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Brexit #2

Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 11:46 AM
Thompson 16 Nov 18 - 11:45 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 11:21 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 10:57 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 10:42 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 10:32 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 09:44 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 09:34 AM
KarenH 16 Nov 18 - 09:24 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 09:10 AM
DMcG 16 Nov 18 - 08:57 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 07:48 AM
Dave the Gnome 16 Nov 18 - 06:40 AM
Steve Shaw 16 Nov 18 - 06:27 AM
Raggytash 16 Nov 18 - 06:19 AM
Dave the Gnome 16 Nov 18 - 06:14 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 06:04 AM
Jim Carroll 16 Nov 18 - 05:28 AM
Raggytash 16 Nov 18 - 05:06 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 04:57 AM
Iains 16 Nov 18 - 04:37 AM
Backwoodsman 16 Nov 18 - 04:04 AM
The Sandman 16 Nov 18 - 04:01 AM
Jim Carroll 16 Nov 18 - 03:46 AM
Dave the Gnome 16 Nov 18 - 03:34 AM
Steve Shaw 15 Nov 18 - 06:54 PM
Backwoodsman 15 Nov 18 - 05:27 PM
Backwoodsman 15 Nov 18 - 05:03 PM
Backwoodsman 15 Nov 18 - 04:57 PM
Nigel Parsons 15 Nov 18 - 04:40 PM
Backwoodsman 15 Nov 18 - 04:08 PM
Raggytash 15 Nov 18 - 03:50 PM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 03:39 PM
Iains 15 Nov 18 - 03:33 PM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 02:27 PM
DMcG 15 Nov 18 - 01:21 PM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 01:05 PM
Iains 15 Nov 18 - 11:48 AM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 11:43 AM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 11:18 AM
Iains 15 Nov 18 - 11:08 AM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 10:50 AM
Raggytash 15 Nov 18 - 10:27 AM
Iains 15 Nov 18 - 10:16 AM
Backwoodsman 15 Nov 18 - 10:01 AM
Dave the Gnome 15 Nov 18 - 09:27 AM
Jim Carroll 15 Nov 18 - 09:10 AM
Donuel 15 Nov 18 - 08:58 AM
Donuel 15 Nov 18 - 08:36 AM
Iains 15 Nov 18 - 08:31 AM
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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 11:46 AM

Here you are, some more facts for you (you do understand the meaning of the word 'facts' do you?) from a considerably more reliable source than a Right-Wing Extremist Criminal, and based on a significantly bigger sample than your idiot-boy, Seaman Staines...

https://news.sky.com/story/majority-of-brits-now-against-brexit-and-back-second-eu-referendum-sky-data-poll-11555078


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Thompson
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 11:45 AM

What amuses me in a horrible way is that if the unionists had themselves negotiated the deal they’re being offered they’d be gloating and boasting unbearably.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 11:21 AM

Here ya go, a few facts for you...

https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2018/11/brexiteers-only-have-themselves-blame-uk-s-disastrous-fate


Any good news about the BrexShit Debacle?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 10:57 AM

Interesting yougov survey from Guido


https://order-order.com/2018/11/16/just-36-brits-want-stop-brexit
I wonder just how accurate it is? The remainiacs are obviously not quite where they would like to be. No surprises there!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 10:42 AM

No. As you're very well aware, the Remainers here have constantly asked the BrexShit-Bumpkins for some positive facts about the looming BrexShit disaster, and have been told there are no facts "Because Brexit hasn't happened yet".

Tell us, how do you avoid bumping into things as you walk around with your head on back-to-front?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 10:32 AM

I believe the renmainiacs were the ones gathering up horror stories to gleefully display here. They were all successfully repudiated by pointing out the fact that brexit has yet to occur.
Brexiteers 1!
clowns 0!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 09:44 AM

"We deal in facts not fancy, unlike the clowns."

Would these be the facts that you, Nigs, Keefie, and other sundry wandering BrexShitters have told us, on numerous occasions, are as yet unknown 'because Brexit hasn't happened yet'?

A liar needs a good memory.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 09:34 AM

Mention feeble-minded Tory stooges who enjoy taking it up the arse from the toffs and, right on cue, one appears...

"Brexiteers have far more sense, as we all know.
We deal in facts not fancy, unlike the clowns."


And that's going really well for you, innit? Bwwaaaaaahh-ha-ha-ha-haaaaahh!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: KarenH
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 09:24 AM

Here are the arguments of Rees-Mogg as stated in the Express:

"What we need is a leader who will say to the EU 'it is impossible to divide up the UK, it is impossible to agree to a situation where we have a perpetual customs union, it's impossible to pay £39billion of taxpayers money for a few promises which were meant to be £39billion for an implementation of a deal, and it is impossible for us to allow the continuing jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice’."


I am not saying I agree with them, just trying to put a bit of focus into the discussion. For example:

Why are we paying the EU this money: it is 'for an implementation of a deal' or is it for some other reason?

In what aspects if any will the European Court of Justice continue to have jurisdiction?

In what sense does the proposed agreement 'divide up' the UK?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 09:10 AM

Never have so many feeble-minded fools been so misled by so few.
Must be remainiacs. Brexiteers have far more sense, as we all know.
We deal in facts not fancy, unlike the clowns.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: DMcG
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 08:57 AM

According to Steven Swinford of the Telegraph the remaining Eurosceptics in cabinet "aim to change the wording of the backstop exit mechanism to stop it binding UK in customs union indefinitely"

... so far it is understandable ...

"There's genuine optimism it can be done ahead of Brussels summit on Nov 25"

... what?????? Even by Brexiteer standards, that may be a new high for 'genuine optimism'


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 07:48 AM

"It was obvious to some of from the start. It should now be blatantly obvious to all that the whole sorry affair was dreamed up by a tiny but powerful minority with vested interests in keeping the British people under their heel."

Precisely what I've been saying throughout this thread and its predecessor, and for which I've had scorn heaped on me by our indoctrinated, happy-to-take-it-up-the-arse-from-a-Tory, Conservative stooges on here.

It's got Sweet Fuck All to do with 'Take Back Control', and everything to do with giving complete control to that 'tiny but powerful minority with vested interests in keeping the British people under their heel'.

Never have so many feeble-minded fools been so misled by so few.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 06:40 AM

If anyone doubts that the campaign against the EU has been orchestrated for a long time and mainly false try this

The EU has archived all of the "Euromyths" printed in UK media - and it makes for some disturbing reading


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 06:27 AM

"The pound presently trades at a level seen in 2010 but with reduced volatility."

Reduced volatility? On Tuesday I bought a hundred quids'-worth of euros to load on to my prepaid card. If I'd bought 'em today I'd have got two and a half cents less per quid. With "reduced volatility" like that, who needs ordinary volatility!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Raggytash
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 06:19 AM

I think perhaps Iains that you are choosing to ignore the facts that the pound had been trading* at levels in excess of 1.25 euro to the pound for over 2 years prior to the dramatic fall the day after the Brexit referendum.

* There was a slight dip in late April 2016 when it was 1.23.959.

The truth of the matter is that the referendum caused a massive decline in the value of the pound that it has not recovered from and which has had a negative impact on the rise in the cost of living for everyone.

That rise, of course impacts, to a greater degree on those with lower incomes. Although I suspect you couldn't give a toss about those people.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 06:14 AM

A sobering piece in 'The Scotsman'. A paper known for being centre, moderate and down to earth.

Wealthy men are playing with the lives of 60 million people as if Brexit were a game of chess

Plenty to think about but the following passage is particularly disturbing to me.

It is clearly true that many of them are now trying to unseat their own party leader for not delivering on a fantasy of painless, glorious Brexit that they themselves have failed to turn into political reality, since the task is impossible. And as for concealing their true aims – well, who can say what strange brew of midlife psychosis and outright political dishonesty has motivated the bizarre wave of retro-imperial fantasy and anti-European rhetoric that has swept through parts of the Tory Party at Westminster in recent years; although investigations into the funding and management of the Leave campaign suggest that there are, at the very least, very serious questions to be asked about the sources of its funds, and its shadowy political connections.

It was obvious to some of from the start. It should now be blatantly obvious to all that the whole sorry affair was dreamed up by a tiny but powerful minority with vested interests in keeping the British people under their heel.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 06:04 AM

Kindly explain then, why did the pound really plummet the day after the Referendum vote when the decision to leave the EU was announced.

It was part of a decline from 1.42 in July 2015. Look at the graphical data. How many times do you need telling this?

Would you like a merry-go-round for Christmas?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 05:28 AM

Oddly enough, May is the only one to come out of this showing a shred of principles and dignity in all this - certainly more than any (either) of her supporters here
One of the saving graces of Brexit is watching the rats turn on each other
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Raggytash
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 05:06 AM

Kindly explain then, why did the pound really plummet the day after the Referendum vote when the decision to leave the EU was announced.

Coincidence ????


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 04:57 AM

"As I'm sure you realise the pound PLUMETTED from 1.31 before Brexit to a distinctly lower amount afterwards."
I am afraid the significance of 1.31 totally escapes me, That was the exchange rate in January 2016 and part of a decline from 1.42 in July 2015.That was a rise from a historic low of 1.02 in 2008. The pound presently trades at a level seen in 2010 but with reduced volatility.The point you are trying to make has no validity. Economic factors dictate exchange rates, not headlines.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 04:37 AM

Some have compare Theresa May to Neville Chamberlein.
Others have said "That's unfair to Chamberlain, he didn't pay the Luftwaffe for the blitz."


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 04:04 AM

"What are these people turning Britain into and how do those who support them square their concionces?"

What consciences?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: The Sandman
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 04:01 AM

PEOPLE LIKE REES MOGG TALK ABOUT THE BENEFITS OF LEAVING BUT ADVISE THEIR INVESTORS TO INVEST IN EUROS , UNBELIEVABLE


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 03:46 AM

"making the U.K. an utter laughing-stock around the world"
A little more than that, I'm afraid
Brexit was sold on keeping immigrats and asylum seekers out - as May put it yesterday "taking back control of our borders"
Not only is this basicalloy racist, but it is self-destructive and inhuman
Had the British governments in the thirties taken the same stance there would have been far more Jews exterminated than there were - we and other nations took in the refugee from Nazisim - Britain is turning its back on today's refugees - shame on Nigel and his fellow appeasers
Not only are the present leaders encouraging this inhuman policy, butt by supporting the regimes who have caused the refugees to flee their countries; politically, financially and even militarily, NOT JUST FIGHTER PLANES
In doing so, our leaders have made Britain part of the slaughter
A little more than a laughing stock, I'm afraid
What are these people turning Britain into and how do those who support them square their concionces?
Beyond me !
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 16 Nov 18 - 03:34 AM

Well said, Steve.

Looking on the bright side again the EU referendum debacle has had the benefit of showing everyone that the self serving shower of shits who started it are not fit to govern. Hopefully they will completely melt down and by next week we will be one step further towards an administration that does really serve the people.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 06:54 PM

A chap came to my house today to do some work for me (no names, no details, no pack drill). While he was here the news came through about Dominic "Slimeball" Raab and Esther "Devil-Incarnate" McVey. I commented on the news to him. He told me he didn't follow politics and didn't understand any of it. But he'd voted leave, for chrissake. I told him to come round my house in the event of another vote for a ten-minute chat in which I'd tell him why he should vote remain next time. He doesn't need it. He assured me that he'd changed his mind. Good thing, but the exchange hardly cheered me up. Let's redefine democracy, mused I after he'd gone, as a system in which ignorant people can be kept ignorant so that they can be manipulated, but make them feel good by "giving them the vote."

We are in a nightmare. What is happening to this country is insane. I want to hear politicians saying what is blatantly, bleedin' obvious: that staying in the EU is by FAR the most beneficial outcome for the national interest. There is no-one here on this forum that can make even the weakest argument as to why we would be better out. They can quote Tory rags and Tory blogs until they're blue in the face. But not one of them, not Iains, not Nigel, not Keith, not Stanron, can make any sort of case that we will be better off out. They can offer only vacuous and faux-hopeful aspiration. Nothing else. It's been like that for over two years, but the issue is crystallising fast before their eyes. Time to ditch the hubris, chaps. We are better off by a million miles in the EU. Apart from the clear economic benefits, look at the rest of the world. We have Trump destroying democracy in the rest of the western world, and he's going to get a second term. Six more years. We have a dictator for life who tramples on human rights in the biggest country in the world. We have Putin who is determined to turn Russia into a corrupt and dangerous superpower. We have far-right populism in Brazil and, worryingly, in some European countries. We have a horrid regime in Israel that is at the root of all middle-eastern conflict and we have an antediluvian, murderous regime in a country we daren't criticise because they have oil. The EU, for all its faults, which are legion, is a democratic bulwark against these horrible trends. If you can't see it, you're blind, and you are not thinking about the nasty world you're unconsciously arguing should be visited on your children and grandchildren.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 05:27 PM

Brexit in a Nutshell - it would be funny if it wasn't so true.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 05:03 PM

May's Tory Government publicly self-destructing before our eyes, making the U.K. an utter laughing-stock around the world, and Nigs The Nitpicker can't find anything to comment on except a badly-worded sentence in something the leader of HM Opposition put out.

What a muppet.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 04:57 PM

{{{ Yaa-a-a-awn }}}


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 04:40 PM

From: DMcG - PM
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 01:21 PM
ALong with presumably thousands of others I have just got this email from Corbyn. The bolding is mine.

======

If we cannot get a General Election, in line with our conference policy, we will support all options remaining on the table, including campaigning for a public vote.

We are ready to lead, ready to deliver a sensible deal that works for all our regions and nations and ready to build a Britain that works for the many, not the few.

Jeremy Corbyn
Leader of the Labour Party


Is it fair to guess that the section you highlighted in bold is intended to read: "we will support (keeping) all options remaining on the table (open for consideration)"? If not, he is not stating which option he supports. "We will support all options" so maybe Mr Corbyn has yet to make up his mind!

And before anyone accuses me of nit-picking, I am merely commenting on the supposed contents of an email which has, presumably, been vetted by the Labour Party before issue.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 04:08 PM

"Can we hope for an improvement in the value of the pound?"

More importantly, can we hope for a bit of good news about the Brexit Debacle - like, for instance, that the government has come to its senses and abandoned it?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Raggytash
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 03:50 PM

I see you have not responded Iains to my observation about the comment of the pound "soaring" of the pound.

.................. I wonder why that is.

I take it you do recall one of your cohorts saying the pound had "soared" when it had risen by one half of one cent.

Not, as I'm sure you understand, even one half of one percent.

As I'm sure you realise the pound PLUMETTED from 1.31 before Brexit to a distinctly lower amount afterwards.

The attached website would seem to claim that the pound loss 19% post Brexit, not one half of one cent but a full 19%

Link

Can we hope for an improvement in the value of the pound?


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 03:39 PM

"Do you often link to the comic above?"
Not as often as you link to your moron Guido - I know Snooty is a cartoon - you have that yet to learn about yourr clown
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 03:33 PM

Do you often link to the comic above? In comparison it makes the Guardian look to be almost a serious newspaper!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 02:27 PM

LORD SNOOTY FOR PRIME MINISTER
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: DMcG
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 01:21 PM

ALong with presumably thousands of others I have just got this email from Corbyn. The bolding is mine.


======

If we cannot get a General Election, in line with our conference policy, we will support all options remaining on the table, including campaigning for a public vote.

We are ready to lead, ready to deliver a sensible deal that works for all our regions and nations and ready to build a Britain that works for the many, not the few.

Jeremy Corbyn
Leader of the Labour Party

======

I have also got an email from my Tory MP who says he will vote against the deal because "To agree to this will be worse than staying in the EU". I have asked him to confirm this means if his only choice is between this deal and remaining, he will vote remain. I do not expect any response at all, but certainly not one that is compatable with his assertion.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 01:05 PM

Moggie in the Window has proposed a 'No Confidence' vote against the Prime Minister
Wonder what tomorrow will bring?
Jim Caarroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 11:48 AM

As the article says:
Using a "Frankenstein" model, which cobbles together data from other major economies, the bank's economists worked out the hit to UK growth.

Has as much validity as Frankenstein as well,I would say.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 11:43 AM

TRY THIS FOR SIZE - though I prefer the Financial Times analysis - so clear even our resident morons could understand it when it was read to them
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 11:18 AM

No comment on the ecconomic damage done by Brexit so far - who's to blame you ?
Patriots ?
I've shit 'em
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 11:08 AM

A stunning link from the horses mouth. It just wants money


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 10:50 AM

FROM THE HORSES MOUTH
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Raggytash
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 10:27 AM

Hang about, it was one of your cohort who said first suggested that the pound had "soared" when it went up by half one one cent.

Not half a percent but a half of one cent.

Don't recall you saying anything about hysteria on that occasion.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 10:16 AM

"Sterling soars downwards"
More hysteria off remainiacs.
Sterling was far lower back in August and trading lower exactly one year ago.

But never let facts spoil a good story!


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 10:01 AM

I think you mean, "Sterling soars downwards", using the ever-optimistic BrexShiteer's language.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 09:27 AM

Pound falls steeply as Brexit resignations rock UK government

Time to sell my leftover dollars methinks.

Always look on the bright side of life...


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 09:10 AM

Six resignations to date and ain impending Tory coup and what do we get Guido and "see what happens" ?
I think we have the makings of the next Prime Minister here !!
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Donuel
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 08:58 AM

psst - in a double negative situation it is best to 'don't do' -
Do over.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Donuel
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 08:36 AM

Nobody in England knows what is going on, except which immediate domino is going to fall today. No democracy if you do, no democracy if you don't.


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Subject: RE: Brexit #2
From: Iains
Date: 15 Nov 18 - 08:31 AM

From guido, the man with a finger on the pulse!

https://order-order.com/2018/11/15/erg-advises-mps-send-letters/

How many supporters I wonder.


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