Mozza
It’s Carrick you know
And if we don't agree to pay......??
There will be a lot of British ex-EU officials without a pension
And if we don't agree to pay......??
That's ok.....it'll be far cheaper for us to pay them.There will be a lot of British ex-EU officials without a pension
There will be a lot of British ex-EU officials without a pension
No doubt they improve at the micro level but the overall picture is large unemployment in the South (due to the euro straight jacket) and depressed wages in the West (the effect of immigration from the East).
Then we'll be in default on the billions in loans and grants we took from the EU, they will seek legal repairs against us and our already increasingly dodgy credit rating will drop to the level of Puerto Rico's. Good luck in signing all those beneficial trade agreements with the rest of the world then.And if we don't agree to pay......??
Ukippers swapping metric measurements on signs for ones with imperial measurements.
'I’m interested in immigration but my main thing is democracy,” said Mr Norman'
![]()
https://www.ft.com/content/509006b8-acb7-11e6-ba7d-76378e4fef24
Ukippers swapping metric measurements on signs for ones with imperial measurements.
'I’m interested in immigration but my main thing is democracy,” said Mr Norman'
![]()
https://www.ft.com/content/509006b8-acb7-11e6-ba7d-76378e4fef24
So we're blaming the poor economies of the south on the EU now are we? Funny, because I seem to remember them being pretty shit before the EU too. Spain and Italy have been badly run economically for at least my entire lifetime.
Come on now, just get with the program. Anything negative = EU's fault.
Unreal to blame the EU for Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and other warmer countries with a huge majority of people having a different outlook on life, taxes, economy.
The EU is failing system
Its also the EU fault that sometimes countries appoint clowns as foreign secretaries
The will of the people, not dictated too by the EU blah, blah, blah...I really don't understand the democratic argument.
They are, what I fail to understand with these cretins that seem to think we should revert to imperial units everywhere is that Britain was metric in 1969, ahead of joining the EU. Britain was the first to propose a universal metric system with John Wilkins in the 1600s and was ahead of the eventual adoption of the metric system in Europe in 1875 when the British Academy under Kelvin, Maxwell and Joule proposed adoption of a metric system across all scientific fields.As far as I'm aware in the UK distances are still measured in miles and speed in mph
News today of another unelected bunch of Europeans getting £369m from the British taxpayers. Oh never mind it's just the Royals, as you were. Remember to give generously to Children in Need.
We need to hold tight to the little things which matter most to our sovereign identity in the face of Europe's unreasonable demands. No quarter shall be given, you know what them Eurozoners are like. Give 'em 2.54cm and they'll take 1,609m.Makes sense. We can start charging for our pounds and ounces of Marmite in florins and groats too. That'll teach those uppity continentals.
"Whilst the rest of the World uses the Metric system let us in the UK revert back Imperial units" seems to me like a really good idea. In fact, in order for Britain to keep is identity I think Britain should revert back to many things like the feudalism, the gold standard, steam power and bartering. Kin nutjobs.
So we're blaming the poor economies of the south on the EU now are we? Funny, because I seem to remember them being pretty shit before the EU too. Spain and Italy have been badly run economically for at least my entire lifetime.
I really don't understand the democratic argument.
Welsh and Scottish now formally in the article 50 hoohah.
R (on the application of Miller & Dos Santos) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, 5-8 December 2016
The Supreme Court has today confirmed that the following applications to intervene in the above case have been granted:
Additionally, the Attorney General for Northern Ireland has made a reference to the Court regarding devolution issues relating to that jurisdiction. Permission to intervene is therefore not necessary.
- The Lord Advocate, Scottish Government
- The Counsel General for Wales, Welsh Government
- The 'Expat Interveners', George Birnie and Others
- The Independent Workers Union of Great Britain
Counsel for the Scottish Government and for the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain have been invited to address in their skeleton arguments the relevance of points of Scots Law, so far as they do not also form part of the law of England and Wales, to the determination of the present proceedings.
A further update on other applications to intervene, and a timetable for oral submissions during the hearing, will be issued in due course.
The Court is not in a position to publish the interveners' applications, and any queries on them should be addressed to the relevant party.
https://www.supremecourt.uk/news/interveners-article-50-brexit-case.html
I think the EU is just easy to accuse of being undemocratic because the EU is less well known and understood by most people than their national politics and the politicians that take senior positions aren't well known outside of their countries. It has it's flaws and they aren't much worse than national democracies but because it's more complicated and less familiar to most people the "unelected bureaucrats" line works well.
Should the uk start driving on the right aswell?They are, what I fail to understand with these cretins that seem to think we should revert to imperial units everywhere is that Britain was metric in 1969, ahead of joining the EU. Britain was the first to propose a universal metric system with John Wilkins in the 1600s and was ahead of the eventual adoption of the metric system in Europe in 1875 when the British Academy under Kelvin, Maxwell and Joule proposed adoption of a metric system across all scientific fields.
Why let such facts stand in the way of a good moan however, especially when it gives us the chance to blame the EU for something and after all it was that dastardly Napoleon that foisted the system on Europe and ensured the standard metre and kilogramme measures are held in Paris.
They are, what I fail to understand with these cretins that seem to think we should revert to imperial units everywhere is that Britain was metric in 1969, ahead of joining the EU. Britain was the first to propose a universal metric system with John Wilkins in the 1600s and was ahead of the eventual adoption of the metric system in Europe in 1875 when the British Academy under Kelvin, Maxwell and Joule proposed adoption of a metric system across all scientific fields.
Why let such facts stand in the way of a good moan however, especially when it gives us the chance to blame the EU for something and after all it was that dastardly Napoleon that foisted the system on Europe and ensured the standard metre and kilogramme measures are held in Paris.
Should the uk start driving on the right aswell?
Personally I'd love it, I've never had any trouble driving on either side of the road but hate the pain of toll booth, car park and security barriers if I'm on my own driving on the continent. I'm not selfish enough to think it's all about me though and recognise the cost it would incur in terms of changing all the UK road layouts, junctions, roundabouts, traffic lights etc that would suddenly be impractical or dangerous due to the opposite directions of traffic flow.Should the uk start driving on the right aswell?
No problem working in base 12, but for those who find maths a little harder I think limiting it to the number of fingers makes more sense. I'm sure however that once we've cut ourselves off from the rest of the world for long enough the inbreeding in the UK will see us as a nation catch up with the average number of fingers per capita in Blackburn and base 12 will look more logicalMetric is daft anyway. Base 12 is much better.
ok name themOther countries in the EU drive left. No one had ever complained about that
ok name them
a lot of the workers rights the EU provides mean nothing to many people. The vast majority of workers rights protected by the EU are in regard to health and safety, which don't get me wrong in theory it is good thing, but in practice I couldn't honestly count the amount of times I've signed health and safety paper work in jobs, just to be told by bosses to do the exact thing I signed saying I wouldn't do.Strong workers rights? Maybe if you are fortunate enough not to live in the southern eurozone and actually have a job. The EU is a big business project and has been since the off (Jean Monnet was a Wall Street banker). There's a reason the hard left like Corbyn (and Benn before him) are against it.
Personally I wanted to remain and I can't stand Corbyn but let's not build the EU into something it's not.
YeaaaaaahIreland, Malta and Cyprus
Yeaaaaaah
2 small islands without land borders and historic ties to Britain. Oh and ireland.
I'd have been impressed if you had named a land locked country
Yeaaaaaah
2 small islands without land borders and historic ties to Britain. Oh and ireland.
I'd have been impressed if you had named a land locked country