will have to read it againThat has a very extremist and unsavoury undertone.
Vile rubbish.
which parts
come on stroller
it was too long for you to read
will have to read it againThat has a very extremist and unsavoury undertone.
Vile rubbish.
Why would anyone want a "losers referendum"? We have done that. If there is to be one though the questions should be May's deal or WTO. No point having remain as it would only devide the country more.
I will respond Quality tomorrow.Ignoring what you want to happen or not happen Ellers, what do you think might happen? Interested to know!
The whole of it.will have to read it again
which parts
come on stroller
it was too long for you to read
Why would anyone want a "losers referendum"? We have done that. If there is to be one though the questions should be May's deal or WTO. No point having remain as it would only devide the country more.
Therefore, to divide something by anything, increases the remaining fear of confusion, beyond the ability to say anything logically !!Therefore to be divided more it would need to shift
51/49 to 50/50 so you saying in two years Remain voters have increased ?
At last you get it !
Conclusion The fear of the Brexiteer
Not at all. He made a big mistake. He trusted the bankers by continuing with the deregulation and willingness to allow the financial sector to regulate itself started 20 years earlier by Nigel Lawson who was one of your lot. You do remember him I take it? Another Breximoron now I believe. I'll let you off with that one though because not everyone remembers things from 30 years ago whether selectively or not, Unprecedented greed is what got us into the mess not Brown's stewardship of the biggest financial crisis inflicted upon us by capitalism at its worst. And greed after all was the attribute most appreciated and admired by Margaret Thatcher during that spell of financial extremism - the good guys in white hats for her and Ronnie Reagan were all the entrepeneurs of this world however shady they might be because they would be able to employ people.Who had the duty to regulate financial services between 1998 and 2010? Who removed responsibility from the Bank of England? Who encouraged massive borrowing by claiming there would be no more boom and bust? Who put no government funds away for a rainy day? Need help with your selective memory?
I'd like to think so but the you're putting a lot of faith in a bunch of politicians putting the national interest before the wishes of their party leadership and self-interest to continue doing a job from which you can't be sacked until the next electionYes, you're not wrong. I guess in my head it will come down to the option least opposed, not the one with most support. I think there would be a swathe of Lab MPs would sacrafice their seats for remain. V hard to call but fun guessing. Is there a bookie with the odds?
There has been nothing disrespectful coming from the EU Commission in these recent discussions either.It’s utterly meaningless bollocks.
We won the war so don’t treat us like the ****ing shambles we are. Brilliant.
I love how you use the word democracy Watford when you want another vote before the other has been implemented?
Should we have one every 2 years?
Well I spose the enemy if you are worried about going to a Christmas market is no longer a pickpocket or overchargingThe whole of it.
It portrays itself as an everyman's view while defining the enemy as Muslims, liberals and the establishment.
It cleverly stops short of saying what "needs to be done" while being leading with what the answer should be.
It combines empathy and hyperbole to draw readers into feeling an exaggerated anger.
It's a hate-fuelled subtext and a call to arms.
Very, very few things I read get me so wound up but that is just evil propaganda.
What happens if the ****s win againIdeally not as I’d get tired of reading the ****e on here from a 90-year-old Col in the build-up to the 2042 referendum.
However there are some painfully obvious differences between our situation in 2016 regarding the referendum and now less than 2.5 years later.
Most importantly, the fact that now we’ve (including the politicians but mostly just us serfs) got some sort of clear idea of what Brexit actually ****ing is, and it’s been shown to be a load of meaningless bollocks which does no normal people any good.
Secondly the illegality of the funding of the Leave campaign, Aaran Banks and all that. It doesn’t sound very sensible to blindly enforce a narrow victory with that hanging over it.
Thirdly we’ve agreed some sort of deal and fulfilled the desire of us plebs to leave and Leavers are still moaning, so I don’t think it would be unfair to throw the question back at us to ask “what the **** do you ****s want now then?”
I could go on, but it’s early. It’s certainly not undemocratic to have another referendum because that makes no sense. If Leave is such a great thing still it’ll win comfortably. It’ll probably get enough turkeys voting for Christmas again in the North anyway so you’ve nothing to fear.
What happens if the ****s win again
Do you keep voting until enough of them die
The concrete barriers aren't a terrorist precaution but a traffic measure. For example, Cambridge city centre has had barriers for 25 years at least and I don't think that was foresight of a Muslim threat.Well I spose the enemy if you are worried about going to a Christmas market is no longer a pickpocket or overcharging
The concrete barriers all over the place are not to stop Buddhists ploughing into pedestrians on bridges
The concrete barriers aren't a terrorist precaution but a traffic measure. For example, Cambridge city centre has had barriers for 25 years at least and I don't think that was foresight of a Muslim threat.
The whole part about Christmas markets is to evoke, to make the reader feel more tangibly threatened than they really are. Have Christmas markets been particularly targeted? For example, have there been more incidents at all the markets everywhere than, say, Westminster Bridge?
The reality is that there have been more stabbings on one small road fairly near me than terrorist attacks on markets. That makes it more likely that I'd get stabbed in one street than going to any markets anywhere.
According to that article, I am the enemy too, as bad as a terrorist and probably deserve the same treatment.
No problem with your other shares BTW (a bit right leaning for my taste generally but happy for reasonable alternative viewpoints).
Ideally not as I’d get tired of reading the ****e on here from a 90-year-old Col in the build-up to the 2042 referendum.
However there are some painfully obvious differences between our situation in 2016 regarding the referendum and now less than 2.5 years later.
Most importantly, the fact that now we’ve (including the politicians but mostly just us serfs) got some sort of clear idea of what Brexit actually ****ing is, and it’s been shown to be a load of meaningless bollocks which does no normal people any good.
Secondly the illegality of the funding of the Leave campaign, Aaran Banks and all that. It doesn’t sound very sensible to blindly enforce a narrow victory with that hanging over it.
Thirdly we’ve agreed some sort of deal and fulfilled the desire of us plebs to leave and Leavers are still moaning, so I don’t think it would be unfair to throw the question back at us to ask “what the **** do you ****s want now then?”
I could go on, but it’s early. It’s certainly not undemocratic to have another referendum because that makes no sense. If Leave is such a great thing still it’ll win comfortably. It’ll probably get enough turkeys voting for Christmas again in the North anyway so you’ve nothing to fear.
Without doing extensive searching on concrete barriers at Christmas events, I can't say conclusively and I have little inclination to spend time on it.I can't speak for Cambridge but it simply not right to say that concrete barriers aren't a terrorist precaution. They've sprung up all over the place since the 2016 Berlin truck attack by an Islamist which was driven at a Christmas market. There's evidence that these psychopaths are targeting the Christmas festival. There have been plenty of threats to this effect and a Christmas attack was foiled in Melbourne this year. It seems likely that the Strasbourg attack was Christmas related.
Ideally not as I’d get tired of reading the ****e on here from a 90-year-old Col in the build-up to the 2042 referendum.
However there are some painfully obvious differences between our situation in 2016 regarding the referendum and now less than 2.5 years later.
Most importantly, the fact that now we’ve (including the politicians but mostly just us serfs) got some sort of clear idea of what Brexit actually ****ing is, and it’s been shown to be a load of meaningless bollocks which does no normal people any good.
Secondly the illegality of the funding of the Leave campaign, Aaran Banks and all that. It doesn’t sound very sensible to blindly enforce a narrow victory with that hanging over it.
Thirdly we’ve agreed some sort of deal and fulfilled the desire of us plebs to leave and Leavers are still moaning, so I don’t think it would be unfair to throw the question back at us to ask “what the **** do you ****s want now then?”
I could go on, but it’s early. It’s certainly not undemocratic to have another referendum because that makes no sense. If Leave is such a great thing still it’ll win comfortably. It’ll probably get enough turkeys voting for Christmas again in the North anyway so you’ve nothing to fear.
Without doing extensive searching on concrete barriers at Christmas events, I can't say conclusively and I have little inclination to spend time on it.
The foremost point is that it was a subversive piece of extremist propaganda that, more than anything I've read in the last couple of years, disgusted me.