SK1NT
Well-known member
So many factually incorrect statements in one post!
Care to elaborate?
Because every point is factually correct... however brexiters don't like real facts. They like sound bites "take back or country"
So many factually incorrect statements in one post!
I see the FTSE 250 is up over 300 points (2%) this morning so not all doom and gloom.
Ah Ok oh insulting one from behind the keyboard. Unfortunately using my mobile and just popping in occasionally in the day, unlike some, I posted that Norway turned away 8000 last month. As was pointed out by a poster it was indeed a year. I expected to be pulled up about it and admit my figures and text was wrong on THIS occasion. Keep going keyboard warrior, your country needs you.
When we start to enact the process instructed by the democratic will of the majority we will begin to see what our new relationship with our European friends is likely to be rather rely on guesswork which suggests the overly optimistic sunny uplands or the doomsday 'real shit going down'.
I notice your location, Crawley with a 58% vote to leave ... the real world indeed.
In part, I was voting with other members interests in mind, the difficulties faced by our neighbours will get worse with us leaving, there is a potential for a fragmentation of the Union.
The evolution of the E.U. is slow and plodding, frustratingly so at times, so nothing that happens, happens overnight, there is time to adjust, amend, or block stuff, leaving will bring challenges on every front all at once, and will be a rush job.
We are one of the stronger members, the wealthier members and made a large net contribution, we chose to try and keep more for ourselves and share less with our neighbours, at a time when we need to help eachother, not very British in my opinion.
Yes, The majority of my Town and my Country were taken in, I believe that if we had another referendum though, the result would be different.
If the will of the people is what you want to enact, surely another referendum would be wise?
When I say the real shit will go down, I am talking about recession in the first instance, job losses etc. eventually, we will come out of recession, but we will be much poorer nation, it will take many years, to get back to where we are now.
This is not guesswork. The exact number of years is a guess, but 5 years is very optomistic.
What is guesswork is how badly it will divide this country, and Europe, I do not want to paint the pictures for you, but there are some awful outcomes.
I promise you, if we go ahead with this, at some point you will regret that we went down the path. It is not yet set that we go, I hope we can stop it from happening, I hope that you and others will reconsider and add your voices to those calling for a better informed opinion to be heard, not the one made on lies and half truths a couple of weeks ago.
What evidence have you got that the result would be different? WWIII hasn't started yet has it?Yes, The majority of my Town and my Country were taken in, I believe that if we had another referendum though, the result would be different.
If the will of the people is what you want to enact, surely another referendum would be wise?
Yes it is. I expect there to be a recession, but it's only a guess.When I say the real shit will go down, I am talking about recession in the first instance, job losses etc. eventually, we will come out of recession, but we will be much poorer nation, it will take many years, to get back to where we are now.
This is not guesswork.
You're in no position to make such a promise. You don't know what will happen, or what we'll all think of it.I promise you, if we go ahead with this, at some point you will regret that we went down the path.
Hank Marvin?
When I say the real shit will go down, I am talking about recession in the first instance, job losses etc. eventually, we will come out of recession, but we will be much poorer nation, it will take many years, to get back to where we are now.
This is not guesswork. The exact number of years is a guess, but 5 years is very optimistic.
Many leavers accepted that the early stages of Brexit would bring the sort of turmoil we are seeing so I am not sure what the remainers are hoping to gain by keep reminding everybody of it. Perhaps we can all save the debate until the end game is played out and we can see the outcome of Brexit rather than initial anticipated phases.
Yes, you may be right. One of the Economists for Britain group of pro-Brexit experts (it was quite a small group) said that by 2030 the economy should be back to where it would have been if we hadn't left the EU and - wait for it - it might be before then. And he was trying to flog the project! And three weeks ago the leader of a Brexit economists group (it may have been the same one), a Cardiff professor called Metcalf, was really gung ho about abandoning tariffs, adding this immortal line "it will probably mean the elimination of British manufacturing but that is not something we should be afraid of."
Yeah I know, let's all wait until people are really really suffering before we debate this.
I try to be polite in my posts but I'm starting to think that we are living in a lunatic asylum.
Yes, you may be right. One of the Economists for Britain group of pro-Brexit experts (it was quite a small group) said that by 2030 the economy should be back to where it would have been if we hadn't left the EU and - wait for it - it might be before then.
In part, I was voting with other members interests in mind, the difficulties faced by our neighbours will get worse with us leaving, there is a potential for a fragmentation of the Union.
The evolution of the E.U. is slow and plodding, frustratingly so at times, so nothing that happens, happens overnight, there is time to adjust, amend, or block stuff, leaving will bring challenges on every front all at once, and will be a rush job.
We are one of the stronger members, the wealthier members and made a large net contribution, we chose to try and keep more for ourselves and share less with our neighbours, at a time when we need to help eachother, not very British in my opinion.
On and on and on, maybe that is why you are on so many dating sites, you bore them. By the way your profile on one was done when you were 53, you are now 61, like on here try changing the profile like the record. Good luck getting a younger partner and update the profile picture as well.People are keyboard warriors for pointing out that you lied, and did not retract, or mention it again until now?
How right were you when you posted a picture of the Labour Business secretary as a member of UKIP?
Yes, you may be right. One of the Economists for Britain group of pro-Brexit experts (it was quite a small group) said that by 2030 the economy should be back to where it would have been if we hadn't left the EU and - wait for it - it might be before then. And he was trying to flog the project! And three weeks ago the leader of a Brexit economists group (it may have been the same one), a Cardiff professor called Metcalf, was really gung ho about abandoning tariffs, adding this immortal line "it will probably mean the elimination of British manufacturing but that is not something we should be afraid of."
Yeah I know, let's all wait until people are really really suffering before we debate this.
I try to be polite in my posts but I'm starting to think that we are living in a lunatic asylum.
We've got our country back though. It's a price worth paying. The multi-millionaire UKIP backer Arron Banks said so.
On and on and on, maybe that is why you are on so many dating sites, you bore them. By the way your profile on one was done when you were 53, you are now 61, like on here try changing the profile like the record. Good luck getting a younger partner and update the profile picture as well.
That seems a reasonable analysis of why you stayed, but it seems most Leavers have made their own decision based not on the merits of membership but more on the consequences of leaving it, which cannot yet be determined.
Some tend to think that a daily analysis of the currency markets, FTSE and anything else that might spit out an immediate negative result is what is bolstering their own feeling of injustice of their lost referendum vote.
Whilst it is of some worth giving a net contribution for the wellbeing of other countries, I personally couldnt have foreseen the future accession countries that for me have never been in my psyche as our European neighbours and partners, either historically, politically and not even geographical and unsurprisingly many of those are net recipients of funds whilst adding to migration at levels never seen before.
We are now free to apportion financial help to whom we like whatever and whenever we wish.