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How long will bremoaners here whine on about Brexit?

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    #11
    The remoaners are cretins who are best kept away from the normal people in general.

    Just keep throwing them the odd bone in the brexit forums to keep them busy. They will never notice.

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      #12
      For as long as I live...

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        #13
        Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
        517 days of abject misery and inconsolable whining and toy throwing since 23rd June 2016.

        486 days of further abject misery and inconsolable whining and toy throwing until 29th March 2019.


        At least we are > 0.5 way through the repetitive bitching and griping on here.
        Why are you describing Brexiters in an anti-remainer thread?
        Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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          #14
          No worries Brexit is going swimmingly. There will be some "rearrangement" of UK businesses as for example 40,000 jobs in financial services disappear due to the movement of Euro derivatives clearing to the EU

          40,000 jobs at risk due to the relocation of Euroclearing

          All major European and US banks throw their weight behind the movement of Euro clearing to the EU

          However this is not a problem as it will be offset easily by new jobs manning torpedo boats to defend the UK's 12 mile limit.
          I'm alright Jack

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            #15
            Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
            The Bremoaners AND Brexiteers are cretins who are best kept away from the normal people in general.
            FTFY

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              #16
              Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
              The remoaners are normal people who are best kept away from the divorced bankrupt failures in general.
              FTFY

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                #17
                Fook Em™
                How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
                  No worries Brexit is going swimmingly. There will be some "rearrangement" of UK businesses as for example 40,000 jobs in financial services disappear due to the movement of Euro derivatives clearing to the EU

                  40,000 jobs at risk due to the relocation of Euroclearing

                  All major European and US banks throw their weight behind the movement of Euro clearing to the EU

                  However this is not a problem as it will be offset easily by new jobs manning torpedo boats to defend the UK's 12 mile limit.
                  ...and of course by all those new trade deals we are going to strike, although it seems the Bobs are indicating that may take quite a while....
                  Britain must accept higher levels of immigration from India if it hopes to sign a free trade agreement after Brexit, a senior Indian diplomat has warned, as he predicted it could take up to a decade to secure the deal.

                  YK Sinha, India’s High Commissioner to the UK, said "freer movement of people and professionals" had to form part of any future deal to ensure it was “mutually beneficial.”

                  Speaking to Indian business leaders in London, Mr Sinha said he was “very confident” that a “winning partnership” between the two countries would emerge after Britain's departure from the EU.

                  However, he also warned that signing a free trade agreement was “obviously not going to be easy” and suggested that the deal may not be complete until 2030.

                  Britain must accept more immigrants if it wants a free trade deal, Indian diplomat warns

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                    #19
                    But I am beginning to think that there is more to this than Brexiters’ failure to accept (or perhaps even to understand) the consequences of their decision. Brexiters bemoan the failure of remainers to ‘get behind’ Brexit but they themselves seem singularly lacking in any big, coherent, optimistic, strategic or even enjoyable vision of Brexit. Given that (as they constantly say) they won the vote and are now enacting their dream policy you might expect such a vision, and if it existed many of the current problems would fall away. They would happily be saying ‘sure, we will meet our pre-existing financial commitments, these are of little importance given the exciting new opportunities Brexit brings’. Or, on citizens’ rights, they would be saying ‘fine, it is a little unusual to have another court overseeing these rights, but we recognize this is an unusual situation and if you want this, it is not a big problem’. As for Barnier’s speech, the response would be no more than a raised eyebrow, as if to say ‘of course we are leaving the single market, we told you that, remember’.

                    In short, we would see a generous, consensus-building approach to making an agreement with the EU, rather than a transactional, fractious, suspicious ‘negotiation’ in which at each step Britain is dragged to agreeing things it at first says it will not agree, squandering time and goodwill. After all, if Brexit were as wonderful as they claim, why not be generous? Why not be magnanimous? We’re free, and heading for much better things! For that matter, the constant harrying of remainers for their lack of enthusiasm, their hang-dog resentment, not to mention their sabotage and treachery would all be irrelevant for Brexiters who were confident, even joyful, about the decision they had made.
                    http://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot....itain-was.html

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