nicko31
Well-known member
Could be 6 or 7am to get a result if its close. Going to bed early and getting up early
I would rather shit in my own hands and clap.
That normally costs €50 in certain clubs in Hamburg.
I've put you in the "maybe" column.
Are you going fishing ?
Anyone pulling an all-nighter to watch the drama unfold?
My parents are in their 70's, full on OUT, all their friends are outers too hardly, not IN an voters in sight. OK life growing up in the 50's was tougher, I don't deny that
But since the 70's they all have lived through a period of growing prosperity, most have pensions my generation can only dream about, paid off houses that now worth a load and spare cash to travel. Life could be worse...
Just don't get it, they've done well out of Europe. Now suddenly getting out will solve everything that is wrong with the country. I just don't get it, they seems to be living on false nostalgia.
I would rather shit in my own hands and clap.
That normally costs €50 in certain clubs in Hamburg.
Given that the Exit polls and so on were predicting it pretty close after the last general Election, despite getting it all over the place beforehand, I just wonder whether we might have some decent idea with the 10 o'clock news.
Although it could be "too close to call".
As per usual, Newcastle and Sunderland will be racing to declare first at around midnight, must cost their council taxpayers a fortune! The bulk of results will begin to be declared around 4am, by 6am we should have a damn good idea of where it is all going. The last results will come in from deeply rural areas like the Highlands, west Wales and deepest Cornwall, if we are sweating on those then things will be really close.
Well, quite.
So the (current) deal, is that we get a load of cute young Spanish girls to staff the bars and retail outlets of Brighton, paying taxes, and contributing to the local economy, and in return Spain gets a third of a million sickly pensioners to leech off their health system.
Please explain why you think the Spanish are out of order to suggest that this would not be an acceptable state of affairs, after a Leave vote??
Of course your making it up to fit your immigration agenda and if you care to analyse the actual figures you will see that most immigrants are in low skilled employment.
I will try to simplify it a little:
We do have something like 400 000 in skilled positions from the pre 2004 EU14 countries (older member countries) Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden.
However there are more than double that figure 800 000 from the accession countries known as EU10 Bulgaria, Romania, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia three quarters 600 000 in low skilled employment and of which 260 000+ of those are in what is considered the very lowest category of low skilled employment.
So it definitely isn't a Red Herring, its a set of circumstances that require much consideration for any prospective voter, we are not sucking in exclusively skilled immigrant workers in the main we are sucking in primarily from the E10 countries low skilled workers.
That does NOT constitute an answer for any perceived skill shortages because those immigrants are not skilled.