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It wasn't a decision, it was a fook up - Camoron used it to stop UKIP and he was not expected to actually go through with it, at least not that early when the economy is not doing well.
^this
But the great unwashed will use it as an opportunity for fook-up^2
I blame Corbyn. Labour ought to be able to win over the so-called working class, not that there is such a thing in the 21st century, but Corbyn seems even more out of touch with ordinary people than Cameron. And that just opens the door for the likes of Nasty Nige.
Well Corbyn is only interested in people who are already in his own tent.
Working classes will pay dearly for it - a pint of Carling will be at least £10. I am off to pub to drink Guiness whilst they still sell it here...
I didn't think about Guinness.
I blame Corbyn. Labour ought to be able to win over the so-called working class, not that there is such a thing in the 21st century, but Corbyn seems even more out of touch with ordinary people than Cameron. And that just opens the door for the likes of Nasty Nige.
Not any more. Let's face it, this was another one of Gidiot's hamfisted political ploys and Dave only went along with it because he expected a coalition, at best.
The rich decided we were to have a referendum in the first place to stop other rich folk gaining power.
Not any more. Let's face it, this was another one of Gidiot's hamfisted political ploys and Dave only went along with it because he expected a coalition, at best.
Now that we have it, they're rather surprised about the reality on the ground. In working class areas. You can argue that they're wrong, misinformed, that the poorest in society always suffer the most from an economic downturn - I don't think many would dispute that - but, from where I'm standing, working class communities seem to be saying that they have little left to lose. When Gidiot joined the political dots in his colouring book before the GE, he forgot to connect the dot between Tory austerity and the referendum as an expression of bottom-up power. Oh well.
The rich decided we were to have a referendum in the first place to stop other rich folk gaining power.
It wasn't a decision, it was a fook up - Camoron used it to stop UKIP and he was not expected to actually go through with it, at least not that early when the economy is not doing well.
Working classes will pay dearly for it - a pint of Carling will be at least £10. I am off to pub to drink Guiness whilst they still sell it here...
You'd better inform the working classes, because they don't believe you. Perhaps it's because they're too ignorant and prefer to parrot the views of the Murdoch press?
The rich determine the climate, outside or inside the EU, so it's no surprise when they're able to withstand any weather. This isn't about the rich.
It is though.
The rich decided we were to have a referendum in the first place to stop other rich folk gaining power.
If the Biriths elite (ie the rich) lose a lot of money, who do you think they'd make up for the loss, workers from Germany or workers from UK? If the rich lose half of their money because Sterling will half in value then they would still be pretty rich, where as workers will be fooked.
You'd better inform the working classes, because they don't believe you. Perhaps it's because they're too ignorant and prefer to parrot the views of the Murdoch press?
The rich determine the climate, outside or inside the EU, so it's no surprise when they're able to withstand any weather. This isn't about the rich.
There's a reason that Hamface and Gidiot are plugging the line that Brexit is for the rich, namely that they know precisely the opposite is true, and they're worried. Word on the street in traditional, working class, Labour communities is, er, different than expected.
If the British elite (ie the rich) lose a lot of money, who do you think they'd make up for the loss, workers from Germany or workers from UK? If the rich lose half of their money because Sterling will half in value then they would still be pretty rich, where as workers will be fooked.
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