Sat Apr 06, 2019 6:54 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 7:47 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 7:49 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 7:55 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:Seen a few interesting articles about brexit today. (Obviously won't get as many responses as a bearded man who looks a bit like Corbyn)
Why is Britain turning a blind eye to Leaves lawbreaking? https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/why- ... 6?mode=amp
Here's a video (Article in German but the vid is English) https://www.zdf.de/politik/frontal-21/d ... n-100.html
Sat Apr 06, 2019 7:57 pm
dogfound wrote:9 million pound of tax payers money to fund a remain leaflet ffs.
this was david versus goliath and goliath is now complaining david was allowed to fight back..
Sat Apr 06, 2019 8:12 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 8:19 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 9:09 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 10:04 pm
dogfound wrote:9 million pound of tax payers money to fund a remain leaflet ffs.
this was david versus goliath and goliath is now complaining david was allowed to fight back..
Sat Apr 06, 2019 10:06 pm
ajbr14 wrote:dogfound wrote:9 million pound of tax payers money to fund a remain leaflet ffs.
this was david versus goliath and goliath is now complaining david was allowed to fight back..
Hit the nail on the head. Annoys me that those slating Leave’s spending seem to have conveniently forgotten that the govt spent more on one poxy leaflet than the entire Leave campaign’s £7.5m spend. It probably swung a lot of people towards leave just out of sheer contempt for the government spending taxpayer money on a project fear campaign when they should’ve arguably remained neutral.
Sat Apr 06, 2019 10:21 pm
epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
Sat Apr 06, 2019 10:28 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
Sat Apr 06, 2019 10:43 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
Sat Apr 06, 2019 11:23 pm
Sat Apr 06, 2019 11:58 pm
Sun Apr 07, 2019 9:04 am
Sun Apr 07, 2019 9:45 am
RV Casual wrote:CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
I think people might give you a bit more respect if you speak for yourself rather than posting 'copy and pastes'.
Sun Apr 07, 2019 9:48 am
rumpo kid wrote:The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
But not the Eurozone. So economically, youre saying it makes sense to leave.
Sun Apr 07, 2019 9:49 am
Sun Apr 07, 2019 9:58 am
CCFCJosh75 wrote:RV Casual wrote:CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
I think people might give you a bit more respect if you speak for yourself rather than posting 'copy and pastes'.
So next time you want me to ignore the experts who have spent their lives to be able to accurately analyse and interpret data and instead just 'have a pop at doing it myself'?
Sun Apr 07, 2019 10:03 am
Sun Apr 07, 2019 12:08 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
Sun Apr 07, 2019 12:11 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:RV Casual wrote:CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
I think people might give you a bit more respect if you speak for yourself rather than posting 'copy and pastes'.
So next time you want me to ignore the experts who have spent their lives to be able to accurately analyse and interpret data and instead just 'have a pop at doing it myself'?
Sun Apr 07, 2019 12:13 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:So next time you want me to ignore the experts who have spent their lives to be able to accurately analyse and interpret data and instead just 'have a pop at doing it myself'?
Sun Apr 07, 2019 12:16 pm
Tony Blue Williams wrote:CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
Germany has lower growth than the UK and France is about the same and neither of them is leaving the EUThe UK also has record employment levels and has almost balanced the books after the economic crash of 2018.
These figures are guess work at best. The only thing hampering the economy is the uncertainty and we can end that next Friday by getting out. It is about time those tossed faced MP's grew some backbone and got on with the job.
Sun Apr 07, 2019 1:26 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:RV Casual wrote:CCFCJosh75 wrote:epping blue wrote:What about those with political and financial influence giving us dire financial predications based on nothing more than their political preference. Were they lying, incompetent or both ? Whatever the answer it was an absolute scandalous abuse of power. In fact they should have provided impassioned neutral opinions on the economy. They didn't and despite their continuing attempts to rubbish the economy its doing pretty well.
'The cost to Britain is currently £40bn a year, or about £800m a week of lost income, he said. Since the referendum, the UK’s economic growth has slowed while the rest of the world has recorded one of its strongest periods for growth of the past decade.
Vlieghe’s estimate for the weekly cost of Brexit so far is more than double the £350m the Leave campaign claimed could be saved on EU membership fees and instead spent on the NHS. The claim, emblazoned on the side of the campaign’s battlebus, became a key focus for debate in the run-up to the vote.
Vlieghe said in London on Thursday: “That 2% of GDP is not trivial, that’s £40bn or if you prefer it in bus units, it’s £800m a week.”
The Bank has calculated that the cumulative total of lost GDP since 23 June 2016 is £55bn.'
Maybe not recession levels but certainly not lying or incompetence.
I think people might give you a bit more respect if you speak for yourself rather than posting 'copy and pastes'.
So next time you want me to ignore the experts who have spent their lives to be able to accurately analyse and interpret data and instead just 'have a pop at doing it myself'?
Sun Apr 07, 2019 2:02 pm
Steve Zodiak wrote:
Do you mean experts like the Chancellor, who stated in the event of a "leave" vote an emergency budget would be required within weeks to stop the UK economy from falling over the edge of a cliff. Still waiting for that budget, and have been waiting for more than his few weeks. This is the same "expert" who also warned of unemployment going through the roof, shares collapsing, and the country going into recession, and all just by voting "leave". Not quite right with those predictions was he?
Sun Apr 07, 2019 2:18 pm
CCFCJosh75 wrote:Steve Zodiak wrote:
Do you mean experts like the Chancellor, who stated in the event of a "leave" vote an emergency budget would be required within weeks to stop the UK economy from falling over the edge of a cliff. Still waiting for that budget, and have been waiting for more than his few weeks. This is the same "expert" who also warned of unemployment going through the roof, shares collapsing, and the country going into recession, and all just by voting "leave". Not quite right with those predictions was he?
Like we're still waiting for:
£350 million a week for the NHS
Not a single job loss
Brexit dividends
Easiest trade deal in history
All the Turks about to 'Invade'
Stay in the single market
Won't pay to leave
All the new trade deals we'll get
Take back control
The Iraqis and Syrians who'd come now that turkey is joining
Sun Apr 07, 2019 2:44 pm
Sun Apr 07, 2019 3:08 pm
Stants Step over wrote:I'll never understand how one of the most deprived areas in the UK could vote (and passionately argue) for the status quo.
Trickle down (wealth) is total bollocks swallowed by the gullible and those doing OK and by that i mean at least £100k P.A. or you are kidding yourself.
Its there for big business and even bigger government, corrupt to the point of a science but there are a few good souls in there meaning well. The idea was a great one, but as soon as it went from a trading block to a political one it was always doomed to fail.
The countries of the EU are too diverse in wealth and cultures to speak as one voice, they all want different things from it and the only way to control it is to do what Macron wants and centralise and control even more.
We'll never leave, the whole house of cards falls if we do. Not because we are Jonny big bollocks but because Mr Soros and the rest of the unseen unelected king makers lose too much money if we do. Its so much easier to only need to "influence" a small group of commissioners who never need to worrying about reelections than 28 individual countries.
The "breaking the law" is laughable with so much unseen money and influence bouncing around, its pittance.
British politics is at an all time low, but in reality the last three years has shown they do next to sweet FA anyway nowadays since 80% of our laws are made overseas. I don't care if we stay, but I am an all or nothing person. If we don't leave lets go the whole hog. Euro, ECB, radically change the house of commons for a part time federal (national) parliament combined with the devolved assemblies with the same members and dissolve the house of lords.