Saddleworth2
Well-Known Member
No. with the current arithmetic I don't believe he will.My guess is he’ll piss it if the backstop is removed.
No. with the current arithmetic I don't believe he will.My guess is he’ll piss it if the backstop is removed.
I’m not denying it @blueinsa and yes we all want a deal.As was said and asked for, we needed the threat of no deal and the realisation that we would be leaving regardless, something we never had under May.
This needs to end for our sakes, yours and the EU’s and it’s time to get a deal sorted that allows us to part ways and everyone to claim victory and that they got what they wanted.
No deal hurts everyone and isn’t going to happen, hence a deal will get done.
All in my humble opinion of course.
Your enduring reference to everyone except Johnson by their surname gives away the embarrassingly big hard in you have for the lying ****.Juncker states a no deal Brexit would be catastrophic for both sides, so not an empty threat after all eh?? Also states a Brexit deal is in the offing. If Boris agrees a deal and we leave on October 31st this place should be fun ;)
Lib Dems in a landslide victory ;-)Impossible as he could come back, say we are staying in and revoking and the SNP, Greens, Lib Dem’s and a few Labour would feel they have to vote against it just for shits and giggles.
Roll on the GE!
I love how some Remainers have started to post that they would be happy with a deal after 3 years of the crap they have given out.Course they are.
I hear every day remainers campaigning for a deal by shouting "stop brexit".
Will it get through Parliament.I was interested to see Arlene Foster was in Dublin last night, which means she’s engaged and involved in the process, and as long as she’s happy with the deal it’s fine by me.
Says the self-styled ring-master of faux everything methinks (ffs)I love how some Remainers have started to post that they would be happy with a deal after 3 years of the crap they have given out.
Is there such a thing as 'faux reasonableness'?
Your enduring reference to everyone except Johnson by their surname gives away the embarrassingly big hard in you have for the lying ****.
We all have our foibles, I guess :-)
My two descriptions have gotten nothing to do with like or dislike of Remainers - where I live is a predominately Remain area and I have a lot of Remainer friends - not as many as I used to have because a few have been converted (worn down).You are clearly desperate for the remain cause to be beset by the same issues as leave. Remain is incredibly simple, it is the status quo, we get there without having to negotiate anything, we simply issue a letter and it's done.
We are where we are because leave involves a range of outcomes - none of which resemble the promises of the leave campaign. The campaign led leavers to believe and expect all the best bits of all of forms of leaving could be achieved in a simple deal. The right wing press has conditioned people to reject the reality of the difficulty in reaching any deal and the inevitable negatives - the result is no workable way forward. The clamour for No Deal is just a desperation to press on for emotive reasons ignoring the lies and misinformation that got us to this point.
Your two points above are just different reasons why you dislike remainers and the various ways there views might be expressed - they add nothing to the debate. You don't like remainers because they are dealing with reality and you want to ignore it.
That is the crazy thing - there is no status quo option anymore - has not been for quite a while actually.You also want to ignore the fact that there is a significant proportion of the population of this country that no longer wishes to continue to be a member of the EU, and that for them the "status quo" has changed, one to a position where the UK is no longer a member of the EU.
You wish to ignore this position because you disagree with it. Remaining in would not be the status quo and persisting is essentially one viewpoint forcing the other to adopt it's position, just as the no deal leavers tend to do.
Forgive them, they know not what they do.I love how some Remainers have started to post that they would be happy with a deal after 3 years of the crap they have given out.
Is there such a thing as 'faux reasonableness'?
How so? Parliamentary approval for a deal was Parliament's demand.Yes I know but he’ll try, the wanker.
We owe that woman a lot. We’d be out on May’s deal if it wasn’t for her.
How so? Parliamentary approval for a deal was Parliament's demand.
This is sooo exciting - all these 'genuine' born again Leave supportersCorrect, so the only option is to leave the EU, with a deal most preferably, yes?
Cast off your "remainer" tag, join the purpose of leave and start compromising to push forward a leave deal we can all agree upon. A Common Market 2.0., EFTA membership etc.
Tears stream down as he said goodbye to his staff after whistling his way back inside Downing St after the resignation speech - like so many beforewatching the Cameron Years on TV - dealing with the run up to the referendum. Something quite striking in all the coverage.
Tears stream down as he said goodbye to his staff after whistling his way back inside Downing St after the resignation speech - like so many before
Well - given that I would vote Remain before I would vote for May's deal as is - I suspect that I am proven correctWas it bollocks. It was biased towards trying to keep her party together, that was the aim of it, and it hasn't worked. You lot need to move on from seeing everything as a remainer plot. May's WA would have meant we would have left the EU, that is not biased towards remain.
?Nope. The fact that numerous interviews and reports were shown involving the protagonists and none of them mentioned N.Ireland and its border with the ROI !!! Which I find really strange as Leaver after Leaver have claimed it was raised ( and given the stumbling block it has become I kinda think they would have included it ) and they knew full well what they were voting for in the referendum. Somebody is clearly mistaken.