Your attitude shows only selfish motivation, without caring about the collateral damage, doesn't it?Oh - so its now about who pollutes the most is it?
Whatever.
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Your attitude shows only selfish motivation, without caring about the collateral damage, doesn't it?Oh - so its now about who pollutes the most is it?
Whatever.
Are you expecting anyone to take that remark seriously? why would we want to do that? why for instance if that troubled us didn't we recruit them from outside the EU and thus not have EU people coming in?Doh. It's low skilled workers from within Europe we will be able to block once we're out.
How will we block them? Low skilled workers have been coming here from outside the EU for years and still are coming here, but now in greater numbers. We have complete control over non-EU immigration, but are entirely incompetent at enforcing those controls. What makes you think we will be more successful with EU migrants?Doh. It's low skilled workers from within Europe we will be able to block once we're out.
It only cost us our steel industry, have you been living on the moon?It works here too. We have to shape up and do what we do best - not try to compete with people who can do that stuff for way cheaper.
Do you really think China's recent economic expansion has hurt us? No. Of course not. We stopped trying to compete manufacuring wigets and the like - and got stuck into stuff we CAN compete at. Like stuff that requires using one's brain.
I was including trains, light rail and trams of course, which don't rely on batteries. And the hydrogen production using electricity is inefficient and expensiveHowever, despite the huge improvements achieved, batteries are still pretty darned heavy and take quite some time to recharge. It doesn't take much to imagine using hydrogen as a much lighter way of storing a given amount of energy and, potentially, much faster "charging" - whether that uses pre-filled hydrogen containers or pumps hydrogen into the vehicle's storage tank. Whether we can ever achieve that is questionable, of course.
Absolutely! The same syndrome is applicable to all other government-controlled, directly or indirectly, services.The Border Agency has been starved of cash to the point that it is unfit for purpose.
I thought Zog perhaps but in principle, we are agreed that there is a certain detachment from the reality of life on Earth where this contributor is concerned.have you been living on the moon?
Some of us were hoping he was the astute one. Not that I am French or I vote or...Nothing new in this AK, our far worse 2011 nation wide riots were protests at all the things that people were upset about. An unholy alliance of the poor and deprived with the ill treated and the politically angry, plus those just taking advantage of the chaos to help themselves to what they couldn't afford.
But the root that triggers these events is always genuine, so they can only be prevented by dealing with the root problem. Macron has belatedly given way now, too late, he should have been more politically astute in the first place. Fewer self publicising trips abroad and more attention at home would have been wiser.
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Indeed, that was how he portrayed himself, but I quickly saw before the French that he was just an empty vessel, a sort of French Tony Blair.Some of us were hoping he was the astute one. Not that I am French or I vote or...
There is no tariff on wine from the EU to the UK. There may be HMRC excise and duty, frankly I don't know but that is a UK tax not an EU one.We can get 'fresh' food from as far away as New Zealand - refrigerated transport and all that. Plus just wait for all the wine we can get without those EU tariffs. Hic.
I have the same suspicion Tom.Oh, there's definitely an amazing similarity both in tone and delivery between what I have read today from Jennifer Jenkins and another correspondent from not long ago. I can feel it in my water!
Someone who was laughed at and generally derided on account of his views expressed in these pages. It isn't a case of 'Jekyll and Hyde', more of a 'Hyde and Hyde', I'd say with this person.
Tom
Yes we are the ones who tax wine heavily, not the EU:There is no tariff on wine from the EU to the UK. There may be HMRC excise and duty, frankly I don't know but that is a UK tax not an EU one.
B-liar!….has he said something new? Why hasn't he been taken into custody yet? Harold Shipman was the UK's most prolific murderer, convicted of 15 but almost certainly guilty of in excess of 250 killings…..until B-liar came along and eclipsed Shipman's total, with a figure, according to educated estimates, running into the millions.Like Blair, promising a new way without saying or knowing what that might be.
Quite fun when you think about it, disguises really need new propaganda material and a change of styleI have the same suspicion Tom.
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dead link tom i'm afraidYou better believe it! This cretin had the most crass placard on public display today.
I think he should have been detained and questioned at least.
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Tom
If you took any it was too muchIs that within one's control though? How can you 'remember' something? If you do - it was pure luck - you can't 'force' yourself to remember something can you? Anymore than you can force yourself to forget something. Thoughts just appear in your head right? There's no way you can know what your next thought is going to be. Try it. Try to tell me what your next thought is going to be BEFORE you have it. Whatever thought it is - well it just arrived huh?
Maybe I took too much LSD at college. My husband says I didn't take enough - but what does he know?