From the same show
19:36
Serious question. Is that our resident believer? He uses the exact same arguments and the exact same techniques.

From the same show
19:36
Has he been banned? Not online since Monday and his profile isn't available.Serious question. Is that our resident believer? He uses the exact same arguments and the exact same techniques.![]()
Has he been banned? Not online since Monday and his profile isn't available.
Good riddance if so.
Aye, the 'we' is ambiguous- I was meaning Brits in general.I guess it depends what you mean as "we". You or I might see our culture as benefiting from immigration. Steve from Harlow clearly perceives his culture as under threat.
And this thread has mistakenly largely painted the Brexit vote as almost wholly a protest vote confined to the old and the white working class but it's not as simple as that. There was a big British Asian vote for Brexit in some areas which doesn't tie into that narrative and highlights a diversity within the leave vote that gets overlooked and is therefore not understood.
He'll probably return as"I still believe"I don't know, I couldn't tag him, so maybe.
He'll probably return as"I still believe"
Davis says the agreement is non-binding. So was the referendum.
I think they're still trying to ride two horses with one ass. Stave off Farage, Gove and Johnson, keep "the people" on board and make the right noises to the EU.Why does he need to state the obvious, are people asking him about it? Without a comprehensive free trade deal, the agreement can't exist within WTO rules.
Gove and Davis are doing a great job of inspiring confidence into business, investors and the City, they will be deciding what to do very soon. Do they trust the UK government, the EU certainly doesn't.
There are three choices as there always has been:
1. Hard Brexit, no deal, hard border, WTO rules and the consequences of that
2. Soft Brexit, customs union and some form of deal of one of the models e.g. Norway
3. Call the whole thing off
They are just continuing with same lies as they have done for the past two years.
I agree it's a fudge and think with former soviet states refusing to accept asylum seekers to the point of being fined means both sides were happy to get small wins with some concessions. This way it keeps the markets calm with the promise of more heated debates post February.
Of course one of the other 27 nations could throw a spanner into the works by not agreeing to this.
Re your point two I believe the model we are seeking is not Norway more like Canada.
I agree it's a fudge and think with former soviet states refusing to accept asylum seekers to the point of being fined means both sides were happy to get small wins with some concessions. This way it keeps the markets calm with the promise of more heated debates post February.
Of course one of the other 27 nations could throw a spanner into the works by not agreeing to this.
Re your point two I believe the model we are seeking is not Norway more like Canada.
Aye, the 'we' is ambiguous- I was meaning Brits in general.
A friend of Indian descent was genuinely appalled at how narrow the remain vote was in his home town of Leicester.
My wife is not white and she's African, so not sure Steve from Harlow will approve.
Gove and Davis are doing a great job of inspiring confidence into business, investors and the City, they will be deciding what to do very soon. Do they trust the UK government, the EU certainly doesn't.
There are three choices as there always has been:
1. Hard Brexit, no deal, hard border, WTO rules and the consequences of that
2. Soft Brexit, customs union and some form of deal of one of the models e.g. Norway
3. Call the whole thing off
They are just continuing with same lies as they have done for the past two years.
You're obviously right, what 'we' means shouldn't be ambiguous, but different people certainly have their own interpretation. Davis was showing his knowledge and understanding of the Brexit process once again, calling for the 'Canada plus, plus, plus' deal to be signed upon leaving, when negotiations will be just starting when we leave. I guess we go WTO in the interim at least by default.Exactly, when I refer to British people I mean all British people, not just white Christians as some people think.
There are racists and xenophobes in all countries and all religions and all ethnic backgrounds.
How many brown skinned Polish or Bulgarian people are there in the UK then?
I would love someone to tell me which language I can speak in and then I would really be unpleasant.
So David Davis thinks that publicly stating he might renage on any deal is good preparation for entering into protracted trade negotiations with multiple countries....
What a muppet!
Will he be telling the EU that the "cheque is in the post"?
Still no Mogg quotes?
So David Davis thinks that publicly stating he might renage on any deal is good preparation for entering into protracted trade negotiations with multiple countries....
What a muppet!
Will he be telling the EU that the "cheque is in the post"?
We don't have a deal, we have agreed to a huge pay off fee providing we get a favourable trade deal. There's no point in paying the EU a huge pay off for a poor trade deal. If there's not a favourable trade deal we don't pay the divorce pay off, it's simple negotiation. The pay off divorce fee is simply a dangling carrott during negotations, it's no obligation to the UK otherwise.
I am pretty sure that the EU made sure that they tied the UK on these obligations. Till now the EU had been winning one battle after another, there's nothing to suggest that the UK can outwit the EU on this detail.
You're obviously right, what 'we' means shouldn't be ambiguous, but different people certainly have their own interpretation. Davis was showing his knowledge and understanding of the Brexit process once again, calling for the 'Canada plus, plus, plus' deal to be signed upon leaving, when negotiations will be just starting when we leave. I guess we go WTO in the interim at least by default.
It's an international trade deal, who are they going to appeal to if the UK doesn't honour the deal, the European Court of Human Rights? Davis is correct in that the EU can't strike a divorce deal and then think they can offer a worthless trade deal with any chance of having the UK honouring the divorce payments in any settlement.
Yep, I've no idea if he is super-lazy, as the persistent rumour suggests, or a moron. Maybe a combo of the two. I'm just writing up his interview for our news alert in the morning. I normally always try to write everything dead straight, but I think this may be somewhat barbed- will rile some of our readers and get a reaction though.I've just managed to watch the whole Marr interview. Either Davis doesn't understand one thing about what is happening or he is lying about every detail. I thought Johnson was incompetent, this surpasses even him.
You wouldn't buy a second hand car from this lot, never mind do a trade deal. How the hell does he get away with this.
However, he insisted the agreement so far is ‘non-binding’, much like the EU referendum, in an irony lost on him.
Yep, I've no idea if he is super-lazy, as the persistent rumour suggests, or a moron. Maybe a combo of the two. I'm just writing up his interview for our news alert in the morning. I normally always try to write everything dead straight, but I think this may be somewhat barbed- will rile some of our readers and get a reaction though.
As an investment mag, our readers are predominantly Tory-voting late 40 to early 50-something white wealthier individuals running money.
I can't figure out if he's lying or just inept. I'm also not quite sure which is more worrying.Don't envy your job, does he realise that being idiotic or a downright liar might wash with the public but it won't wash with businesses, banks and investors nor with the EU. I still can't believe I watched what I did.
It's an international trade deal, who are they going to appeal to if the UK doesn't honour the deal, the European Court of Human Rights? Davis is correct in that the EU can't strike a divorce deal and then think they can offer a worthless trade deal with any chance of having the UK honouring the divorce payments in any settlement.
To be fair, not paying this £Xbn settlement is our only card in the negotiations. Of course the Govt is going to threaten to use it. If its legal or not i have no idea..So David Davis thinks that publicly stating he might renage on any deal is good preparation for entering into protracted trade negotiations with multiple countries....
What a muppet!
Will he be telling the EU that the "cheque is in the post"?
If that is what he wants it means bailing out the Greek government.This noble continent, comprising on the whole the fairest and the most cultivated regions of the earth; enjoying a temperate and equable climate, is the home of all the great parent races of the western world. It is the fountain of Christian faith and Christian ethics. It is the origin of most of the culture, arts, philosophy and science both of ancient and modem times.
If Europe were once united in the sharing of its common inheritance, there would be no limit to the happiness, to the prosperity and glory which its three or four hundred million people would enjoy. Yet it is from Europe that have sprung that series of frightful nationalistic quarrels, originated by the Teutonic nations, which we have seen even in this twentieth century and in our own lifetime, wreck the peace and mar the prospects of all mankind.
And what is the plight to which Europe has been reduced?
Some of the smaller States have indeed made a good recovery, but over wide areas a vast quivering mass of tormented, hungry, care-worn and bewildered human beings gape at the ruins of their cities and homes, and scan the dark horizons for the approach of some new peril, tyranny or terror.
Among the victors there is a babel of jarring voices; among the vanquished the sullen silence of despair.
That is all that Europeans, grouped in so many ancient States and nations, that is all that the Germanic Powers have got by tearing each other to pieces and spreading havoc far and wide.
Indeed, but for the fact that the great Republic across the Atlantic Ocean has at length realised that the ruin or enslavement of Europe would involve their own fate as well, and has stretched out hands of succour and guidance, the Dark Ages would have returned in all their cruelty and squalor.
They may still return.
Yet all the while there is a remedy which, if it were generally and spontaneously adopted, would as if by a miracle transform the whole scene, and would in a few years make all Europe, or the greater part of it, as free and as happy as Switzerland is today.
What is this sovereign remedy?
It is to re-create the European Family, or as much of it as we can, and provide it with a structure under which it can dwell in peace, in safety and in freedom.
We must build a kind of United States of Europe.
If that is what he wants it means bailing out the Greek government.
To be fair, not paying this £Xbn settlement is our only card in the negotiations. Of course the Govt is going to threaten to use it. If its legal or not i have no idea..
David Davis has clashed with the Irish government after claiming that the Brexit divorce agreement between Britain and the EU was a “statement of intent” rather than something legally enforceable.
The Brexit secretary’s comments came after it was reported that Downing Street advisers had told cabinet ministers who campaigned to leave the EU that promises around full regulatory alignment were “meaningless”.
Theresa May also appeared to suggest there was still some flexibility in the deal reached at the end of last week, writing to all Tory MPs – in a letter seen by the Guardian – to set out the details of the agreement but promising that “nothing is agreed until everything is agreed”.
In a statement issued after Davis had made his remarks to the BBC, the Irish government warned: “Both Ireland and the EU will be holding the UK to the phase one agreement.”
As i have said, ive no idea of the legality or otherwise. The credit rating angle is interesting - it would certainly be messy!If we want to be an economic pariah with no credit rating and a business reputation like Greece, then sure we could not pay our bills.
As i have said, ive no idea of the legality or otherwise. The credit rating angle is interesting - it would certainly be messy!