required field
- 03 Feb 2016 10:00
Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 15:43
- 10281 of 12628
why should i?
i have no objection to what views he holds, but i certainly get very bored with him harking back to having to go to school without clogs and belittling everyone else
btw, i was calling him a thief exactly .... it was common and accepted practice back in those good old days, as was nicking small coal from beside the rail tracks
Stan
- 23 Nov 2018 15:46
- 10282 of 12628
"why should I?" oh Alf stop behaving like a spoilt child and have some respect for once in your existence.
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 15:48
- 10283 of 12628
why?
fred shows no respect for others, and he needs to earn it, not be given it like some spoilt child
as they say
if you can't take it (but fred is perfectly capable of looking after himself), then don't dish it
Fred1new
- 23 Nov 2018 16:11
- 10284 of 12628
Stan,
You can see why Manuel failed as a waiter!
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 16:15
- 10285 of 12628
never did learn proper silver service, especially for mashed potato and similar :-)
Fred1new
- 23 Nov 2018 16:16
- 10286 of 12628
Was the silver nicked?
Stan
- 23 Nov 2018 16:17
- 10287 of 12628
...Oh just a bit Fred 😀
Reply to post 10284.
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 16:17
- 10288 of 12628
who bothers to nick restaurant plate?
Fred1new
- 23 Nov 2018 16:21
- 10289 of 12628
It was probably off the plate.
Do they have plates in Cynagogues?
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 16:23
- 10290 of 12628
not in the greek ones ....... they smashed the remainder last saturday night
Fred1new
- 23 Nov 2018 16:27
- 10291 of 12628
That is probably orthodox for them.
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 16:49
- 10292 of 12628
certainly customary, especially when celebrating yet another rocket attack on hamas
Clocktower
- 23 Nov 2018 16:50
- 10293 of 12628
Just to save washing up but when will the next election be if TM fails to get her best deal passed?
No other deal on the table she suggests - seems to have forgotten NO Deal is better than a bad deal that she banged on about for some time.
cynic
- 23 Nov 2018 16:54
- 10294 of 12628
technically not until 2022, but
there are two provisions that trigger an election other than at five year intervals:
a motion of no confidence is passed in Her Majesty's Government by a simple majority and 14 days elapses without the House passing a confidence motion in any new Government formed
a motion for a general election is agreed by two thirds of the total number of seats in the Commons including vacant seats (currently 434 out of 650)
=============
having read up on what actually happens with "no deal", that really would be an awful result, and indeed parliament across the board knows and accepts that
2517GEORGE
- 23 Nov 2018 19:08
- 10295 of 12628
From this weeks Moneyweek
In a no-deal situation, we would have no incentive at all to put up unnecessary import barriers – and it is hard to see how even the most bonkers members of the EU system would want to block exports to the UK (it would be an entirely unnecessary act of aggression).
World Trade Organisation (WTO) “most favoured nation” rules oblige members not to discriminate between trading partners. But they also allow exemptions for national security reasons. Short-term, that would surely cover food and medicine: our borders should be able to stay open, tariff-free, to EU goods. So talk of extreme shortages of medicine seems pretty silly.
On the export side, there would be added costs (import, export and transit documents for starters), but EU lorries that have entered the UK (85% of lorries leaving the UK for the EU are non-UK ones) must get home – and it is hardly in the interests of any EU nation to strand its own fleet in Kent for weeks. So, as John suggests, it seems likely that any chaos would be reasonably short-lived.
Read the whole of this article on the MoneyWeek website.
Dil
- 23 Nov 2018 22:18
- 10296 of 12628
Bit like I've said all along George , any chaos at the ports would hit EU companies harder than UK companies so would be sorted within weeks for the sake of the EU not us.
Dil
- 23 Nov 2018 22:24
- 10297 of 12628
Mays radio interview , couldn't even say yrs to her deal being better than remaining ?
Been out all day and someone just told me that but if true she's a disgrace trying to recommend her deal
Stan
- 24 Nov 2018 08:23
- 10298 of 12628
Well Dil you lot voted Tory so it's your own fault...The real trouble for the rest of us is we are now stuck with her and your useless good for nothing excuse for a government in the process - do try and grow a 🧠 for next time - have a nice W/E 😎
cynic
- 24 Nov 2018 09:51
- 10299 of 12628
so much tiresome sniping on this thread, which is why i do not react too often
the referendum result is a fact of life, however that came about
by a margin of 4%, the result was to leave eu
apart from the fact that eu was always going to make leaving very painful, whoever had to negotiate terms was never going to satisfy all and even carrying a majority was always going to be very tough
imo, TM has done a very good job and has certainly shown much tenacity and strength of character
corbyn has voiced nothing constructive, and merely mutters vaguely and without any substance that he/labour could have negotiated a far better deal
for myself, and quite probably the majority of the country, i think a second referendum would be an appalling choice, though i understand the argument proposing this
i would very much like to think that TM will ultimately carry the day, though there is inevitably so much partisanship on both/all sides, that i certainly would not bet on it
Fred1new
- 24 Nov 2018 10:14
- 10300 of 12628
A democracy which ignores the present views of what the majority of the populace think of its government and policies.
The waiter, as usual, is being whimsical.