- Jul 10, 2003
- 27,772
Ouch .... biting If you're this angry now what are you going to be like on the 1st November Not too long for us to find out
I would hazard a guess that he would be much like he was on March 30th 2019 and April 13th 2019
Ouch .... biting If you're this angry now what are you going to be like on the 1st November Not too long for us to find out
I would hazard a guess that he would be much like he was on March 30th 2019 and April 13th 2019
"They just can't see it".
Yeah Ok.
You didn't "dumb it down to make it easier". You just made it dumb.
There's good reason you turn to an analogy like that. Because there are actually no intellegent arguments you can make to change the situation. Yes there is lot's of worry about how things will shape up when we leave. & much of that concern is fully justified. But we had a refurrendum and decided, together, by way of a democratic vote, to leave the EU. So that is what we are going to do.
You would do better to spend less time thinking up meaningless Disney analogies (and accusing people who don't agree with you of being thick), and more time coming to terms with where we are, and then, getting over it.
Ouch .... biting If you're this angry now what are you going to be like on the 1st November Not too long for us to find out
I'm rapidly beginning to think you are wrong on that count.
Your previous post suggested you still think we will have extra money for Public services, because we won't be sending any contributions to the EU.
The intelligent arguments have been presented and ignored, if you would like to have one, I am up for it, but I challenge you to start it off with a rational and intelligent post on the benefits of Brexit.
I know I know but some Brexiters still can't see how bad things are. So I thought I would dumb it down to make it easier...
I tiold you before, if it happens in am leaving, Britain is dead. It will just be an island full of Nazi ***** like you.
You aren't really up for a reasonable and intelligent discussion, because you "challenge [me] to start it off with a rational and intelligent post on the benefits of Brexit".
If you were really up for a reasonable and intelligent discussion, the fist thing you would do is acknowledge that there are benefits of Brexit, just like I acknowledge that there are risks and challenges also.
Your post seems to imply that there aren't any benefits, or you can't see any. That is as unreasonable as me saying there are no risks or challenges, or that I can't see any.
Not the opening salvo for a reasonable level headed discussion is it.
I'm looking forward to your next whinge about how the feral dickheads clad in Stone Island - your wànkbank material - are being marginalised and how it's just not fair.
You post that tedious bullshit around once a month. Where has that got you?
Ouch .... biting If you're this angry now what are you going to be like on the 1st November Not too long for us to find out
I will acknowledge any benefits that you can present and I can't refute. But you choose not to present any, or maybe you just can't?
We take full control of our decisions/destiny that in itself is more than the EU can offer time to cast off the shacklesI will acknowledge any benefits that you can present and I can't refute. But you choose not to present any, or maybe you just can't?
EU is clearly not going to budge. They've played it with a straight bat throughout.
Boris's political career is equally clearly going to crash and burn earlydoors. Not that Boris gives a shit. Boris gets to tick 'Be Prime Minister' off his Eton bucket list. Pathetic beyond words.
... beyond words? ... I think you're being a little hard on yourself!
I'm happy to debate this subject with anyone who comes across as reasonable, fair minded & sincere.
I asked you this the other day and got no response. Lets try again:
If The UK Government negotiated a Withdrawal Agreement in good faith based on each others red lines set down at the start, including the formulation of the backstop as per EU red lines that really didn't give them much wriggle room, and The UK and EU reached an agreement for The Withdrawal only for it to all fall down because the European Parliament wouldn't vote for it for 3 times, what would you have liked The UK Government to have done? Bearing in mind this is just The Withdrawal Agreement, would you trust them in the future now they've reneged on this? What about the UK Government's red lines? Would you like The UK to cut them the slack they need and have open borders, say at the channel ports? Lets say some arrogant, eccentric oddballs in the European Parliament, rather than The Westminster one, (educated at elite Swiss finishing schools rather than English Public ones) started talking vaguely about technological solutions without any details other than vague waffle? Would you think it sounds plausible? How do you think The EU rejecting it 3 times, having agreed it, would reflect on them globally? What do you think it does to their reputation? Would it make it look good? Lets say The EU Parliament is really bitterly divided on this too, like The EU as a whole is - what would you like The UK to do faced with all that?