EU referendum, brexit and the aftermath

Posted on
Page
of 1,293
First Prev
/ 1,293
Last Next
  • David Davis spends a lot of time practising his signature. Or getting someone to build it from his best tries.

  • it's like one of those 'and where do you see yourself in five years time?' HR assessment forms you have to fill out for your annual review.

  • The into to the white paper: Is Theresa May trying to imitate trump's folky rhetoric, or is she also borderline illiterate?

  • I don't think the leave vote represented a desire to stay in the EU but reform it though. If remain had won 52:48 but politicians had decided that it was best for us to leave as we couldn't get the deal we wanted I doubt people would have been of the view that that was reasonable.

    If you look at the post brexit vote opinion polls there doesn't seem to be a great element of buyers' remorse, people still want to leave the EU even though it's evident that no-one has a clue what the plan is.

    I think a better analogy would be remain winning 52/48 and politicians taking that as a green light to join the Euro. Given that a narrow win for leave means that we're heading for the hardest version of the headbangers brexit.

  • Excellent

  • Good post and there is another issue:

    "Britain is by no means alone in fostering feel-good myths of national self-sufficiently. This is a Europe-wide phenomenon."

    Energy reliance on Russia. So now the EU is stuck between an orange rock and a sociopathic hard place.

    http://time.com/4627780/russia-national-front-marine-le-pen-putin/ isn't a good read either.

    But it's OK, we shouldn't worry about things until they have happened I was told today ;)

  • Well, if it looks like it might all go wrong at the last minute, we'll have some laws up our sleeves to save us. (Perhaps they should have used the word 'spells'?)

  • Ah, the Moon on a Stick Act 2019? I look forward to it.

  • 'passing legislation as necessary to mitigate the effects of failing to reach a deal'.

    weasel words that really mean the erosion of worker's rights aicmfp.

  • The poor snowflakes, having their sovereignty feels hurt by those nasty Europeans.

  • So many unnecessary full-stops! And sentences beginning with 'and', 'but' and 'because'. But that's ok. Because she probably wrote it in 5 minutes with some text-t0-speech app.

  • "no deal is better than a bad deal"

    No deal doesn't exist, it's either WTO which is the minimum or such other, which is no deal with the EU, or a deal with the EU.

    "no bicycle is better than a bad bicycle"
    "no shit is better than bad shit"
    Etc etc.

  • "no shit is better than bad shit"

    no, no it is not.

  • Seems May has flown off to the future where the country has forgotten differences and come together behind Brexit- mental.

  • Joke alert... it's just meaningless language IMHO :)

    a bad bicycle is obv. better than no bicycle...right?
    I think?
    :)

  • mcbain.jpg

  • so much self censorship today. u ok hun?

  • No shit is better than some shit.

  • I doubt the remaining EU states will be able to coalesce around a deal that accommodates every opinion, so the no deal, WTO rules looks like the most likely option.

  • Load of crap.

  • "Expensive" rent plus maintenance issues is better than homeless.

  • Iirc you were pro Brexit, are you happy with how it is proceeding?

    (Not trying to be difficult, but I don't know many leave voters so am interested in your take on things).

  • Post a reply
    • Bold
    • Italics
    • Link
    • Image
    • List
    • Quote
    • code
    • Preview
About

EU referendum, brexit and the aftermath

Posted by Avatar for deleted @deleted

Actions