How about kids in camps with no adults to look after them and no relatives in the UK
Have to be very careful when you are making exceptions
Have to be very careful when you are making exceptions
Priority number 2 for 'processing'. The ones with family elsewhere are the easy ones, it shouldn't take months to sort them out.How about kids in camps with no adults to look after them and no relatives in the UK
Have to be very careful when you are making exceptions
I didn't say we would lead the EU. I also didn't say London would be the single financial centre. I said that if we leave, the EU would definately need to build up Frankfurt, but not necessarily if we stay. I don't mind the debate, but don't misquote me please, it belittles your good position.
At the moment the only one that really punches globally is London, but there are really only three or four (NY, Tokyo and possibly HK being the others). If we leave, the EU will definitely build up Frankfurt. They may do so in any case, but by leaving we force their hand and by association we weaken London."...the EU won't have a single financial powerhouse if London leaves..."
Your words, Chaz. How have I misquoted you?
Should unaccompanied kids in France not be in the care of French social services
What I meant was why are these unaccompanied kids being kept in the camps and not looked after properly by the French systemThey are. Should they be cared for by their families?
At the moment the only one that really punches globally is London, but there are really only three or four (NY, Tokyo and possibly HK being the others). If we leave, the EU will definitely build up Frankfurt. They may do so in any case, but by leaving we force their hand and by association we weaken London.
I did NOT say London would be the only EU financial centre, nor did I say we would 'lead the EU'. That's how you misquoted me, by saying I said things that I didn't.
My words in point 1 and yours are fundamentally different. I said that if we leave, there would be the need for the EU to build up Frankfurt. If w e stay, they may do that but would not need to. That's different from what you think I said.1. You said at [HASHTAG]#525[/HASHTAG] "...the EU won't have a single financial powerhouse if London leaves..."
I said you said "London would be the single financial powerhouse."
2. You said at [HASHTAG]#523[/HASHTAG] "The UK would become the most powerful and influential 'external force' stating an independent case. If anything, it would likely be listened to more than today."
I said at [HASHTAG]#536[/HASHTAG] "Chaz said "The UK would become the most powerful and influential 'external force' stating an independent case. If anything, it would likely be listened to more than today."
Please explain how in either of these I have misquoted you.
My words in point 1 and yours are fundamentally different. I said that if we leave, there would be the need for the EU to build up Frankfurt. If w e stay, they may do that but would not need to. That's different from what you think I said.
Stop trying semantics. You were talking about the EU building up Frankfurt so that London wasn't the financial centre of the EU. I responded, saying that leaving would make that a certainty. That's the context you are clearly ignoring.Your post [HASHTAG]#525[/HASHTAG] in entirety:
"And with the UK out of the EU, how is that different? Actually, it's far more likely to happen if we leave because the EU won't have a single financial powerhouse if London leaves..."
Where is the reference to Frankfurt?
Stop trying semantics. You were talking about the EU building up Frankfurt so that London wasn't the financial centre of the EU. I responded, saying that leaving would make that a certainty. That's the context you are clearly ignoring.
OK, misinterpretation then. But London may well not be the only financial centre irrespective of the vote. My point was that if we leave, the EU will be forced to build one to rival London, creating the weakening situation you warned against by default. Only by staying in is there the possibility of t that being avoided.I accept the context. But if you say the EU won't have a single financial powerhouse if London leaves, then my interpretation of what you were saying, that unless and until Brexit, London will be the single financial powerhouse - seems reasonable and not a misquote
Don't get me started on what we suspect people are, you may not come out of it well...I suspect that chaz may be a politician. Only politicians can wriggle on a hook in such a way, denying anything and everything when it suits.
I don't think it's immoral but I do think it encourages 'avoidance' and the threshold should be very high. VAT is a more immoral tax because it is not progressive in any sense.A lot of fuss about inheritance tax today - the Mail calling it 'immoral' because it is tax on money that has already been taxed. Doesn't the same apply to VAT?
why do people need to hide their dosh if there is no inheritance tax?no inheritance tax here
lots of family trusts though
lots of money hidden in those