The #poortastejoke bit tipped me off![]()

@Diego and @BobbyD serious question for you... 'the common market' requires any country to have freedom of movement of people as one of its conditions. If the Tory government negotiate our exit in such a way that we can remain inthe common market, would you be happy to accept the freedom of movement of people as part of that condition?
In @ the ten years since they've been coming here I've not met a bad Pole, or one without a job (and yes, they do come here to York too). I don't want to oversimplify or Disneyfy it, but, like the Chinese that Diego referred to further up the thread, they simply don't, in my experience, come here for handouts. And when people then retort that our public services are further stretched the answer is that public services such as health, education and transport have not grown exponentially with the population. Ah, but why grow our population, says Nigel with his 75m apocalypse? Well, the economy needs to grow year on year to fund future debts, such as paying for Wayne and Waynetta's benefits and an ever-burgeoning pension segment of society. And there's the ****ing point, Lillywhite Brexit fantasists, how are you going to keep Slob England in it's beer and pizza and pay for Baby Boomers' pension and NHS demands and expectations?
While the central point is valid in fact i made the point earlier in the thread that the remain camp should have pointed out the demographic neccecisity of raising the the number of youngsters in societ to keep a sufficient number in the working age bracket to support those outside said bracket . Indeed there is a suspicion that Merkels outrageous "arrive in Germany from Syria or Afghanistan and we will give you asylum" despite this breaching EU rules and leading to the scenes of death and chaos we all saw on out TV's. There is a central flaw in your statement as what we need to do is become more productive as that is the key to a successful economy. One could argue the almost never ending supply of cheap labour has in itself allowed companies to take the "easy" way out and not take on necessary important capital investment. A rise in GDP is an almost inevitable effect of a rise in population so is pretty irrelevant unless if far exceeds the productive capacity of the increased numbers.In @ the ten years since they've been coming here I've not met a bad Pole, or one without a job (and yes, they do come here to York too). I don't want to oversimplify or Disneyfy it, but, like the Chinese that Diego referred to further up the thread, they simply don't, in my experience, come here for handouts. And when people then retort that our public services are further stretched the answer is that public services such as health, education and transport have not grown exponentially with the population. Ah, but why grow our population, says Nigel with his 75m apocalypse? Well, the economy needs to grow year on year to fund future debts, such as paying for Wayne and Waynetta's benefits and an ever-burgeoning pension segment of society. And there's the ****ing point, Lillywhite Brexit fantasists, how are you going to keep Slob England in it's beer and pizza and pay for Baby Boomers' pension and NHS demands and expectations?
It's surreal.So, Cameron(the UK)told in no uncertain terms that to gain access to the single market(financial heaven)we must accept freedom of movement as a right for EU citizens.
If accepted by the next prime ministers government and in light of the out campaign admitting its main referendum claims were untrue we will be in a similar situation to where we were before the vote but with a financial burden that will take years to put right.
There has to be accountability for this but instead Boris is being championed as the next Tory leader and prime minister, the country has gone to the dogs in recent years due to the global recession and austerity but this current mess was self inflicted.
What you're seeing is a stabilisation in the markets as Article 50 has been volleyed into the long grass by CameronAs of now my poor understnading of these things leads me to assume there is a lot of preprogrammed buying driving shares higher and they are staying up during the day so the two days after the bad two days has done much on the ftse100 to get back to the headline number pre brexit
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who's lost out?
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the locals companies seem to be worst hit but the rising tide is lifting all boats
.... the pound is up to 1.34 so 10% down since brexit.
Stability in the knowldege nothings happening yet seems to have broken out... no crash?
Now lets see what happens with business decisions and results post brexit...
So, Cameron(the UK)told in no uncertain terms that to gain access to the single market(financial heaven)we must accept freedom of movement as a right for EU citizens.
As I've said before, I'm no economist, but what you've said here seems like common sense to me. Nothing much is actually happening at the moment politically so the money markets are likely to stabilise for a while. Whenever there's anything going on then they'll respond to it again.What you're seeing is a stabilisation in the markets as Article 50 has been volleyed into the long grass by Cameron
There is hope in the market that the we will remain in the single market, and as of now nothings changed.
Once (or if) article 50 is invoked then there'll be a huge tumble.
What you're seeing is a stabilisation in the markets as Article 50 has been volleyed into the long grass by Cameron
There is hope in the market that the we will remain in the single market, and as of now nothings changed.
Once (or if) article 50 is invoked then there'll be a huge tumble.