Don't be a hypocrite. You did that to me, so I found it better to debate with other posters.
New UK PM is Boris Johnson
- springrain
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'History is a set of lies agreed upon.'
Attributed to Napoleon
Attributed to Napoleon
- TheGrimReaper
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Waiting for that. I usually insult the content not the individual. I looked back and have never personally insulted you. I questioned what planet you live on after one of your "way out" posts but that is hardly a personal insult.springrain wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 9:37 pm
Don't be a hypocrite. You did that to me, so I found it better to debate with other posters.
Sleep, those little slices of death — how I loathe them.
So grimey, you claim you voted remain in 2016.
But since then you flipped a wee bit and have been enthusiastically embracing hard brexit and Bojo the Clown as a serious leader,
to the point that you have been predicting and betting that the pound would climb up to 1.3 euro by Christmas ?
Are you another stable genius?
Kudos! It's a brilliant long game you been playing all along ! you figured out before anybody that this pathetic Brexit concept would fail , which would indeed push the £ upwards. Your astute machiavelism would put even Scoobie to shame
But since then you flipped a wee bit and have been enthusiastically embracing hard brexit and Bojo the Clown as a serious leader,
to the point that you have been predicting and betting that the pound would climb up to 1.3 euro by Christmas ?
Are you another stable genius?
Kudos! It's a brilliant long game you been playing all along ! you figured out before anybody that this pathetic Brexit concept would fail , which would indeed push the £ upwards. Your astute machiavelism would put even Scoobie to shame
- TheGrimReaper
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I don't claim, I state that I voted Remain and have said this many times here and on ToF (even before the referendum before Gonk had a hissy fit and perma banned me). That seemed to wind people up there as well as it seems 99.99% of members are binary and cannot understand how someone could vote remain yet support Brexit. It's called supporting democracy. The majority voted out so I accept that. It's no different to a General Election where a large percentage of the voting public do not get their wish but accept the result and get on with their lives. Is that so hard to understand?logos wrote: ↑Fri Aug 16, 2019 4:23 amSo grimey, you claim you voted remain in 2016.
But since then you flipped a wee bit and have been enthusiastically embracing hard brexit and Bojo the Clown as a serious leader,
to the point that you have been predicting and betting that the pound would climb up to 1.3 euro by Christmas ?
Are you another stable genius?
Kudos! It's a brilliant long game you been playing all along ! you figured out before anybody that this pathetic Brexit concept would fail , which would indeed push the £ upwards. Your astute machiavelism would put even Scoobie to shame
I guess that most members on forums are only interested in the 10 minute argument rather than an educated debate.
Don't crow too loudly. I just made a prediction, I did not crow about it. That attitude can come back and bite you very hard.
Sleep, those little slices of death — how I loathe them.
UK farmers now want a 2nd referendum. Most voted to Leave, even the really clever one's who enjoy hunting foxes with dogs and calling it SPORT, and selling 80% of their produce to the nasty EU.
Now somethings happened amongst the haystacks ?.
They've changed their minds en masse.
Imagine all those pro-sovereignty folks voting to leave because they were told there would be no more royal family.
I'm done trying to understand.
Now somethings happened amongst the haystacks ?.
They've changed their minds en masse.
Imagine all those pro-sovereignty folks voting to leave because they were told there would be no more royal family.
I'm done trying to understand.
The farmers round my way, some of which I've known all my life, don't want to remain. In fact they were among the most ardent supporters of Leave. They were down the pub banging on about UKIP before most people had even heard of it.EIKROY wrote: ↑Fri Aug 16, 2019 6:00 pmUK farmers now want a 2nd referendum. Most voted to Leave, even the really clever one's who enjoy hunting foxes with dogs and calling it SPORT, and selling 80% of their produce to the nasty EU.
Now somethings happened amongst the haystacks ?.
They've changed their minds en masse.
Imagine all those pro-sovereignty folks voting to leave because they were told there would be no more royal family.
I'm done trying to understand.
TheGrimReaper wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2019 1:45 pmSlavedog, you do not belong on this forum as you talk too much sense.
Okay, Maybe they need to go to the NUF website www.nfuonline.com
Tally Ho Old Chap
Tally Ho Old Chap
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I caught up with several of my farm based friends whilst back in England this summer. Most were more concerned over plans and preparations for the [then] upcoming Glorious Twelfth than Brexit.
"We, the sons of John Company, have arrived"
Yes quite understandable, 14 Million Common Pheasant bred in captivity this year to facilitate their Sport !!!!. In the interest of conservation of course.
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Guitarist That Will Change the World
Today's play:
Stopping no deal
Corbyn-led temporary government
Jeremy Corbyn has offered to lead a temporary government tasked with requesting a delay to Brexit from the EU, before triggering an election.
Likelihood: one in five
Government of national unity
Jo Swinson, the Lib Dem leader, has said Corbyn cannot command enough support to lead a temporary government. She has instead suggested a temporary government of national unity, led by a more neutral figure such as Labour’s Harriet Harman or veteran Tory Ken Clarke.
Likelihood: two in five
New laws blocking no deal
MPs such as Dominic Grieve, Oliver Letwin, Nick Boles and Yvette Cooper have been part of efforts to pass new legislation that orders the prime minister to request a Brexit delay to avoid no deal.
Likelihood: three in five
A Brexit deal is agreed
Some MPs are still holding out hope that Boris Johnson will offer them a vote on a Brexit deal based on the agreement put forward by Theresa May. For it to pass, Labour MPs opposed to a second referendum, such as Lisa Nandy, would have to back it.
Likelihood: two in five
Today's play:
Stopping no deal
Corbyn-led temporary government
Jeremy Corbyn has offered to lead a temporary government tasked with requesting a delay to Brexit from the EU, before triggering an election.
Likelihood: one in five
Government of national unity
Jo Swinson, the Lib Dem leader, has said Corbyn cannot command enough support to lead a temporary government. She has instead suggested a temporary government of national unity, led by a more neutral figure such as Labour’s Harriet Harman or veteran Tory Ken Clarke.
Likelihood: two in five
New laws blocking no deal
MPs such as Dominic Grieve, Oliver Letwin, Nick Boles and Yvette Cooper have been part of efforts to pass new legislation that orders the prime minister to request a Brexit delay to avoid no deal.
Likelihood: three in five
A Brexit deal is agreed
Some MPs are still holding out hope that Boris Johnson will offer them a vote on a Brexit deal based on the agreement put forward by Theresa May. For it to pass, Labour MPs opposed to a second referendum, such as Lisa Nandy, would have to back it.
Likelihood: two in five
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According to leaked government documents on “Operation Yellowhammer”, published by the Sunday Times, the “most likely aftershocks” of a no-deal Brexit include the UK being hit with a three-month “meltdown” at its ports, a hard Irish border and shortages of food and medicine after it leaves leaves the bloc.Fuzzhead22 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 12:25 pmThe 'backstop' actually breaks the GFA anyhow, and the EU is overly keen on using it, so your post is piffleChneseexpat wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 8:44 pm
There is no way in hell parliament, the EU or congress will support the breaking of the Good Friday agreement. Only a complete nutter would want to do that.
Over to you, TGR.
A senior Whitehall source told the paper: “This is not Project Fear – this is the most realistic assessment of what the public face with no deal. These are likely, basic, reasonable scenarios – not the worst case.”
Yes. Thousands of experts are wrong. but certain Boris lovin tossers are right. I take of my cap to you. We've already spent Billions of pounds on things like non-existent ferries - but carry on, the sand is soft, and deep enough for your head.
Bojo's controllers are not allowing him to do radio & tv interviews. The more he appears. the more people see what a Charlatan he is, how ill-informed, ill prepared, a mere armature. His controllers are very scared that the Brexit con is collapsing.
Taking Back Control. Luv It.
Bojo's controllers are not allowing him to do radio & tv interviews. The more he appears. the more people see what a Charlatan he is, how ill-informed, ill prepared, a mere armature. His controllers are very scared that the Brexit con is collapsing.
Taking Back Control. Luv It.
TGM. Deliberate spelling mistake for you on my last post. But don't get too excited. Not getting any younger.
Paradoxically Boris may be remembered as the Prime Minister responsible for facilitating the reunification of Ireland!Chneseexpat wrote: ↑Sun Aug 18, 2019 4:17 pmAccording to leaked government documents on “Operation Yellowhammer”, published by the Sunday Times, the “most likely aftershocks” of a no-deal Brexit include the UK being hit with a three-month “meltdown” at its ports, a hard Irish border and shortages of food and medicine after it leaves leaves the bloc.Fuzzhead22 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 12:25 pmThe 'backstop' actually breaks the GFA anyhow, and the EU is overly keen on using it, so your post is piffleChneseexpat wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 8:44 pm
There is no way in hell parliament, the EU or congress will support the breaking of the Good Friday agreement. Only a complete nutter would want to do that.
Over to you, TGR.
A senior Whitehall source told the paper: “This is not Project Fear – this is the most realistic assessment of what the public face with no deal. These are likely, basic, reasonable scenarios – not the worst case.”
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