Still backing 'no deal' ?
Over the Chequers option .... yes.
Still backing 'no deal' ?
Re-reading my post, I think a company has to get a license with a single country BUT the conditions under which they do so differs from country to country.Interesting and exactly the sort of case study that shows that the flag wavers in the Tory party and beyond really didn't have a clue about the chaos they were unleashing. OK maybe relatively few jobs will be lost - but how will this in any way serve the interests of the UK?
Over the Chequers option .... yes.
Most other clubs listen to the concerns of their members and improve the service. They understand that without the members and their membership fees there is no club.
It's all a massive car crash. I read with dismay that 90% of the over 65's voted in the Brexit referendum, and only c64% of the 18-24 age took part in the vote.
Every single day now we're reminded that both the Chequers deal AND a No-deal will pretty much shaft the entire country. All we can hope is that the government finally sees sense, and puts a stop to it.
Go and check for yourself - every single one of those points* has been suggested, implied or explicitly said ( including the now traditional posting of other peoples Twitter posts ) on this thread. It's not my fault how utterly ridiculous and exaggerated it looks when all put in one list ..... but then the remain campaign rather liked hyperbole didn't it !
* OK, I made up one
What you fail to understand is that while [MENTION=22389]bashlsdir[/MENTION] might appear to one of the biggest simpletons on this thread, he is in fact actually an expert on the EU. This is because his mum is Italian. He may have mentioned it once or twice.That's a ridiculous analogy. The EU has a democratic structure in place (several, in fact) where members' concerns can be aired and dealt with. It so happens that many of the UK's concerns aren't shared by other members, so nothing was done - but that's no different from any other club.
In this instance, the UK has decided that its concerns are such that it wants to leave the club. What you seem to want is someone leaving the club having the exact same privileges as those still in it: I know of no other club that lets former members do this.
I do get exasperated by some of my fellow leavers who post bone-headed statements like that - it gives the impression that all leavers are idiots, which just isn't true.
You mean like the simple childish repetition of 'Pfft' Nibble ? It makes you look so so intelligent !
Watched Boris, with clenched jaw. Cannot stand the guy but (of course) the audience cheered him to the rafters. He totally upstaged everyone else at the conference which to be fair isn't that much of an achievement. I think the word grandstanding could have been made for him.
A few jokes (some good, others not) a few cheap shots, a whole heap of rhetoric but very little of substance (a few anecdotes about great firms in his own constituency) and that same old/ same old about exciting possibilities with few being identified.
Nothing new. This is increasingly an internecine Tory war and the rest of us can stand back and wait for the winner to emerge...……….while the country is in pain.
Watched Boris, with clenched jaw. Cannot stand the guy but (of course) the audience cheered him to the rafters. He totally upstaged everyone else at the conference which to be fair isn't that much of an achievement. I think the word grandstanding could have been made for him.
A few jokes (some good, others not) a few cheap shots, a whole heap of rhetoric but very little of substance (a few anecdotes about great firms in his own constituency) and that same old/ same old about exciting possibilities with few being identified.
Nothing new. This is increasingly an internecine Tory war and the rest of us can stand back and wait for the winner to emerge...……….while the country is in pain.
And this quote from a thinktank report yesterday;
"The model also suggests that had Britain not voted to leave, the deficit would be down to just 0.1% of GDP, or £2bn. It would mean the austerity drive in place since 2010 would be all but complete."
Smart move Brexiteers. :sigh:
What you fail to understand is that while [MENTION=22389]bashlsdir[/MENTION] might appear to one of the biggest simpletons on this thread, he is in fact actually an expert on the EU. This is because his mum is Italian. He may have mentioned it once or twice.
If we leave with no deal, I'll predict that at least half your list will happen, albeit to a lesser extent than suggested there. However, you'll be able to give yourself a big pat on the back that things were nowhere near as bad as predicted because only some of the disasters happened, and your no deal Brexit will be a TRIUMPH because our economy only contracted by 5% instead of the 10% predicted by all these nasty remoaners.