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Lynne (Tigger's Mum)
(last edited Oct 21, 2016 03:19PM)
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Oct 21, 2016 03:19PM

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Leaving aside the issue of Scotland and Scottish independence for a minute, what happened to the hundreds of billions of pounds of North Sea Oil money?
As far as I'm concerned, Westminster's handling of this money has to be one of the greatest acts of criminality ever inflicted on the British people. The money was more or less poured down the drain!

London survived the Luftwaffe. It can survive Brexit.

what happened to it is what happened to all money that passes through the hands of British governments. It gets spent. Poured into a myriad short term fixes and schemes which parties hope will win them friends at the next election. The British Government is a black hole into which an infinite amount of money can be poured and will only make the hole bigger

At least the short term fixes and schemes have some benefit to the plebs.



I think this 'trade deal' is testing the water for TTIP.

Trade deals are complex beasts that take years to negotiate.



yes, that's what I was hinting at David :-)

technically two years after Article 50.
But no we'll be dealing under WTO rules and the latest calculations indicate that as EU member states will be paying more in tariffs to import into the UK than UK firms will be to import into the eu, technically the government could subsidise the companies paying the tariff to export into the eu and pocket the rest as a nice profit :-)

technically two years after Article 50."
I took the government at their word when they said the trigger would be March '17. Hence the 'just over 2 years time'


what more farcical than voting in UKIP MEPs who don't believe in the institution they are voted into

I was gonna say 'these days' but thought that'd be redundant.

Taking a few liberties with the source, politics repeats itself, initially as tragedy, thereafter as farce. We've been going too long for any tragedies to be anywhere but in the dim and distant past, so we must put up with thread-bare stand-up :(

I was gonna say 'these days' but thought that'd be redundant."
none that I can see

what more farcical tha..."
Are you seriously suggesting that Nigel Farage failed to appear at EU fisheries commission meetings, and then moaned about EU fisheries policy afterwards? :)

Another myth shattered...

We need Parliament to be an effective counter to the executive.

I suspect that from the Conservative point of view they'd prefer the election earlier while UKIP is still in total disarray.
Waiting until 2020 with the debate continuing on and things getting more and more acrimonious would probably kickstart UKIP and make a conservative win in 2020 less absolute.
Indeed I could see some within Labour looking for an election soon because if Labour does crash out, as they could if they vote to remain and really hack off their northern voters, then the anti-Corbyn wing might see it as their only chance to get rid of Corbyn

If they vote remain, when the majority of their voters voted Leave - and that's a fact across large swathes of the UK - they may be fearful of a backlash and losing their seat. So they may vout out even if they personally want to remain.

I doubt it. Most of them used to work for the EU.

Anybody who voted leave will never back a pro-EU candidate. I know this because in Scotland, after 2014, all the Yes voters went to the SNP.
Labour are finished, because their voters and old heartlands will vote for UKIP.
And that's before you even consider Corbyn, Middle England, boundary changes et all.
It's the 1980s all over again for Labour.

W..."
We also need a written constitution, elected second chamber, and a proper federal system. We can't keep muddying along like this.
Say what you want about the USA, but at least their powers for Congress/Senate/Executive/SCOTUS are clearly laid out for all to see.


the problem with the US system has been laid open for the last few years, ours produces a government that can govern.
Having an elected second chamber merely confuses who has the authority, is a member of the upper chamber elected this month more legitimate than a member of the lower chamber elected three years ago?


the problem with the US system has been laid op..."
A written constitution would codify that.
The US system is not perfect, but it's the world's most powerful nation, so it must be doing something right.

Hopefully, our MPs will comprehend that simple fact....

It was non-binding, even though they voted in favour of it. It didn't say hard or soft BREXIT, and every other excuse they can think of....
Weasel words from weasel MPs....





Getting the feeling that was the EU plan from the beginning. Tie up its member states with so much rules and red tape, do so for 40 years, with the net result that it's very hard to leave and untangle the web....
Books mentioned in this topic
The Beiderbecke Affair (other topics)The Grain Market in the Roman Empire: A Social, Political and Economic Study (other topics)
The Peasants Are Revolting (other topics)
How to Lie with Statistics (other topics)
That Old Ace in the Hole (other topics)
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