The EU debate - Part III

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Is this plan B? Insults didn't drive me away, so you're trying to bore me into submission. :emoticon-0102-bigsm

I think it might be viewed as retaliation, or even revenge!...<ok>
 
Says somebody who doesn't have any valid experience of Hull.
Continuing spouting nonsense with no knowledge?
I've been to Hull loads of times. It's a ****ing **** hole. I've also been to Mitcham loads of times. It's a ****ing **** hole.

Hope that helps.
 
I'll dig it out when I can be arsed sweet cheeks

Feel free, unless you wriggle like you normally do, you'll look an arse if you're trying to support your claim I said go to every game. :emoticon-0105-wink:

Save yourself some time, the search functions working. :emoticon-0105-wink:
 
Sorry cupcake, not scared of anyone.

Out of interest did you win the ebay auction of the signed Mein Kampf, last I heard it was a battle between you and Sad Stan and was up to 30p

You're scared of the paperboy if he's got a suntan you xenophobic jellyfish. You quite clearly have so little backbone you could be carried around in a bucket. If you ever step foot out of whatever backwards inbred yokel town you live in, you run quivering to the nearest fish and chip shop and hide under a table til it's time to go home.
 
Envy and hatred of the British are at the heart of the French identity: DOMINIC SANDBROOK on why that secret Tory briefing paper was right to predict France would be the most bloody-minded opponent of Brexit
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/a...ody-minded-opponent-Brexit.html#ixzz4RTPq8Gi5

"Since Britain was then unquestionably the leading power in Europe, we would surely have dominated the Common Market in its crucial early years, and could have helped it to evolve into a leaner, less wasteful, more effective association, shorn of all its bureaucratic nonsense.
The French, of course, would not have liked that at all. Even now, they cling jealously to their privileges, such as the ridiculous gimmick of having a second European Parliament in Strasbourg and the corrupt charade of the Common Agricultural Policy, which accounts for 40 per cent of the EU budget and functions as a gigantic subsidy for French farmers."
 
EU boss blames millions of Britons who voted for Brexit for 'creating uncertainty' and dismisses UK MPs demands on a deal for expats as ‘nothing to do with reality’
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...y-Britain-Brexit-Christmas.html#ixzz4RTQhDVNi

"Prime Minister Theresa May has said she is eager to confirm EU nationals living and working in Britain can stay after Brexit but has insisted there must be a matching deal for Britons abroad.
Mrs May proposed a deal that could have been completed by the EU summit in two weeks time but German Chancellor Angela Merkel refused.

Tonight Mr Tusk, the EU Council president, heightened tensions as he dismissed a call from more than 80 MPs to facilitate talks on a reciprocal deal for foreign workers in order to reassure them of their rights to stay after Brexit - insisting June's Leave vote is the only cause of uncertainty.
He said it would amount to starting talks on Brexit and insisted this can only be done by Britain triggering Article 50 of the EU treaties.
The issue affects some 1.2 million Britons and their families resident in the other 27 EU countries, and as many as 3.3 million EU citizens resident in the UK.
Former UK Cabinet Minister Owen Paterson said: 'Germany appears to be one of the last European countries to obstruct our Prime Minister's framework agreement on reciprocal rights.
'She must act now to reassure millions of UK and EU resident citizens. Angela Merkel is wrong to be intransigent.'
Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said: 'EU politicians should stop playing politics with people's lives.
'They should agree to end the speculation and take away the anxiety people feel about their futures.
'The EU yet again puts systems above people.'
Senior Tory MP Steve Baker told MailOnline: 'Donald Tusk and Angela Merkel are evidently determined to place dogmatic servitude to EU processes before the wellbeing of EU citizens.
'This dispiriting intransigence will be seen as yet further evidence the EU is run by an elite disconnected from the real concerns of voters.'
Michael Tomlinson, the Tory MP who wrote to Mr Tusk demanding a deal, told MailOnline: 'This needs to be resolved.
'It should not just be on the table at the next European Council meeting, but resolved - Merkel and Tusk are wrong to refuse to talk.
'We are human beings, not structures or process.' "
 
Labour's secret 'plot' to block Article 50: Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer wants to 'keep options open'
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...cretary-wants-options-open.html#ixzz4RTRb1hwt

"Tory MP Dominic Raab, a member of the Exiting the European Union select committee, told the Mail: ‘Labour are shockingly out of touch with the British people – but in plotting to overturn the result of the EU referendum, they have reached a new low.
'They say one thing in public, and then the complete opposite at meetings of the Hampstead Labour Party.
‘Only the Conservatives can be trusted to make a success of Brexit and deliver the right deal for Britain.’
The comments were recorded at a debate hosted by the Hampstead and Kilburn Labour Party on Sunday.

Ms Siddiq said: ‘There’s two options. One is we vote against Article 50 and the Labour Party I should say hasn’t actually made a decision on what’s going to happen.
‘This is what’s floating around the tearooms every night. Some of us will vote against Article 50, but not everyone, then it will still get through. The second option is that a lot of us vote against it, it doesn’t go through, the next step will be a General Election. I’ll be honest and say I have been minded to vote against it.’
Sir Keir, the former head of the Crown Prosecution Service, added: ‘If you’re going to have a second referendum, you’ve got to identify when you’re going to do it. I am clear that as a party we should keep our options open here because this is a process that is going to take us well, I think, into 2020.’
A spokesman for Sir Keir said: ‘Keir has been repeatedly clear that Labour accept and respect the referendum result and will not vote against Article 50 in the House of Commons. Keir was putting a hypothetical position to the audience, as would have been obvious to anyone attending.’ "
 
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