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  • Itsonlyagame
    replied
    Can you imagine a countries political decision making being influenced by people who base their lives around watching keeping up with the Kardashians and love island.
    Naff off.

    Leave a comment:


  • Blobbers
    replied
    Originally posted by brightonr View Post
    BBC commentary of the pointless Lords debate shows this from that muppet Adonis :

    Labour peer Lord Adonis sets out the circumstances he believes are required for a second referendum to take place.

    He says the choice should be "a straight choice between the government's deal and remaining in the EU", adding that "there should not be a no deal option, because no deal does not exist."

    Social media should be regulated, he says, and the franchise should be extended to 16 and 17 year olds, with particular consideration taken to ensure students are able to vote.


    Makes me sick, this bloke. Him, both Campbell’s, Khan, Umunna, Soubry, Clarke and the rest of those who insist upon knowing better than everyone else.


    Students were allowed to vote only they were either too stoned in a field somewhere listening to crap music or couldn't be arsed to get out of bed.
    The idea that 16 and 17 year olds solving a political need is too laughable to debate.

    Leave a comment:


  • brightonr
    replied
    BBC commentary of the pointless Lords debate shows this from that muppet Adonis :

    Labour peer Lord Adonis sets out the circumstances he believes are required for a second referendum to take place.

    He says the choice should be "a straight choice between the government's deal and remaining in the EU", adding that "there should not be a no deal option, because no deal does not exist."

    Social media should be regulated, he says, and the franchise should be extended to 16 and 17 year olds, with particular consideration taken to ensure students are able to vote.


    Makes me sick, this bloke. Him, both Campbell’s, Khan, Umunna, Soubry, Clarke and the rest of those who insist upon knowing better than everyone else.

    Leave a comment:


  • brightonr
    replied
    Think the simplest negotiating tactic from here on in would be to state that for every week that passes before the EU sign up to what we want, then £2.5bn comes off of the divorce payment. That should concentrate their minds into finding a solution to their made up problems.

    The outcome cannot be any worse than a “no deal” scenario, which we may well be heading for anyway if they keep playing games. Unfortunately, I don’t think Mrs May has the bottle to embark on such a straightforward approach. Can’t see the point of allowing the uncertainty and the bedwetting it appears to be causing, to go on any longer.

    Biggest mistake was to allow the EU to dictate the timetable and sequence of events from the outset, believing that they were ever going to act honourably.

    Leave a comment:


  • Blobbers
    replied
    We're not leaving Europe we're leaving the EU,all this scaremongering is useless as everybody wants trade.I see Our Masters have just passed a ruling to keep their expenses a secret.What a thieves' kitchen it(EU) has become.

    Leave a comment:


  • Hubble
    replied
    Originally posted by Blobbers View Post
    It's all academic anyway,the EU won't be around in five years' time.Too many dissenting voices and the moves to forge closer contacts with Russia and China.One Belt,One Road is changing everything.It's either that or being "shackled to a corpse".
    Tend to agree. Look at what's happening in Italy. The EU has just vetoed their budget. Telling a government they can't do what they like with their finances on such a large scale (especially as this was a budget within prescribed limits), particularly an anti-EU one as Italy has now, is not going to end well. I think the Italian government did it deliberately, to show up the EU for what it is.

    Leave a comment:


  • Blobbers
    replied
    It's all academic anyway,the EU won't be around in five years' time.Too many dissenting voices and the moves to forge closer contacts with Russia and China.One Belt,One Road is changing everything.It's either that or being "shackled to a corpse".

    Leave a comment:


  • Hubble
    replied
    Originally posted by UpperP View Post

    I said in my post that I thought it was wrong and still do. My point (stroke of genius on her part) was about her negotiating skills and that she managed to mug off the British working class and would probably been able to do the same to the people TM is bargaining with now.
    Fair dos Uppers, make you right on that.


    Leave a comment:


  • UpperP
    replied
    Originally posted by vespa View Post

    Why presume people who naturally vote Labour want remain ? look at the country wide map , England voted to leave , the whole of the working class Labour supporting North and Midlands ,voted to leave , Look at London, main area in the country that wanted remain , Barking and Dagenham ,Havering in the East ,Sutton and Bexley in the South,Hillingdon in the West all suburban areas made up of natural working class ` white voters .
    It isnt about Left/Right at all ,
    i`d cut my c ock off before id ever vote conservative, but i`m 100% leave
    I didn't, I just presumed, wrongly obviously, that Hubbs would, not every Labour voter and it was meant to be a little bit tongue in cheek (maybe I should have put a smiley emoticon after it). My point was MP's should represent their constituents but also be free thinkers and shouldn't be told by the party whip which way they had to vote.
    Maybe I shouldn't post on here after I've had a couple of beers, as I'm not the most literate and my words aren't coming out right.

    Leave a comment:


  • UpperP
    replied
    Originally posted by Hubble View Post

    Just when we were getting on so well! Couldn't disagree more on this one fella. Not a Thatcher fan. At all. Ever. Destroyed this country IMO, but made it look like she was saving it. Clever. Look at the state of it now. That's how you measure it.
    I said in my post that I thought it was wrong and still do. My point (stroke of genius on her part) was about her negotiating skills and that she managed to mug off the British working class and would probably been able to do the same to the people TM is bargaining with now.

    Leave a comment:


  • vespa
    replied
    Quoted UpperP ,because it fitted the point i`m trying to make ,
    probably shouldnt have ,
    he obviously gets it !
    no offence meant

    Leave a comment:


  • vespa
    replied
    Originally posted by UpperP View Post

    Appreciate that Hubbs. Just thought, wrongly obviously, that as your views are slightly to the left of centre that you'd want us to remain in the EU. As I've got older have thought that all MP's should run as independents, rather than Tory/Labour/Liberal/a.n.other. This would allow them to be more neutral and vote on issues rather than have to tow the party line.
    Why presume people who naturally vote Labour want remain ? look at the country wide map , England voted to leave , the whole of the working class Labour supporting North and Midlands ,voted to leave , Look at London, main area in the country that wanted remain , Barking and Dagenham ,Havering in the East ,Sutton and Bexley in the South,Hillingdon in the West all suburban areas made up of natural working class ` white voters .
    It isnt about Left/Right at all ,
    i`d cut my c ock off before id ever vote conservative, but i`m 100% leave

    Leave a comment:


  • Gtleighsr3
    replied
    I love all the people on tv who say I feel more European than British,prob got something to do with a Norman or Viking banging their great great great great Tec grandmother

    Leave a comment:


  • brightonr
    replied
    Originally posted by Bill View Post

    me to
    You forgot the #

    Leave a comment:


  • Bill
    replied
    Originally posted by brightonr View Post
    There’s one thing that puzzles me above all else. The remainers have claimed recently, even in the debate in parliament would you believe, that there are now even more young people of voting age.
    And therefore we should take their views into account.

    Just what qualifications, knowledge and experience have this particular group got that is of use to the debate? Half of them, having taken the decision to go to university, are about to rack up huge debts for very little return, so it can’t be their fiscal prudence. I encounter many students and young people on a daily basis. And whilst I find the vast majority to be perfectly pleasant and affable characters, they are in the main, not exactly worldly wise and hardly a group of people who I would look to for advice of any sort, let alone on matters of international trade and finance. Nothing strange about that at all, they’re just kids.

    Would genuinely love someone to enlighten me on this, as I can’t help feeling I’m missing something.
    me to

    Leave a comment:

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