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Thread: O/T DDay for Brexit..well sort of...

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2017
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    3,726
    This is Rees Mogg we are talking about - the guy advocating no deal brexit.

    At the same time he shifted his investment fund business to Dublin. The prospectus for the new business, which was registered in March and will be governed by EU and Irish rules, listed Brexit as one of the risks, as it could cause “considerable uncertainty". He also warns the good people of Britain that they should not expect any financial benefit from Brexit for up to 50 years.

    Happy days.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2015
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    26,791
    Tonights late night rambling from animal continues more or less along the same lines .

    I had a one to one with our top gaffer today , he's a great lad , down to earth and says it as it is , what's more you can give it back to him and he doesn't do the pull rank on you thing , he has my total respect .

    How the fuq can I place fecking orders with our suppliers whilst this pantomime is going on ?

    I just don't know what the bill will be or even when I'm going to receive the goods .

    We aren't talking about next weeks deliveries but those in the spring and summer time .

    The only good news if that's the right wording is that our competitors are in the same boat but none the less .

    So when governments feck around playing for time some of us have live in the real world , who knows how smaller businesses are going on , luckily we are a big concern and can absorb a bit but my gaffer is hamstrung by these idiots creating all of this uncertainty .

    By the looks of it unnecessarily given the EU have stated many times that the deal is unnegotiable and yet ..........


    I'm incredibly disappointed with my own party to tell the truth , disillusioned you might say .

    I totally get the stance but the delivery is awful , Starmer is a man I respect but this second referendum idea is not one of his better ideas , it will kill this party if they push for that .

    People hate one another in the Labour Party just as they do within the other lot over Brexit but it doesn't come out as much because we are in opposition .

    We can all go back in time and blame whoever we want , the truth is it doesn't matter because you have to deal with the reality .

    Nobody knows how to resolve this whether in government or opposition .

    The whole political system is broken , can't function effectively .

    Nobody involved is giving an inch , total log jam .

    Meanwhile the people affected the most are just totally bemused .

    This is serious shyte , if the Queen called a halt to this debacle and dissolved Parliament then who could blame her .

    Then again she's a leaver too apparently so I give up .

    Good night .

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    Even fellow Beeboids are telling Lineker to be quiet now.

    He thinks he's safe because the BBC share his views.

    But they have to pretend not to be biased which he doesn't seem to get, they could still throw him under the bus.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by great_fire View Post
    Even fellow Beeboids are telling Lineker to be quiet now.

    He thinks he's safe because the BBC share his views.

    But they have to pretend not to be biased which he doesn't seem to get, they could still throw him under the bus.
    If Moggs political career needs Peter Shilton to endorse it then he's in some trouble .

  5. #5
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    Mar 2008
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    How does he "need" Peter Shilton's support exactly?

    Do the Remainers "need" Lineker's support?

  6. #6
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    Walk away from it all seeing as we’re not getting a fair deal see what they have to say then.

    Trump would have walked by now telling them to stick it

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brin View Post
    Walk away from it all seeing as we’re not getting a fair deal see what they have to say then.

    Trump would have walked by now telling them to stick it
    The thing is Brin from a negotiating position that would be our strongest position regardless of how unpalatable it may be.

    Easy in and difficult to come out of, and even more difficult being a member

  8. #8
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    Mar 2008
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brin View Post
    Walk away from it all seeing as we’re not getting a fair deal see what they have to say then.

    Trump would have walked by now telling them to stick it
    Trump had to deal with the Five Families for years, May does not really have the same negotiating experience.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Posts
    185
    It's looking a bit like a stand off now. The EU have said that May's deal is the final one and there'll be no further concessions. They also said once we trigger Article 50 it was irreversible, now that doesn't seem to be the case. Whatever your thoughts on May's deal, she certainly got more than Cameron did when he tried to negotiate a deal for us to remain in a "reformed EU." It seems the only way to get concessions from the EU is to wave the "no deal" prospect in their face.

    However, it would appear that both sides are terrified of the no deal scenario. So is it just a case of who blinks first now to try and avoid this happening?

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2012
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    10,287
    Quote Originally Posted by DaveyJohn View Post
    It's looking a bit like a stand off now. The EU have said that May's deal is the final one and there'll be no further concessions. They also said once we trigger Article 50 it was irreversible, now that doesn't seem to be the case. Whatever your thoughts on May's deal, she certainly got more than Cameron did when he tried to negotiate a deal for us to remain in a "reformed EU." It seems the only way to get concessions from the EU is to wave the "no deal" prospect in their face.

    However, it would appear that both sides are terrified of the no deal scenario. So is it just a case of who blinks first now to try and avoid this happening?
    Agree with that DJ although it's not really hard to get more than bugger all is it?

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