pastafarian
Well-known member
You really are an argumentative bore.
cant be helped im afraid, if some of you lot continue to post utter nonsense i will continue to point out your failings.
You really are an argumentative bore.
So by your reckoning the queen who is a German descendant and therefore immigrant is ok to be our ruler not forgetting she has a naturalised husband who is a Greek immigrant this must be so because you infer that my questioning of he ethnicity is doubtful because you use Sadiq Khan as an example of someone who is now British?
Is it ok with you that Khan is British then ?
Was Khan born here? I honestly don't know?
So if Khan married into the royal family you would be fine with this I take it?
cant be helped im afraid, if some of you lot continue to post utter nonsense i will continue to point out your failings.
Lots more questions and no answers.
I'll state my position and hopefully it's clear. I think the Queen is 100% British. I've no problem with that and I've no problem with her having married a Greek/Danish chap and the future kings and queens having that ancestry. I also think Sadiq Khan is 100% British. His parents aren't but he was born and lived here all his life, he clearly self-identifies as a Brit and this is his country as much as it is mine and once again, I've absolutely no problem with that. And if he married into the Royal Family then good for him.
My issue is why you refer to the Queen as German when she was born here, so were her parents, all her grandparents too and 5 of her great-grandparents BUT you say you wouldn't refer to someone like Ian Wright as Jamaican. I genuinely don't understand why the position they hold in this country makes the slightest difference to their nationality.
Well, I suppose everyone has to have a hobby/obsession. All the best with it.
cheers....,its going awfully well at the moment.
Mind you i do have lashings of material to work from.
Lots more questions and no answers.
I'll state my position and hopefully it's clear. I think the Queen is 100% British. I've no problem with that and I've no problem with her having married a Greek/Danish chap and the future kings and queens having that ancestry. I also think Sadiq Khan is 100% British. His parents aren't but he was born and lived here all his life, he clearly self-identifies as a Brit and this is his country as much as it is mine and once again, I've absolutely no problem with that. And if he married into the Royal Family then good for him.
My issue is why you refer to the Queen as German when she was born here, so were her parents, all her grandparents too and 5 of her great-grandparents BUT you say you wouldn't refer to someone like Ian Wright as Jamaican. I genuinely don't understand why the position they hold in this country makes the slightest difference to their nationality.
You don't seem to understand much.the nation has voted to leave and I respect that. I am puzzled why there is seemingly now a plan to try and do a trade deal with the corrupt and unaccountable EU though.
Told by whom? Are there voices in your head?I'm just puzzled why you want out...but now want a back door deal. I thought the future lay elsewhere....this is what I was repeatedly told.
Don't forget the thickos. Oh, and the gullible. Racists, thickos, the gullible, and now those that want rid of workers' rights.Basically the leavers fell into two camps,
The Tories just wanted the chance to repeal all EU laws which protected workers rights
UKIP and the racists wanted to stop brown people coming into our country,
None of them cared about the trade deals.
Dear me, you still on the French stuff.
You should be on Italian or German by now.........i thought you were an expert.
just goes to show.......never trust the experts.
do you actually think that bothers me? , says a lot about you thoughI'm actually close to putting you on my ignore list with Hove, Bald and Unread .... the two of you should get along famously.
do you actually think that bothers me? , says a lot about you though
regards
DR
You don't seem to understand much.
Told by whom? Are there voices in your head?
Brexiteers wanted out of EU and now want deals done with the EU through the back door. Pretty unbelievable really. So basically we will, essentially still be a pat of the EU but with zero clout, at the mercy of the EU and all the elements of it Brexiteers sited as their reason to leave but without any power to do anything about it.
We are a part of Europe whether we like it or not, Brexit just lessens our power in the continent we are a part of. Makes one wonder what the real motivations for Leave voters was because I can't believe they are all stupid enough not to realise this. Perhaps they thought it was a price worth paying for another agenda they had.
There's a good letter in today's FT which possibly hits the nail on the head - ie, the real motivation for many Leave voters was simply the chance to be heard:
Sir, David P Leader (Letters, August 5) waspishly says that supporters of Brexit may be disillusioned, dissatisfied, disappointed or dispossessed, but are not disenfranchised. He is wrong: a quarter of Brexit voters are supporters of the UK Independence party, and they are disenfranchised. Enfranchisement is not merely the right to mark a ballot paper. It means to possess rights and liberties, to be a citizen who is counted and considered and, in the UK, to be represented in parliament. These meanings are recognised in good dictionaries, and uses of the term date predate popular elections. I don’t like Ukip. I find its policies poorly thought out and prejudiced, and its rhetoric is offensive and repugnant to me. But the fact that almost 4m votes for the party result in only one MP scandalises our political system and threatens to destabilise our society. Many of Ukip’s supporters live in economic and life circumstances that have been deliberately created and exacerbated by economic policies over the past 40 years. In normal circumstances nothing they can do in a polling booth has a chance of changing that: are they not disenfranchised?
On one day in June this community saw a possibility of change, and turned out to vote in numbers that surprised the pundits. I consider the outcome bizarre, and unfortunate, and expect that my children and grandchildren will be paying the price.
There's a good letter in today's FT which possibly hits the nail on the head - ie, the real motivation for many Leave voters was simply the chance to be heard:
Sir, David P Leader (Letters, August 5) waspishly says that supporters of Brexit may be disillusioned, dissatisfied, disappointed or dispossessed, but are not disenfranchised. He is wrong: a quarter of Brexit voters are supporters of the UK Independence party, and they are disenfranchised. Enfranchisement is not merely the right to mark a ballot paper. It means to possess rights and liberties, to be a citizen who is counted and considered and, in the UK, to be represented in parliament. These meanings are recognised in good dictionaries, and uses of the term date predate popular elections.
Told by Davis for example. He's said that if the EU is daft enough not to give the UK access to the single market without allowing us curbs on immigration then the future will indeed be elsewhere and him and the Fox will trolley off and do deals with markets ten times bigger than the EU, simultaneously putting a tariff on BMWs and the rest which will raise huge amounts of money that he will give to the British car industry.
I don't know about David but Fox has already shown he is very good at raising vast amounts of money. Unfortunately he had to pay much of it back when he emerged as one of the stars of the MPs' expenses scandal.
There's a good letter in today's FT which possibly hits the nail on the head - ie, the real motivation for many Leave voters was simply the chance to be heard:
Sir, David P Leader (Letters, August 5) waspishly says that supporters of Brexit may be disillusioned, dissatisfied, disappointed or dispossessed, but are not disenfranchised. He is wrong: a quarter of Brexit voters are supporters of the UK Independence party, and they are disenfranchised. Enfranchisement is not merely the right to mark a ballot paper. It means to possess rights and liberties, to be a citizen who is counted and considered and, in the UK, to be represented in parliament. These meanings are recognised in good dictionaries, and uses of the term date predate popular elections. I don’t like Ukip. I find its policies poorly thought out and prejudiced, and its rhetoric is offensive and repugnant to me. But the fact that almost 4m votes for the party result in only one MP scandalises our political system and threatens to destabilise our society. Many of Ukip’s supporters live in economic and life circumstances that have been deliberately created and exacerbated by economic policies over the past 40 years. In normal circumstances nothing they can do in a polling booth has a chance of changing that: are they not disenfranchised?
On one day in June this community saw a possibility of change, and turned out to vote in numbers that surprised the pundits. I consider the outcome bizarre, and unfortunate, and expect that my children and grandchildren will be paying the price.
Indeed David Davis did mention a new free trade area 10 times bigger than The EU - https://corporate.sky.com/media-cen...is,-mp,-secretary-of-state-for-brexit,-170716
Sounds positive. One slight problem though - https://inews.co.uk/essentials/news...-trading-area-10-times-the-size-of-the-earth/