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.
Haystack
- 18 Feb 2016 19:00
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Two polls from MORI and ICM yesterday show remain ahead
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/blog/archives/9634
MaxK
- 18 Feb 2016 19:10
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It wont when Dave comes back with a washout deal.
Boris is waiting.
required field
- 18 Feb 2016 19:21
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Can't help feeling that that north Korean leader Kim Jong-Un is going to end up by being retired by his proche generals....you can't bump off all the main figure heads of a state like that without repercussions....if that happened there might be a glorious reunification of the two Koreas !...
Haystack
- 18 Feb 2016 19:22
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I think that unfortunately the public will be too frightened to leave. The terms of the deal will be forgotten in a few days and then it will be about fear.
MaxK
- 18 Feb 2016 23:46
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There's no deal, so far.
Maybe Dave is holding out?
Fred1new
- 19 Feb 2016 09:09
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2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2016 09:18
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Perhaps DC will grow a pair, tell the EU where to go and campaign for the LEAVE camp.
2517
MaxK
- 19 Feb 2016 10:15
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Pigs might fly too.
It's obvious the €urobeans don't want to give even the mild reforms asked for.
The idea that you could rely on the goodwill of the the other €urovision contestants is so absurdly optimistic as to be laughable.
Why is Dave wasting his time?
Fred1new
- 19 Feb 2016 10:23
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I would think many of the EU are fed up with the arrogance of Dave and his mates attempting to tell them what they should do.
The negotiating methods resemble the approach to the Raj.
Jumped up little englanders comes to mind!
2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2016 10:28
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What about the statement from the Austrian Chancellor that ''we are a democratic country, no one can force us to do something.''
2517
2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2016 10:31
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Those 'jumped up little englanders' just happen to be a major contributor to the EU.
2517
Haystack
- 19 Feb 2016 10:46
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The arguments are getting emotional already and the real campaigns haven't started. One side is saying that Cameron did not ask for enough and wasn't tough enough. The other side is saying that Cameron was unreasonable in asking for changes.
I think Cameron played it exactly right. If he had asked for much more then the EU members would not have spoken to him at all. You have to realise that there are millions of people in the UK who are quite happy with the EU and our current deal. The number of people who want to leave the EU no matter what is quite small, but they make a lot of noise disproportionate to their number.
2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2016 11:08
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The UK parliament tend to play by the rules, after all it's just not cricket not to. Yet time and time again we hear that various EU members ignore the rules. So if it's ok for the Austrians why not the UK or any other country. Makes a mockery of the Freedom of Movement.
We have seen how tight-knit the EU members are (not) you just have to see the individual countries securing their borders.
2517
jimmy b
- 19 Feb 2016 11:57
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Haystack . I really can't agree with anything you have written there .
Cameron played it exactly right ?
He went there asking for nothing and got nothing .
------------
The number of people who want to leave the EU no matter what is quite small, but they make a lot of noise disproportionate to their number.
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How do you know that ? because every one i talk to wants to leave ,i'm not saying i am right because i may not be but your statement above is unfounded.
Haystack
- 19 Feb 2016 13:22
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It is based on a long history of opinion polls over many years. The current appetite for leaving is based largely on false assumptions regarding immigration. There was an interesting statistic I saw yesterday. It was that 85% of immigrants do not claim any sort of benefit.
You may know people who want out at any price. I don't know even one. I do know some who are undecided, but most want to stay in. I will probably vote out.
Cameron had to play a middle sort of game to get anything from the EU.
2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2016 13:29
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Immigration is just one aspect, and it's not about the money.
2517
MaxK
- 19 Feb 2016 13:34
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The land of €l Greco now threatening to pull the plug on the whole shooting match over migrants.
You couldn't make it up if you tried.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/eureferendum/12164607/EU-referendum-eu-summit-david-cameron-brexit-live.html
iturama
- 19 Feb 2016 13:41
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That's the problem in trying to negotiate in the Tower of Babel. He might as well have borrowed Ed's stone, engraved his demands on the back and dumped it in the Espace Leopold, and said "when you sort that lot out, give me call".
jimmy b
- 19 Feb 2016 13:53
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cynic
- 19 Feb 2016 15:12
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i am sorry to say that i do not think that DC will succeed in regaining any sort of sovereignty for uk, and therefore any concessions achieved will always be subject to eu parliament ratifying - or along those lines
confess that, with a heavy heart and grave misgivings, i am fast coming to the conclusion that i should vote "out"