Originally posted by LondonManc
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EU appoints former French minister who blames Britain for losing his job to lead Bre
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Originally posted by GB9 View PostBut it voted to be part of the UK which has a UK government. It had a chance to leave but didnt want it.
You really don't get democracy, do you.Comment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostKorbyn won't mind wealth tax and all the other tulip that idiot is proposing, if anything he'd put him in charge of implementing it.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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Originally posted by LondonManc View PostYou've missed the point. Korbyn won't make it to the next election."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostThey'll want another vote, that's democracy innit, or you propose NOT to let them vote again?
Sturgeon is holding back in case she loses, or more probable, she wins but the EU tell her to apply like anyone else and the Spanish would flatly refuse to let them in.Comment
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Originally posted by GB9 View PostI would definitely let them vote again. Better still, I would let England vote on whether or not Scotland should stay in.
Sturgeon is holding back in case she loses, or more probable, she wins but the EU tell her to apply like anyone else and the Spanish would flatly refuse to let them in.
The options now seem to be rejoining the EU at the bottom rung and embracing the Euro whilst accepting that Scotland may have to accept an undefined number of asylum seekers/economic migrants.
And even then any number of other EU members may be ready to torpedo such an eventuality with Spain leading the queue.
In short, for all her bluff and bluster, the appetite for another Indy referendum is lukewarm at best with no real likelihood of the result being any different to the one that occurred less than 2 short years ago.
I suppose they could always show some more reruns of the factually embarrassing "Braveheart" fiasco with the cuddly short-arsed Aussie in the lead role, although I think that particular option has probably already galvanised the support of the optimum number of gullible simpletons available to it.
Maybe a remake of "Whisky Galore" in which the Treasury sequester all the proceeds to refurbish Buck House's Duck Pond might tease out any latent Jacobite sympathy vote that still remain untapped?
Last edited by shaunbhoy; 27 July 2016, 22:26.“The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain”Comment
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