Pretty pink fairy
Banned
- Jan 30, 2008
- 31,981
Watford Boomer, don’t rise to the bait....
He's ignoring me while sitting there foaming at the mouth , i think I upset him a few weeks back oh well
Regards
DF
Watford Boomer, don’t rise to the bait....
Blue Passports
Passports that are blue
No longer red passports
Passports (Blue)
There: that should do it.
If you really want to keep pretending that you are two different people (for whatever reason) here's a few tips. Don't repeat the same phrase that was used on your alter ego a few hours earlier
Coincidentally, the only two times the phrase has ever appeared on this thread
And try and remember which account does what.
[MENTION=33253]JC Footy Genius[/MENTION] - Angry Conservative party, Johnson, Brexit and Unionist supporter, who somehow managed to vote for a border in the Irish Sea, can't understand why the EU doesn't let us have access into the single market and complete autonomy from any of their rules governing it, and believes Johnson is doing an sterling job
[MENTION=35196]Is it PotG?[/MENTION] - Thumbs up every post I make and tries to post witty one liners - er that's it.
Now, each time you post angrily as POTG or start suddenly thumbing up my posts as JCFG it simply looks as if you too stupid run two accounts properly. Try and remember, if you're angry JCFG, if not POTG. Hope this helps
You could always bookmark this post you can always come back and check before you post to make sure you are on the right account
It’s a good job a hired gun isn’t after you, you can imagine the intel meeting.
Assassin’s questions to hirer,
Where does Watford Boomer hang out
Does he have any hobbies
What’s his route to work (joke)
Where does he buy his groceries
What time does he collect his prescription meds
Help me build a picture of where I can find him.
Hirer
Don’t worry yourself, you’ll find him on the NSC Brexit thread 7 days a week 8 hours a day repeating himself over and over again and getting stressed about NI borders in the sea and fishing quotas, he also talks about lorry parks in Kent a lot.
And he’s a winker boomer too [emoji6][emoji6][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji6][emoji6][emoji6][emoji6]xxxx
[TWEET]1331225582948978691[/TWEET]
[TWEET]1331206317600624640[/TWEET]
[TWEET]1331212904780222468[/TWEET]
Maybe a comprehensive list of the golden opportunities that await, will in some way balance out the negatives.
I’m really pleased you took my advice today a went to (walking I assume)football practice, I’m beginning to think looking at your other posts on NSC you don’t offer, how can I say this politely, variety that’s the word, anyway have a great evening in front of the PC jousting about Brexit and I’ll see you tomorrow, same time same place.... [emoji6][emoji6]
what do you do?
Flippant responses from our Brexit friends. Not a single credible response. Thanks for proving the point guys
Flippant responses from our Brexit friends. Not a single credible response. Thanks for proving the point guys
Just facts David , we are a independent country aren't we?
Regards
DF
A confidential Cabinet Office briefing seen by the Guardian also warns of a “notable risk” that in coming months the country could face a perfect storm of simultaneous disasters, including the prospect of a bad flu season on top of the medical strains caused by Covid.
Global and British food supply chains will be disrupted by “circumstances occurring concurrently at the end of the year”, the paper warns. Stockpiles built up at the end of 2019 were diminished during the pandemic and cannot easily be replenished. There will not be overall food shortages but problems could reduce availability of some fresh supplies and push up prices. Low income groups will be most at risk of food insecurity if there is a no-deal Brexit, including single parents, children in large families and those with disabilities.
Economic chaos could raise the risks of a breakdown in public order and a national mental health crisis, while reducing the “financial levers” available for the government to respond to other risks
There may also be an increase in “community tensions” and public disorder. Police tracked increases in Brexit-related hate crime in March 2019 and the end of that year
“The pandemic has and will continue to limit the capacity of the health and care sector to prepare for and respond to the end of the transition period,” it warns, noting expectations of a “sustained level of system disruption from November until at least April”.
A drop in imports of medicines is also flagged as a serious potential problem, with “a reasonable worst case flow rate of 60-80% of current levels”, putting patient safety at risk.
The government may struggle to get help from the private sector, as the pandemic has left many of the UK’s businesses with diminished capacity to deal with any financial shock caused by Brexit.
“The likelihood of commercial failures, including of major government contractors, has increased,”
Other concerns include shortages of chemicals needed to treat the water supply and veterinary medicines essential to the food chain.
Other fresh problems flagged up in the report include a potential 10 to 20% increase in travel insurance premiums for holidaymakers heading to the continent, now the European Union health insurance card is not valid, and people with pre-existing conditions may struggle to get coverage.
So the French tested their system yesterday, resulted in 5 mile queue formed quickly on the M20, average 70 seconds processing per vehicle
https://www.theguardian.com/politic...-checks-causes-five-mile-lorry-queues-in-kent
Anyone think this is going to go well in January when our self imposed trade sanctions kick in?
Ah, the halcyon days when all legitimate and genuine drawbacks of Brexit were just hand waved away easily.I'm old enough to remember when this was all "Project Fear".
Spend every waking hour worrying about what you’re going to type next [emoji23]
Sit down with the Irish & NI representatives and amend the GFA?
In the long run Ireland and NI re-uniting would resolve it as they would both be in the EU, but that would be a Looonnng game. Look how long and how much negotiation it took to stop the worst of the violence, which was something everyone wanted.
(Not particularly relevant, but the only time Ireland has been United in the last millennium was actually as part of Britain, so it's not really re-uniting )
What about a trade/customs only crossings on the border?
So border infrastructure? There are 300 crossing points
Mmmm, good point, maybe have designated trade crossings?
5 or six trade goods areas at various points on the border similar to the stations you see weighing lorry’s surely could work no?
But you then have to deal with smuggling across the whole border outside of those crossings. Those crossings would need be major as they would need to process all procedures, standards, tariffs etc, same as all UK ports. Unless there was a free trade deal of course, but to get that the UK would have to agree to EU regulations, and the border wouldn't be needed.
Mmm tricky, I’ll give it some more thought, thank you for your considered answers.
Gosh, you're up early today. Probably the excitement of telling us exactly what you voted for 4.5 years ago gave you trouble sleeping.
Anyway, we'll start with something really simple, the NI/Ireland border and what you voted for there. This is where you got to just over a week ago
Of course, you don't have to tell us exactly what you voted for, you could simply say you don't know what you voted for, do a funny one-liner or come up with a load of whataboutism but I'm sure you're not the sort of person to do that in order to avoid a simple question.
Don't worry, once you've told us what you voted for on the NI/Ireland border, we'll go onto what you voted for on fishing rights and any deal with the EU