Why Always Ste said:AucklandBlue said:My wife is a sweaty
[bigimg]http://athomemagazine.co.uk/images/woman_with_sweaty_armpit_28_11_12.jpg[/bigimg]
Very good :-)
Why Always Ste said:AucklandBlue said:My wife is a sweaty
[bigimg]http://athomemagazine.co.uk/images/woman_with_sweaty_armpit_28_11_12.jpg[/bigimg]
denislawsbackheel said:hgblue said:Why the hell should the rest of the UK allow a foreign country to use the same currency?
Any country can use any freely tradable currency.
Hence Zimbabwe use the US dollar.
ChicagoBlue said:Zimbabwe is not unique. Any country can use another country's currency, but they lose control of their own ability to print it when they want to! There are SIX countries that officially use it, with the USA and Zimbabwe being only two of them....and that doesn't even count the US territories that use it and all the other countries where it is an unofficial currency that is freely usable.
Yep, as I say, piss off Scotland.TTTCITYBHOY said:SWP's back said:Piss off Scotland
Good input into the thread,fukn not.
I'm not getting involved in the yes/no shit.
But some of the anti Scots posts on here are a fukn disgrace.
Let them fuk off,wasters,scroungers.
Hadrians wall,junkies,gingers blah blah fukn blah.
It's actually 2014 up here as well you know.
We have electricity,wear trousers not kilts,apart from the fukn. "Tartan army"...sad cunts. :)
We're only 100 miles from Manchester ffs.
Get a grip some of you eh.
stony said:Mikeyc1986 said:Taxes we'll save?? Care to explain? All of scotlands taxes go to westminster who then decide to take a chunk of it and give us crumbs back. Scotland will keep 90% of oil reserves and keep all our own taxes. Oh and the uk will need to find another £4bn to maintain trident.
Scotland are a burden eh? Enjoy ukip and tories for the next 100 years
Your oil is worth £6 Billion a year. Your financial industry who have said to a man that they will fuck off to London as soon you get independence is worth £8 billion a year and employs 7% of the workforce.
At least the £6 billion in oil money will be able to pay for the benefits of all those who will be made unemployed.
bellbuzzer said:. The ''yes'' campaign offers the chance to be free of the black hole of westminster. Cameron begging for a 'no' vote for the sake of 'unity' is hard to take seriously, the leader of a party whose policies have divided the country like never before is saddled with that , no matter how much hand-wringing and grovelling he does.
The Labour party did sweet fa to address the problem of over-centralisation, they abandoned the principles on which the party was formed and became just another bunch of politicians with their snouts in the trough, so Brown and his plea for the no vote is predictable but not worth a carrot.
The 'no' campaign seems to grow more hysterical every passing day, even more than in an election campaign, with speculation presented as facts, in lurid head-lines in the press and on t.v. Personal attacks on Salmond and his staff follow the US model of throwing shit and hope enough sticks, innuendo and smokescreens masking the
lack of solid evidence. The desperate promises of '' give us another chance, we've reformed'' are about as believable as an MP's expenses claim.
The level of anti-Scottish rhetoric on BM is quite intense, but then tribalism has never gone away, if Wales was
voting on devolution no doubt the same bigotry would be expressed in similar fashion.
The only thing that is certain, is that the 'no' campaigners are following the usual practise of ''what's in it for
me'' and pretending to care about the Scottish people is a transparent lie.
bellbuzzer said:. The ''yes'' campaign offers the chance to be free of the black hole of westminster. Cameron begging for a 'no' vote for the sake of 'unity' is hard to take seriously, the leader of a party whose policies have divided the country like never before is saddled with that , no matter how much hand-wringing and grovelling he does.
The Labour party did sweet fa to address the problem of over-centralisation, they abandoned the principles on which the party was formed and became just another bunch of politicians with their snouts in the trough, so Brown and his plea for the no vote is predictable but not worth a carrot.
The 'no' campaign seems to grow more hysterical every passing day, even more than in an election campaign, with speculation presented as facts, in lurid head-lines in the press and on t.v. Personal attacks on Salmond and his staff follow the US model of throwing shit and hope enough sticks, innuendo and smokescreens masking the
lack of solid evidence. The desperate promises of '' give us another chance, we've reformed'' are about as believable as an MP's expenses claim.
The level of anti-Scottish rhetoric on BM is quite intense, but then tribalism has never gone away, if Wales was
voting on devolution no doubt the same bigotry would be expressed in similar fashion.
The only thing that is certain, is that the 'no' campaigners are following the usual practise of ''what's in it for
me'' and pretending to care about the Scottish people is a transparent lie.