Our prime minister 11:51 - Sep 24 with 24617 views | rochdaleriddler | After the ruling of the Supreme Court surely he has to resign? I’m not wanting to start a brexit post here. His actions have been ruled unlawful by our most senior court, not been a great few days coming after the revelations of his dalliance with the American woman | |
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Our prime minister on 12:35 - Oct 5 with 1201 views | BigDaveMyCock |
Our prime minister on 12:00 - Oct 5 by 49thseason | Not much of a "secret meeting" if everyone knows about it . Maybe just another layer of disinformation to put the wind up the EU negotiators? |
Sssssssshhhhhhhh, they’ll be on to the disinformation now n’all. Psssttt, I’ve heard Boris is going to write the letter in magic ink. After a while the words start to disa | |
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Our prime minister on 13:39 - Oct 5 with 1147 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 12:35 - Oct 5 by BigDaveMyCock | Sssssssshhhhhhhh, they’ll be on to the disinformation now n’all. Psssttt, I’ve heard Boris is going to write the letter in magic ink. After a while the words start to disa |
Shame Osborne didn’t write about the recession and the job losses in magic ink, or even whispered it, but no he shouted it from the rooftops. | | | |
Our prime minister on 13:58 - Oct 5 with 1130 views | dawlishdale |
Our prime minister on 13:39 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | Shame Osborne didn’t write about the recession and the job losses in magic ink, or even whispered it, but no he shouted it from the rooftops. |
This is a market on our doorstep, ready for further exploitation by British firms. The membership fee seems rather small for all that access. Why are we so determined to turn our backs on it. | | | |
Our prime minister on 14:36 - Oct 5 with 1099 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 13:58 - Oct 5 by dawlishdale | This is a market on our doorstep, ready for further exploitation by British firms. The membership fee seems rather small for all that access. Why are we so determined to turn our backs on it. |
Is the UK moving to another planet? £9 billion seems a lot of money to keep in the club, especially when the UK is big and bold enough to broker it's own deals. | | | |
Our prime minister on 15:01 - Oct 5 with 1089 views | dawlishdale |
Our prime minister on 14:36 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | Is the UK moving to another planet? £9 billion seems a lot of money to keep in the club, especially when the UK is big and bold enough to broker it's own deals. |
Can you clarify your comments? Not sure if you agree with my last post or not. Also, not sure about where £9billion comes from. Again; clarification please. Thanks | | | |
Our prime minister on 15:28 - Oct 5 with 1056 views | BigDaveMyCock |
Our prime minister on 14:36 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | Is the UK moving to another planet? £9 billion seems a lot of money to keep in the club, especially when the UK is big and bold enough to broker it's own deals. |
Sorry to inject a massive dose of reality into this but big bold UK has, three and a half years later, not even managed to broker a withdrawal deal. Fook knows what we’re going to be like when it comes to actual trade deals with powerful nations/blocs like the EU, China and the USA. | |
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Our prime minister on 15:35 - Oct 5 with 1050 views | BigDaveMyCock |
This stat only makes any sense if it’s compared to income from EU trade. It’s a bit like only submitting your outgoings. On its own it means practically nothing. [Post edited 5 Oct 2019 15:35]
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Our prime minister on 16:05 - Oct 5 with 1022 views | dawlishdale |
Roccy... you still haven't said if you agree with the comment I posted earlier. It becomes quite important if you look at the bigger picture. As BDMC rightly says, £9billion is a small price to pay if it opens the door to our biggest trade partners, who happen to be EU countries. In 2018 we exported £289 billion to EU countries (46% of total exports) In 2018 we imported £345 billion from EU countries (54% of total imports) | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:05 - Oct 5 with 1022 views | tony_roch975 | Brexit could lead to 3 million unemployed or an unprecedented boom but the validity of either prediction seems less important than the main issue - in a democratic referendum (& accepted by the government as binding despite it's flaws; lack of super-majority/under 18s not allowed to vote etc) the majority chose Leave. Isn't the essence of democracy that the majority have the right to see their decision implemented however (economically) damaging it might be to them or others. Any incoming PM can be criticised for policies which will make people worse off, but it doesn't stop them moving into No 10. If, as seems likely, the basis for leaving is a Canada-style FTA, with less protection for workers, consumers or environmental rights, the voters can subsequently (within 4 years maximum) choose a different government committed to overturn those losses and even to rejoining the EU. | |
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Our prime minister on 16:14 - Oct 5 with 1013 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 15:28 - Oct 5 by BigDaveMyCock | Sorry to inject a massive dose of reality into this but big bold UK has, three and a half years later, not even managed to broker a withdrawal deal. Fook knows what we’re going to be like when it comes to actual trade deals with powerful nations/blocs like the EU, China and the USA. |
We can’t do any deals until we actually leave. Reality check for you sweet cheeks. | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:16 - Oct 5 with 1009 views | dawlishdale |
Our prime minister on 16:14 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | We can’t do any deals until we actually leave. Reality check for you sweet cheeks. |
Do you think we'll get a deal from USA ? Personally I don't think there's a chance unless it hugely favours them (and Ireland) | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:19 - Oct 5 with 1001 views | 49thseason |
Our prime minister on 13:58 - Oct 5 by dawlishdale | This is a market on our doorstep, ready for further exploitation by British firms. The membership fee seems rather small for all that access. Why are we so determined to turn our backs on it. |
Why would anyone turn their back on it? everyone else in the world seems to do business there despite being outside their protectionist common market. Governments don't do business, companies do, if the product is good enough and suits their needs, they will buy it. Some tariffs ill make life more difficult for some companies but then there is the rest of the World which is growing more quickly than the EU is and some have far more money to spend than most of the EU. There may be 500m consumers in the EU but many of them cannot afford much of what we sell. Only about 8 or 9% of UK companies export to the EU and in most cases the EU is not 100% of their business. | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:20 - Oct 5 with 998 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 16:05 - Oct 5 by dawlishdale | Roccy... you still haven't said if you agree with the comment I posted earlier. It becomes quite important if you look at the bigger picture. As BDMC rightly says, £9billion is a small price to pay if it opens the door to our biggest trade partners, who happen to be EU countries. In 2018 we exported £289 billion to EU countries (46% of total exports) In 2018 we imported £345 billion from EU countries (54% of total imports) |
And £9 billion saved if the country can and will succeed imo, with getting deals done with the EU and the rest of the world. It’s people like you who like to make things difficult for the sake of it, and you’ll proved to be wrong. Has the recession started yet? | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:22 - Oct 5 with 993 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 16:16 - Oct 5 by dawlishdale | Do you think we'll get a deal from USA ? Personally I don't think there's a chance unless it hugely favours them (and Ireland) |
Er... I don’t know until we leave, but I’m confident it will happen. | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:33 - Oct 5 with 976 views | BigDaveMyCock |
Our prime minister on 16:14 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | We can’t do any deals until we actually leave. Reality check for you sweet cheeks. |
Come on sugar tits, you can’t be that numb? I’m fully aware of that and that’s why the post referred to ‘when we’re’. I’ll repeat it for you again. The fact we can’t even manage to negotiate a withdrawal agreement doesn’t bode well for when it comes to trade deals does it? [Post edited 5 Oct 2019 16:35]
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Our prime minister on 16:42 - Oct 5 with 965 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 16:33 - Oct 5 by BigDaveMyCock | Come on sugar tits, you can’t be that numb? I’m fully aware of that and that’s why the post referred to ‘when we’re’. I’ll repeat it for you again. The fact we can’t even manage to negotiate a withdrawal agreement doesn’t bode well for when it comes to trade deals does it? [Post edited 5 Oct 2019 16:35]
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That’s because shit house Remoaners and the EU won’t accept it, and keep putting spanners in the works as you well know. One of the biggest reasons they keep blocking the move will be the insignificant £9 Billion, do you think the French and Germans will make up that deficit? Will they fook, house of cards when we leave and it will probably spell the end. | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:45 - Oct 5 with 958 views | dawlishdale |
Our prime minister on 16:42 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | That’s because shit house Remoaners and the EU won’t accept it, and keep putting spanners in the works as you well know. One of the biggest reasons they keep blocking the move will be the insignificant £9 Billion, do you think the French and Germans will make up that deficit? Will they fook, house of cards when we leave and it will probably spell the end. |
Resulting to bad language is poor form, and suggests that you may be struggling with the argument. And by the way...my post earlier was not my own words...they were the words of Boris Johnson in the Telegraph | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:49 - Oct 5 with 951 views | rochdale_ranger | Alarmism from remain voters is getting really boring now. Nobody knows what will happen with any certainty what will happen when we leave the EU. I work in an industry that is the first to be hit and the last to recover in a recession and there is still orders in the book for the next three years and are still coming in despite all this talk of economic ruin. | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:51 - Oct 5 with 949 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 16:45 - Oct 5 by dawlishdale | Resulting to bad language is poor form, and suggests that you may be struggling with the argument. And by the way...my post earlier was not my own words...they were the words of Boris Johnson in the Telegraph |
Failing to answer my question about who’ll make up the Insignificant £9 billion, suggests you’ve lost the argument. Has the recession started yet? | | | |
Our prime minister on 16:53 - Oct 5 with 944 views | BigDaveMyCock |
Our prime minister on 16:42 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | That’s because shit house Remoaners and the EU won’t accept it, and keep putting spanners in the works as you well know. One of the biggest reasons they keep blocking the move will be the insignificant £9 Billion, do you think the French and Germans will make up that deficit? Will they fook, house of cards when we leave and it will probably spell the end. |
It’s just not fair is it when those you are negotiating with start wanting things as well? | |
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Our prime minister on 17:04 - Oct 5 with 931 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 16:53 - Oct 5 by BigDaveMyCock | It’s just not fair is it when those you are negotiating with start wanting things as well? |
Yes, but a bright lad like you , knows really that isn’t the case and the EU won’t accept a deal, we’ll then withdraw without a deal and Remoaners will cry and cry and cry some more. But we all know who’s fault it really is, if we do leave without a deal. So do you think the French and Germans will make up the insignificant deficit when we leave? You always seem to know the answers, but not to this it seems. | | | |
Our prime minister on 17:07 - Oct 5 with 922 views | rochdale_ranger |
Our prime minister on 17:04 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | Yes, but a bright lad like you , knows really that isn’t the case and the EU won’t accept a deal, we’ll then withdraw without a deal and Remoaners will cry and cry and cry some more. But we all know who’s fault it really is, if we do leave without a deal. So do you think the French and Germans will make up the insignificant deficit when we leave? You always seem to know the answers, but not to this it seems. |
Apart from the economy might go down the pan I don’t recall him actually making a positive pro EU case. Ever. | | | |
Our prime minister on 17:20 - Oct 5 with 904 views | roccydaleian |
Our prime minister on 17:07 - Oct 5 by rochdale_ranger | Apart from the economy might go down the pan I don’t recall him actually making a positive pro EU case. Ever. |
Well, the economy going down the pan is quite a compelling argument tbf, but I certainly think that won’t happen, just like Osborne’s mad predictions didn’t. But big clever BDMC is rather negative. | | | |
Our prime minister on 17:27 - Oct 5 with 888 views | BigDaveMyCock |
Our prime minister on 16:51 - Oct 5 by roccydaleian | Failing to answer my question about who’ll make up the Insignificant £9 billion, suggests you’ve lost the argument. Has the recession started yet? |
Germany’s trade surplus in July 2019 alone was €21.4 billion. It will have absolutely no problem whatsoever finding another €9 billion annually. | |
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