Jermey Clarkson puts it rather well: Jeremy Clarkson: Asking hospital patients for passports isn't racist - it makes sense if we want our NHS to survive I rather like his reference to the performance of Tim Farron on QT, discussing this topic.
If the Scottishists ever get independence. Charge them for access to the UK market. The Remainains seem to be banging on that this is what the UK will have to do to trade with the EU. I don't know what they propose to use to pay the bill though. They'll have no currency.
Woosh again. We are talking about the duke here FFS. :Banghead: Talk percentages all you want. But almost 2 million more people voted to leave the EU than to remain. Decisive indeed. :Hilarious:
I know you did not accuse me of being a member of Britain First! Still, thanks for answering my question
maybe we should tell who ever that no deal is better than a bad deal? :Smuggrin:. no currency eh? hmm. :Facepalm: triple A follows the oil, old bean
Bah, you'll sell the rights to the oil fields for glass beads or summat. You cannot be trusted to look after yourselves.
hmm, your good at this ruberanul. i think that what yon lefty meant when he said the english need to look in the mirror.. sad, but true. dear dear dear.
Bank exodus :Mooning: Bank exodus? - BBC News Also, isn't it interesting that we merely mention that offering a reduction in corporation tax has everybody frothing at the mouth, yet Paris seems to have beaten us to it and nobody bats an eyelid. Quote : Paris is on a major charm offensive. It is promising to waive France's famously rigid labour laws. Its mandated 35-hour working week and the difficulty of firing people means that it's hard to cut a high-cost base when volatile banking revenues slump. I'm also told it's offering special corporate and income tax rate sweeteners to lure banks and their highly paid staff. Axel Weber, the chairman of UBS, told me he was sceptical there was the political flexibility to enshrine those inducements in law. And, as another bank insider said, if it's political risk you want to avoid - why pick France? PM May would have known this, it's her business to know, as such she's every right to bring the notion to everyone's attention.
Well, a post Brexit UK will have a lot more flexibility to offer deals to any businesses it chooses without the red tape of the EU. I expect Paris and Frankfurt to pull all the stops out, but ultimately get only crumbs. They are still goverened by EU regulation. Those 1000 transfers being talked about could quite easily come back very quickly.
But they are not, one side is dealing with reality and moving forward and the other side is still crying mum mum this democracy is horrible when I lose mum