UK - in or out of the EU? Travel Issues?

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Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

I love articles like that. they re-inforce to me that my own conclusion on the issue (Leave) was the correct one, given edit: some of the tossers who are on the other side!
 
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Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

FTSE up another 180 points in early trade - now less than 100 points off it's steady value for most of the last month.
I don't think there's going to be Armageddon this week, not in the UK at least. Might be a different story in Brussels though where Jean-Claude Juncker has again proved himself inept.
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Got to love the oblivious nature the leavers have unleashed on their country and the world.

ndxa3IF.jpg
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

It is only compulsory to get your name check off the electoral role. You don't have to vote, you can put an blank ballot paper in the ballet box.
No not true.


  • Under the Electoral Act, the actual duty of the elector is to attend a pollingplace, have their name marked off the certified list, receive a ballot paper andtake it to an individual voting booth, mark it, fold the ballot paper and place itin the ballot box.
  • It is not the case, as some people have claimed, that it is only compulsory toattend the polling place and have your name marked off, and this has beenupheld by a number of legal decisions:
    • ™ High Court 1926 – Judd v McKeon (1926) 38 CLR 380
    • ™ Supreme Court of Victoria 1970 – Lubcke v Little [1970] VR 807
    • ™ High Court 1971 – Faderson v Bridger (1971) 126 CLR 271
    • ™ Supreme Court of Queensland 1974 – Krosch v Springbell; ex parteKrosch [1974] QdR 107
    • ™ ACT Supreme Court 1981 – O’Brien v Warden (1981) 37 ACTR 13
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

I love articles like that. they re-inforce to me that my own conclusion on the issue (Leave) was the correct one, given the tossers who are on the other side!

That was the funniest thing I have read for quite a while, its either the most bizzare and subversive piece of satire ever written, or a bunglingly ignorant rant.

Lets paraphrase the argument that T. Whyman writes shall we?

Hell is My Fellow Britons

I hate the fact I was born to and raised in a comfortable suburban middle class part of England, I feel guilty about people mowing the grass. Did I mention how much I hatethe provincial residents of Alresford? Not at all like the cosmopolitan “je ne sais quois" of Colchester Essex where I work, sometimes I have this fantasy image of how it once was, before Ayresford was foundedin the Middle Ages, before stone buildings, agriculture, electricity and modern luxuries such as medicine/plumbing/communication and when life-expectancy was probably under 30.

Alresford is my own personal hell, there's no poverty and not much crime and good schools and shops andhouses are worth quite a lot of money and seem out of reach to apart-time academic lecturer's salary. But dig beneath the surface andthe primary school bully still scares me and I don't like peoplehunting pheasants.

As with any hell, its impossible to leave because I never bothered learning to drive and public transport is a bit too difficult.

Since my late teens every effort I haveever exerted has been with the intention of escaping this middle class provincial "hell", but as I chose to do a philosophy degree at a fair to middling university in a time of rapid globalization and disruption and have only been able to get a temporary academic teaching contract since, I have to move home with parents and sponge off them in the summers.

All that paperwork to change my voting registration from Colchester to Alresford was a bit too difficult given the many months notice we had about the upcoming referendum so I wasn't too worried about Britain possibly leaving the EU.

My complacency about all this lasted until one particular nutter killed a member of parliament, whom was associated with the remain cause, so then I could get all worked up and conflate the entire exit case with a bunch of redneck racists, that really got me grumpy enough to tweet something, and join some anti-racist cause on facebook... that sure made me feel much more superior and self-righteous than before.

So because of my own lack of foresight and planning I made a last minute rush to the heaving cosmopolitan metropolis of Colchester to vote there. On the day of thereferendum I fell victim to a few of signal failures on the railway system and ended up on the wrong train and it all got a bit too hard to think of any other way to vote, even if I'd managed to vote, it would have been pointless because the remain vote ended up winning by more than a million votes.

As a result of this vote by the people,and a result that I don't like I'll make a bunch of unfounded vague predictions that Britain will forget who they are, and how to traveland host visitors, and there will be fewer economic and cultural opportunities for everyone, before the entire world forgets about this and gets on with living and trading and generally doing the stuff that keeps the world turning.

All I can do is look out at nature from my comfortable free middle class room and feel guilty and hope that nature overruns us in some sort of medieval Gia worshipping dizzy utopia..
 
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Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Very curious article.
Luckily I don't require an Ad Hominem to back up my opinion on the UK exit.

Oops .. apologies! I should have said ... some tossers on the other side. :oops:

To to be honest, PF, being most strongest of Scots descent, I'd rather keep Scotland in the UK than take Great Britain out if the EU.

Did anyone predict this situation, do you know?
 
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Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Sure. But will be interesting to see. Sometimes even experts get it wrong. And idiots are right sometimes too.

Is this taking a sample of the BRexit commentators/bloggers or the comparison of FT members with the airline planners?

Happy wandering

Fred
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Surely he's damn near certifiable. Must be on crack.

I thought it must be a spoof-the surname seemed an in-joke
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

petition.jpg
This was inevitable...
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

This referendum and its aftermath has given me more moments of laughter than a Morecambe and Wise Christmas special.

Pick of the day for me was Jean Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission, who asked UKIP MEP's why they had attended the European Parliament meeting to discuss the consequences of the British vote to leave the bloc. Now I know Nigel Farage was being......well Nigel Farage, but I would have thought being an elected representative gave him and his fellow MEP's every right to be there.......until the UK actually leaves the EU.

Coming a close second was the The Labour Party and its implosion. The sight of Jeremy Corbyn suggesting, on camera, to an adviser that it might not be a good idea to have the camera at the shadow cabinet meeting was almost as priceless as the failure of his hastily appointed new defence secretary to get back to parliament for questions on defence. The fifty resignations, many of them public, were also rather amusing. The various factions fighting for control in such an unseemly manner reminds me of primary school.

We really do have some dreadful politicians........but at the moment they seem to be much better than many comedians!!!! :p

Oh and we have the delights of the Tory party infighting over the next leader to come too. :)
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Um can we become a republic now :)?????
Why? Because a republic will make Australia's economy stronger? More jobs and stability? Stronger AUD?

If it ain't broke it doesn't need fixing. And no I am not a monarchist. I hate all forms of power especially inherited power....
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Got to love the oblivious nature the leavers have unleashed on their country and the world.

View attachment 73997

Rather than believe what cartoonists think you might actually read what Boris Johnson actually says-
It is said that those who voted Leave were mainly driven by anxieties about immigration. I do not believe that is so. After meeting thousands of people in the course of the campaign, I can tell you that the number one issue was control – a sense that British democracy was being undermined by the EU system, and that we should restore to the people that vital power: to kick out their rulers at elections, and to choose new ones.
There were more than 16 million who wanted to remain. They are our neighbours, brothers and sisters who did what they passionately believe was right. In a democracy majorities may decide but everyone is of equal value. We who are part of this narrow majority must do everything we can to reassure the Remainers. We must reach out, we must heal, we must build bridges – because it is clear that some have feelings of dismay, and of loss, and confusion. I believe that this climate of apprehension is understandable, given what people were told during the campaign, but based on a profound misunderstanding about what has really taken place. At home and abroad, the negative consequences are being wildly overdone, and the upside is being ignored. The stock market is way above its level of last autumn; the pound remains higher than it was in 2013 and 2014.

https://www.facebook.com/borisjohnson/posts/10153787959746317
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Looks like Jexit may be difficult-
The party’s parliamentarians voted 172 to 40 against Mr Corbyn’s leadership in a secret ballot on Tuesday afternoon. There were four spoilt ballots in the contest, while 13 MPs did not vote.
Mr Corbyn immediately responded to the vote by saying he would not resign, suggesting to do so would be a "betrayal" of the members who elected him by a landslide last year.
Jeremy Corbyn loses 'no confidence' vote among Labour MPs by 172 to 40 | UK Politics | News | The Independent
 
Re: UK - in or out of the EU?

Rather than believe what cartoonists think you might actually read what Boris Johnson actually says-

https://www.facebook.com/borisjohnson/posts/10153787959746317

The is real anti-Boris feeling out there, but so often when you scratch the surface it is totally without any real substance. My daughter had quite a bit to do with him, both at the Palace and later in the City. And a lovelier fellow you will not meet - far from the demon everyone makes him out to be.
 
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