Originally posted by GreyWolf
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Reply to: UK leaves EU?
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Previously on "UK leaves EU?"
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Originally posted by petergriffin View PostYou should know that you can't have dual citizenship in NL.
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The freedom of movement agreement applies to the European Economic Area and that is not same thing as the European Union. It's EU + EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) + Switzerland. There is a Europe outside of the EU.
If the UK leaves the EU it may rejoin EFTA. It may even come to a bilateral agreement with the EU regarding freedom of movement just like the Swiss have. Either way, British people in Europe are not going to be loaded into cattle trucks for resettlement north of Calais.
You can all hold off on the dual citizenship application for the time being.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI think I'll get myself dual British-Dutch citizenship and hedge my bets.
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostMost of my facebook 'friends' seem to be in the 'yes' camp.
On the other side of the coin I notice the more well off members of the family have no intention of voting yes.
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Originally posted by Flashman View PostAnyone with real political [I]opportunism skills [/I]will be in Brussels where the gravy train is.
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Indeed, why get second-rate actors to do it when you can get the genuine article.
Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostThat may be so they are the only show in town for any sort of free enterprise IR35 or not
What ticks me off about MPs, regardless of party, and other anti avoidance 'crusaders' is that they're a) paid purely on the taxpayer's dime and b) are some of the biggest tax dodgers out there, and yet have the gall to whine about anyone other than them not paying "enough tax". There's always the obligatory finger-wagging at MNCs, but they're usually intelligent enough to realise that if these firms just pack up and leave, they won't have very good employment or GDP figures to brag about.
All I will say about the Tories is that they possess superior political acumen to their opposition's big names, e.g. Milliband, who has butchered his career as a PM before it even had the chance to begin.Last edited by Zero Liability; 16 January 2014, 21:01.
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Originally posted by Zero Liability View PostWhat, like 0.01% of them? I doubt any of them have much principled belief in anything, let alone market "fundamentalism". They are very keen on public-private partnerships and the like, which benefit them and their cronies, and perhaps they sell this as the "free market", but I don't think the Tories are any more committed to the concept than the other parties are, other than the aforementioned PPP and the market for political favours. Their actions certainly don't indicate it.
These are also the same people who refuse to do anything about IR35, which is certainly an area (along with NI/PAYE more generally) that should exercise market "fundamentalists", and affects their supposedly beloved middle-class more than the 'rich' or any other group.
The reason I have so little patience for the Tories is precisely their lack of much in the way of principle. They are a political engine, through and through.
I think increasingly we will see celebrities and sports stars going into British politics. All they'll have to do is read out the script on TV and look good doing so.
Anyone with real political talent will be in Brussels where the action is.
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Originally posted by Zero Liability View PostWhat, like 0.01% of them? I doubt any of them have much principled belief in anything, let alone market "fundamentalism". They are very keen on public-private partnerships and the like, which benefit them and their cronies, and perhaps they sell this as the "free market", but I don't think the Tories are any more committed to the concept than the other parties are, other than the aforementioned PPP and the market for political favours. Their actions certainly don't indicate it.
These are also the same people who refuse to do anything about IR35, which is certainly an area (along with NI/PAYE more generally) that should exercise market "fundamentalists", and affects their supposedly beloved middle-class more than the 'rich' or any other group.
The reason I have so little patience for the Tories is precisely their lack of much in the way of principle. They are a political engine, through and through.
That may be so they are the only show in town for any sort of free enterprise IR35 or not
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI thought I was until some 'tories' turned into market fundamentalists. In fact I think I still am as I basically believe in free markets with a qualification; freedom's great but has to be accompanied with morality and responsibility;
These are also the same people who refuse to do anything about IR35, which is certainly an area (along with NI/PAYE more generally) that should exercise market "fundamentalists", and affects their supposedly beloved middle-class more than the 'rich' or any other group.
The reason I have so little patience for the Tories is precisely their lack of much in the way of principle. They are a political engine, through and through.Last edited by Zero Liability; 16 January 2014, 19:48.
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostMost of my facebook 'friends' seem to be in the 'yes' camp.
One posted a link to this article which is quite interesting
My friends wonder why any intelligent Scot would vote Yes «
I think the problem is the 'no' = same old, same old. There isn't really a 'no' campaign as such, and many Scots want change.
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Originally posted by expat View PostI am a Scot, but I don't think we're going to vote for independence, otherwise you'd be right. If the EU vote were held first and went for "Out", then I'd guess the Scottish vote would go the other way.
My great-great-great-grandfather was Irish but I don't think that's close enough, most of the British Isles has at least that much Irish in them.
One posted a link to this article which is quite interesting
My friends wonder why any intelligent Scot would vote Yes «
I think the problem is the 'no' = same old, same old. There isn't really a 'no' campaign as such, and many Scots want change.
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostFTFY
What else would you move to Jersey for other than to die?
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostSailing, fishing, painting, writing?
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