The Merry Prankster
Pactum serva
Sounds great.
You kept a season ticket then?
I did. I was there for about five years. I only missed one game through flight delays in that time which was pretty remarkable.
Sounds great.
You kept a season ticket then?
I did look up one of the two that died post Brexit. The Polish chap was killed by teens, picked on because he was foreign I would guess and not because of the Brexit vote.
Why is so hard for you to not accept a different opinion to yours.
I have little time for those who live in a foreign country and keep boasting about it whilst looking down on the country that they left.
I take more notice of people that live here, whether they agree with me or not.
I thought you were off on your travels anyway.
Because it's not a matter of opinion. It's not open for discussion. People can live in another country and still feel deeply connected with their country of origin. It's not a question of your opinion it's just a truth. Your refusal to acknowledge it makes it no less true.
Agreed, some can, but some seem to boast about the country they chose to move to and run down the country they left.
We will never agree on this issue, politically I put the interests of British working class first and foremost....
It's usually good humoured with HT. I think there are some on here who like to dismiss people's point of view for any reason. "What do you know, you don't live here" is a classic on this thread.
Britain is not under any legal obligation to pay cash to the European Union after Brexit, a cross party committee of peers has found.
The European Commission has threatened to force the UK to make payments worth £50billion over four years after leaving as part of a “hefty” exit bill.
But House of Lords EU Financial Affairs Sub-Committee said in a report published today that “under international law the UK will not be legally obliged to contribute to the EU budget if an agreement is not reached at the end of Article 50 negotiations”.
The report is a boost for Theresa May, the Prime Minister, who has been criticised for saying that she is prepared to walk away from the EU with no trade deal if talks did not progress satisfactorily.
The Article 50 process envisages a withdrawal agreement being reached within two years.
The report was published based on legal advice from senior lawyers including Paul Hardy, the Counsel for European Legislation in the Commons who spent four years as a legal and policy adviser to the European Commission.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...ave-pay-penny-leave-european-union-say-peers/
Hope they sent a copy of the report to Juncker.
Surely this was another case of scaremongering to try (yet again) to demean the Brexit vote.
Surely this was another case of scaremongering to try (yet again) to demean the Brexit vote.
To be fair the Commission's insistence that we have to pay tens of Billions was probably just setting out their first position negotiating stance. Which as you point out is often read as gospel by some people and repeated to have a dig at Brexit.
So what happened to any cost is worthwhile because we have our country back. Does this mean you now don't believe the UK is worth 50bn
Put up where I have stated "any cost is worthwhile because we have our country back".
I think I stated my displeasure on paying 50bn saying that what we are contributing now was going to the EU and bail outs etc.
Perhaps good humored although I don't need words that contain asterisks to "reply" to comments I do not agree with.
So what happened to any cost is worthwhile because we have our country back. Does this mean you now don't believe the UK is worth 50bn
Put up where I have stated "any cost is worthwhile because we have our country back".
I think I stated my displeasure on paying 50bn saying that what we are contributing now was going to the EU and bail outs etc.
To be fair to [MENTION=26105]Soulman[/MENTION] he wouldn't have posted a statement. You must be confusing him with someone else? Or a post he quoted maybe?
I agree with most of this. Where 'scaremongering' and 'demeaning' come in I'm not sure. As regards your second point, I noticed during the week that a single spread in The Times carried four pieces of bad Brexit news and three pieces of good. Picking up any of them to prove a point one way or the other is legitimate although best done with caution. Simply quoting heavily partisan newspapers and extreme American websites probably doesn't constitute caution.
Put up where I have stated "any cost is worthwhile because we have our country back".
I think I stated my displeasure on paying 50bn saying that what we are contributing now was going to the EU and bail outs etc.