goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
aldwickk
- 27 Jan 2016 09:33
- 67370 of 81564
jimmy b
Its out of control , the UK should have complete lock down on any entering the UK and deporting those who abuse our laws. And have complete background check's on those coming here, and a points system that UKIP has asked for.
required field
- 27 Jan 2016 09:49
- 67371 of 81564
The bigger picture is that this illegal immigrant shambles is going to make people vote for leaving the EU.....and who can blame them....something has to be done...I reckon that people are employing these migrants in the catering business...on farms ...etc..and paying them nothing...so there is some unpunished dodgy people trafficking going on !..
2517GEORGE
- 27 Jan 2016 09:58
- 67372 of 81564
Sorry for the tardy reply jimmy b, your post 67366----It's what the EU does if the vote is not to their liking.
2517
2517GEORGE
- 27 Jan 2016 10:01
- 67373 of 81564
A piece from Moneyweek's Capital & Conflict
Former Polish deputy minister Leszek Balcerowicz made it clear that ‘Brexit’ would trigger a punishing response by the EU. Britain would be made an example of to prevent ‘Brexit’ from giving any other countries ideas. The former deputy minister said:
We should not encourage other populist forces campaigning on exit such as National Front in France or Podemos in Spain. This is a very important consideration. This is in the interests of Europe that we do not encourage other EU countries to leave. The common interest of remaining members is to deter other exits. This should have an impact on the terms Britain gets.
2517
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 10:49
- 67374 of 81564
GEORGE , i think the EU is close to falling apart anyway ,look at my link 67367 .
2517GEORGE
- 27 Jan 2016 11:16
- 67375 of 81564
Interesting read JB, it goes to show how together (not) the member countries are, whether it is right or wrong to abandon Greece now I don't know, but let's not forget they allowed Greece to join the EU when they (Greece) did not fulfill the required criteria.
The EU can wave cheerio to any Greek loans now I reckon.
2517
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 11:32
- 67376 of 81564
Europe should be down there helping to keep their (Greece) border safe instead of telling them to sort it out themselves .
Europe could come together and man it's borders if it so wished .
ExecLine
- 27 Jan 2016 13:02
- 67377 of 81564
If we were to leave the EU then London would could well lose lots of its importance.
I love to hear Farage explaining all his stuff but a Brexit isn't a done deal yet, IMHO.
A PDF Download entitled "Brexit - The Pros and Cons" - by Invesco and for professional clients only
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 13:10
- 67378 of 81564
I don't agree with that statement ( London would could well lose lots of its importance)
Exec other than the EU are saying we should be punished if we leave ,which just about sums up Juncker .Tusk and the EU .
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 13:11
- 67379 of 81564
https://leave.eu/
From the Leave EU website ..
21 January 2016
Responding to the Prime Minister's speech in Davos, Leave.EU CEO Liz Bilney said:
"The fact that the Prime Minister is begging for international corporations to stick their noses into our democratic process only shows how little he and the elite care for ordinary British citizens. This referendum is about our needs, not theirs."
"The Prime Minister's only spoke of economic reasons for remaining, none of which which are dependent on our membership of the EU. His negotiation will do nothing to solve the migration crisis, the steel crisis, the flooding crisis or whatever the next inevitable EU crisis may be. Only through Britain regaining control of its laws, its borders and its taxes can we begin to avoid those EU crises and solve their problems we inherit.
"The remain campaign may have establishment characters from the past, such as Mandelson, Kinnock and Tony Blair. But what they don't have are any valid reasons for staying in beyond the vested interests of their paymasters. With them now being joined by Wall Street bankers Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan this debate is gearing up to be the establishment versus the people."
2517GEORGE
- 27 Jan 2016 13:45
- 67380 of 81564
If you were looking to join a club why would you choose to join this one.
2517
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 13:56
- 67381 of 81564
Is that to me GEORGE ? i am not looking to join a club ,i do however read a lot on the in's and out's of the EU .
2517GEORGE
- 27 Jan 2016 14:14
- 67382 of 81564
Sorry JB, by club I meant the EU and it was just a general question, not to you specifically.
2517
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 14:15
- 67383 of 81564
Yes it looks like a pretty rubbish to join .
iturama
- 27 Jan 2016 14:34
- 67384 of 81564
Who would indeed join a club where you contribute nearly a net £1 billion a month and the members that receive that generosity threaten to punish you severely if you dare to leave. Punish with what? We'll take our people back?
How do countries like Canada, Australia and New Zealand ever survive?
Common sense says that the EU as it exists today is doomed to failure. No organisation can be run effectively by committee. I think Liz Bilney has hit the nail on the head. It will turn out to be a battle of vested interests v the people.
Stan
- 27 Jan 2016 14:45
- 67385 of 81564
"It will turn out to be a battle of vested interests v the people."
Bit like this Country then IT and no I'm on the fence and not pro or anti EU on the whole at the moment.
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 14:49
- 67386 of 81564
Vote out Stan you know it makes sense.
Stan
- 27 Jan 2016 14:56
- 67387 of 81564
Whats it worth.. I am open to bribery on this one occasion -):
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2016 15:09
- 67388 of 81564
Your future Stan !!
Stan
- 27 Jan 2016 15:57
- 67389 of 81564
Nah, having lived through the Thatcher, Blair and Cameron years I can live through just about anything.