Brexit, for once some facts.

gray198

Esteemed Pedelecer
Apr 4, 2012
1,592
1,069
I have attacked the lack of substance of their arguments. And when it comes to tax havens, for example, their lack of ethics or understanding. The fact that you voted leave without understanding the damage you're doing makes you a far more destructive antagonist, to this country, than I will ever be by trying to shed light on your decision to vote leave.
can't help yourself can you. You don't know what the effect will be on this country. You have chosen to believe the people who say it will be bad and I haven't. You have accused leavers of being racist stupid etc. I could say the same about those who wish to remain. Call them cowards Say they are thick because they cannot see beyond Brussels. We never asked to join the EU . We were never consulted. Just forced into it by the likes of Blair, who by the way promised a referendum on 2 separate occasions and then reneged. Possibly because he could see the writing on the wall. When it comes down to it we are leaving and are going to have to make the best of it. I personally prefer BJ over JC to get us through. If I am wrong it won't be the first time, but I may be right and am willing to take the chance
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,196
30,602
Is Luxembourg or is it not a place where people and companies can hide money and benefit from secret banking, and weren't a lot of these deals done by a certain Mr Junker or is the eu just perfect.
Miniscule compared to the total of our Tax Havens, but of course they are all ethically wrong

Personally though I'll miss Jean-Claude Juncker and his mischievous sense of humour. He has wonderful ways of dealing with awkward people.

As with Viktor Orban, the hard line prime minister of minor country Hungary at their last get together.

With an impish smile Jean -Claude greeted him with "And how is our little dictator?".

Wonderful, Orban cut down to size in an instant.
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gray198

Esteemed Pedelecer
Apr 4, 2012
1,592
1,069
Miniscule compared to the total of our Tax Havens, but of course they are all ethically wrong

Personally though I'll miss Jean-Claude Juncker and his mischievous sense of humour. He has wonderful ways of dealing with awkward people.

As with Viktor Orban, the hard line prime minister of minor country Hungary at their last get together.

With an impish smile Jean -Claude greeted him with "And how is our little dictator?".

Wonderful, Orban cut down to size in an instant.
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similar sense of humour to JRM then
 
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50Hertz

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 2, 2019
2,199
2,403
Oh do give over, this man is a pretentious prat intend on misleading the public with this faux "respect me I'm superior to you" crap.
If you support this sort of pretence, you are the one needing to grow up, it's a throwback to the past of lords and serfs.
Wow! That's seriously mixed up thinking.

There is everything wrong with the following statement
"There is nothing wrong with aspiring to a set of clearly defined standards. What is it about his rules that you specifically object to? What is so terrible? "
What is wrong is the notion that he or you have the right to impose your personal standards on people you regard as underlings.
JRM issued a set of standards regarding how he expects the people who work for him to communicate on his behalf. If he has developed a format for his communications, then he has every right to impose that format on those employed to communicate on his behalf.

And then you repeat the error of assumed superiority,
Indeed this "This “nappy filling” temper tantrum type behaviour must stop. Grow up.

Who or what do you imagine you are to make comments like that?

The day will never come when you tell me what to do or think, kindly remember that.
The comment is appropriate and it still stands.

I admire the way JRM communicates. He is clear, polite, unambiguous and has an enviable vocabulary, which explains why the left don't like him.

People would do well to aspire to JRM's standards of communication instead of dumbing down language. The BBC are one of the worst offenders, constantly pushing comedy regional accents into all aspects of their broadcasting.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,196
30,602
We never asked to join the EU . We were never consulted. Just forced into it by the likes of Blair, who by the way promised a referendum on 2 separate occasions and then reneged.
This is the grossest distortion of the situation, missing out all the background. As I've posted before more than once, when Ted Heath was taking us into the EEC it was made abundantly clear by him and others that the intention was to work towards European Unity. That the wider public only bothered with the headline Common Market was their fault, no-one else's. I and others who bothered to look further knew the truth which was never kept from us, and I'd known that from the Treaty of Rome onwards.

We did ask to join the EEC many times, and we did sign up to all the treaties towards unity. It was John Major who fought for the Maastricht Treaty acceptance to finalise our path to unity and he signed up to it, Blair not involved since he wasn't in power at the time.

And it was the UK public that used the 1975 referendum to approve the path we were on. They also elected all the pro EU leaders and governments over the years, even when there were alternatives standing for election.

I don't like Blair or politicians in general, but being truthful and fair is important. We have been where we were for 47 years entirely due to the UK public's acquiescence.
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gray198

Esteemed Pedelecer
Apr 4, 2012
1,592
1,069
This is the grossest distortion of the situation, missing out all the background. As I've posted before more than once, when Ted Heath was taking us into the EEC it was made abundantly clear by him and others that the intention was to work towards European Unity. That the wider public only bothered with the headline Common Market was their fault, no-one else's. I and others who bothered to look further knew the truth which was never kept from us, and I'd known that from the Treaty of Rome onwards.

We did ask to join the EEC many times, and we did sign up to all the treaties towards unity. It was John Major who fought for the Maastricht Treaty acceptance to finalise our path to unity and he signed up to it, Blair not involved since he wasn't in power at the time.

And it was the UK public that used the 1975 referendum to approve the path we were on. They also elected all the pro EU leaders and governments over the years, even when there were alternatives standing for election.

I don't like Blair or politicians in general, but being truthful and fair is important. We have been where we were for 47 years entirely due to the UK public's acquiescence.
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i recall a vote about joining the Common Market, but don't ever recall one about joining the EU. Maybe we were all expected to read all the documents and legalese to see what they were really up to. It was Blair who was in when the Lisbon treaty was passed .Wasn't that the one that had it's title changed so that we didn't get a vote on it, but it was still the same. I seem to think that Gordon Brown snuck in and out of the back door to sign it. And John Major wonders why he lost the 1997 election having sold us down the river with Maastricht
 
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OxygenJames

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 8, 2012
2,593
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can't help yourself can you. You don't know what the effect will be on this country. You have chosen to believe the people who say it will be bad and I haven't. You have accused leavers of being racist stupid etc. I could say the same about those who wish to remain. Call them cowards Say they are thick because they cannot see beyond Brussels. We never asked to join the EU . We were never consulted. Just forced into it by the likes of Blair, who by the way promised a referendum on 2 separate occasions and then reneged. Possibly because he could see the writing on the wall. When it comes down to it we are leaving and are going to have to make the best of it. I personally prefer BJ over JC to get us through. If I am wrong it won't be the first time, but I may be right and am willing to take the chance
Excellent reply. Bravo.
 
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flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,196
30,602
i recall a vote about joining the Common Market, but don't ever recall one about joining the EU. Maybe we were all expected to read all the documents and legalese to see what they were really up to.
No it wasn't necessary to read any documents. Just take note of what was said by politicians in speeches quoted on the various news programs at the time. From Churchill speaking strongly in favour of European Unity onwards, the public have never taken any notice of what was being said.

They weren't interested in the subject so didn't bother to inform themselves, and it's little different now.
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jonathan.agnew

Esteemed Pedelecer
Dec 27, 2018
2,400
3,381
Is Luxembourg or is it not a place where people and companies can hide money and benefit from secret banking, and weren't a lot of these deals done by a certain Mr Junker or is the eu just perfect.
Which part of the word 'proportional' dont you understand?
 
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oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
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An election may, then perhaps more sensible indirect representation could mean each of those important decisions are not subjected to a mindless misinformed populist vote. I doubt very much whether the majority of the electorate is really thick enough to opt for a suicide pact with boris.
I think you are being a tad optimistic there!
 
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jonathan.agnew

Esteemed Pedelecer
Dec 27, 2018
2,400
3,381
can't help yourself can you. You don't know what the effect will be on this country. You have chosen to believe the people who say it will be bad and I haven't. You have accused leavers of being racist stupid etc. I could say the same about those who wish to remain. Call them cowards Say they are thick because they cannot see beyond Brussels. We never asked to join the EU . We were never consulted. Just forced into it by the likes of Blair, who by the way promised a referendum on 2 separate occasions and then reneged. Possibly because he could see the writing on the wall. When it comes down to it we are leaving and are going to have to make the best of it. I personally prefer BJ over JC to get us through. If I am wrong it won't be the first time, but I may be right and am willing to take the chance
Your facts are so fundamentally wrong - about the uk - eu history, that it is neither possible nor worth responding to this post. You also evidently have a massive chip on the shoulder about racism. Now why on earth would that be?
 
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