best analogy I've seen:
https://twitter.com/PickardJE/status/996821085575434240
Quote:
Brexit fast becoming a holiday which half the family didn’t want to go on and now the car is stuck in a traffic jam and mum and dad are arguing over the map
we seem to have been around the same roundabout a dozen times and its name is customs arrangement
and now someone has suggested a board game
they are arguing over the map because no one brought the map
dad keeps saying how everyone will love Pontins when they get there, it was great back in the day
the first drops of rain are starting to fall
the holiday, like every holiday in the history of holidays, has been more expensive than anticipated
and the cry goes up from the back:
are.
we.
nearly.
there.
yet?
Labour are the family next door who are also going to Pontins which is puzzling when they supposedly don’t like Pontins
it will be dark in a couple of hours
the “transition period” involves a lengthy stay at the Watford Gap service station while dad struggles to change a tyre
mum is silently contemplating divorce but fears the alternative could be worse
one of the kids is googling “Abilene Paradox”
the backseat driving has begun
Dave, who lent the brochure, isn't coming on the trip
the car has no brakes
the kids want cake even though they’ve eaten the cake
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.....
And there follows some very amusing responses
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18-05-2018, 17:47
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#2718
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Virgin Media Employee
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Winchester
Services: Staff MyRates
BB: VM XXL
TV: VM XL
Phone : VM XL
Posts: 3,113
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Re: Brexit discussion
Except that more than half who expressed an interest did want to go.
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18-05-2018, 21:26
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#2719
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 14,229
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bircho
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It's very funny, a good find. Credit to its author, Jim Pickard of the FT.
Particularly like the lines "Labour are the family next door who are also going to Pontins which is puzzling when they supposedly don’t like Pontins" and "Dave, who lent the brochure, isn't coming on the trip"
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21-05-2018, 22:58
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#2720
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 14,229
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Re: Brexit discussion
Just need the rest of the country to follow suit
Quote:
Northern Ireland would vote more strongly to remain in the EU if there was another Brexit poll, a study has suggested.
A total of 69 per cent would favour Remain if there was another referendum compared with 56 per cent in the result two years ago, the UK in a Changing Europe project said.
Catholics were more likely to support a united Ireland if there was a “hard exit” in which the UK left the customs union and single market.
The Irish border is one of the most vexed questions facing negotiators who aim to strike a deal by autumn, before Britain’s withdrawal from the EU next year.
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Registration required to read full article.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/i...inds-l6grdfsh9
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23-05-2018, 09:39
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#2721
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Woke and proud !
Join Date: Jun 2004
Services: TV, Phone, BB, a wife
Posts: 9,125
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Re: Brexit discussion
https://news.sky.com/story/carney-se...comes-11381658
Quote:
Mark Carney has claimed the Brexit vote has left households £900 worse off annually, describing the sum as "a lot of money."
The governor of the Bank of England made his remarks while giving evidence of a committee of MPs, stating his belief that the effects of the EU referendum in June 2016 had lowered the UK's GDP by 2%.
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£900 a year is what it's costing you folks, to get the country back from God knows who .... And our economic growth has ground to a halt, however the Eurozone steams ahead.
Brexit hasn't even happened yet, this is just the reaction to the prospect of it. Never mind Boris is ordering a new Jet for Brexit business, hope he's not raiding all that NHS money he promised.
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23-05-2018, 10:08
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#2722
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vox populi vox dei
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: the last resort
Services: every thing
Posts: 13,739
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr K
https://news.sky.com/story/carney-se...comes-11381658
£900 a year is what it's costing you folks, to get the country back from God knows who .... And our economic growth has ground to a halt, however the Eurozone steams ahead.
Brexit hasn't even happened yet, this is just the reaction to the prospect of it. Never mind Boris is ordering a new Jet for Brexit business, hope he's not raiding all that NHS money he promised.
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If your unhappy pack your bags and jump on the Euro star for a better life in EUtopia , better hurry the offer ends in march .
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To be or not to be, woke is the question Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer. The slings and arrows of outrageous wokedome, Or to take arms against a sea of wokies. And by opposing end them.
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23-05-2018, 11:19
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#2723
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: At the Leaving door
Posts: 4,050
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Re: Brexit discussion
Mark Carney has claimed the Brexit vote has left households £900 worse off annually, describing the sum as "a lot of money."
He's just another Euro lover that needs to hide the fact he's pretty useless at his job.
Was it the Brexit vote that has increased oil prices?
Was it the Brexit vote that pushed the local councils into the desperate attempts to 'save' £millions every year on their budgets?
Was it the Brexit vote that has decimated the high streets, or caused the ongoing closures of many named companies?
Was it the Brexit vote that has held interest rates at low levels for years?
Was it the Brexit vote that encouraged the shenanigans of the bankers/traders - something we're still paying for?
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23-05-2018, 11:36
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#2724
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Perfect Soldier
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Worthing West Sussex
Age: 66
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Posts: 10,989
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Re: Brexit discussion
Mark Carney's predictions are as reliable as a 3 month ahead weather forecast. He has been consitently wrong post Brexit and continues in vein.
The reduction in growth to near zero in the first quarter of this year was dominated by a fall in the construction sector of ~6%, mainly due to the appaling weather and precious little to do with Brexit.
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History is much like an endless waltz: The three beats of war, peace and revolution continue on forever.
However history will change with my coronation - Mariemaia Khushrenada
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23-05-2018, 15:15
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#2725
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vox populi vox dei
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: the last resort
Services: every thing
Posts: 13,739
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by heero_yuy
Mark Carney's predictions are as reliable as a 3 month ahead weather forecast. He has been consitently wrong post Brexit and continues in vein.
The reduction in growth to near zero in the first quarter of this year was dominated by a fall in the construction sector of ~6%, mainly due to the appaling weather and precious little to do with Brexit.
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Carney the Blarney at it again
__________________
To be or not to be, woke is the question Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer. The slings and arrows of outrageous wokedome, Or to take arms against a sea of wokies. And by opposing end them.
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23-05-2018, 17:15
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#2726
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Guest
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Re: Brexit discussion
Ah bless MrK found himself something to cheer him up hopefully he'll quit while he's ahead and go enjoy a drink in his garden. Carney is about as reliable as a north korean takeaway the guy has a lousy track record and hopefully when he goes we will get somebody a lot better. Even if it were true it's a price many of us are willing to pay to get out of the EU hell double and triple it still a bargain to be out of the EU and not long now till we are out.
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23-05-2018, 18:50
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#2727
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Rise above the players
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Wokingham
Services: 2 V6 boxes with 360 software, Now, ITVX, Amazon, Netflix, Lionsgate+, Apple+, Disney+, Paramount +,
Posts: 14,587
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by RizzyKing
Ah bless MrK found himself something to cheer him up hopefully he'll quit while he's ahead and go enjoy a drink in his garden. Carney is about as reliable as a north korean takeaway the guy has a lousy track record and hopefully when he goes we will get somebody a lot better. Even if it were true it's a price many of us are willing to pay to get out of the EU hell double and triple it still a bargain to be out of the EU and not long now till we are out.
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Very true, although I must say I don't remember losing that £900.
I guess the rich bods must have skewed the average somewhat!!
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23-05-2018, 19:48
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#2728
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: #Plagueisland
Age: 53
Services: VM VIP Pack
Posts: 1,668
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Re: Brexit discussion
I am sure someone will be along with the right figures if the Bank of England is wrong in their summary of the economy over the last couple of years....
The question is why, if Mark Carney is so bad, did the government want him to extend his contract?
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23-05-2018, 20:10
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#2729
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Guest
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Re: Brexit discussion
Failing upwards seems to be the norm these days boris johnson is proof of that Jon.
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23-05-2018, 20:49
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#2730
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cf.mega pornstar
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 18,802
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Re: Brexit discussion
Quote:
Originally Posted by jonbxx
I am sure someone will be along with the right figures if the Bank of England is wrong in their summary of the economy over the last couple of years....
The question is why, if Mark Carney is so bad, did the government want him to extend his contract?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RizzyKing
Failing upwards seems to be the norm these days boris johnson is proof of that Jon.
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It looked to me as though in the days after the referendum Carney was the only person in high office who wasn't sat there wide eyed like a rabbit in the headlights, I remember seeing headlines in papers like the express that he saved 250 000 jobs in the immediate aftermath whilst the only jobs Dave and Gideon were concerned about were there own.
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