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John B

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  1. You seem to be completely out of touch with reality as you did not understand what I wrote. I spent lots of time canvassing prior to 2015 talking to thousands of electors but not before the Referendum because I left the Labour Party in July 2015 but I am not out of touch in any way. Before 2015 there was of course concerns regarding immigration many of them based on misconceptions but there is no real solution because we need immigration as we have an ageing population and there is not much evidence that foreign workers take British jobs and they do pay their way and do jobs which many UK people do not want to do. Perhaps if your read this you might be surprised https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/may/20/reality-check-are-eu-migrants-really-taking-british-jobs The Tories could also have alleviated the problem if they had built more homes had not cancelled Labour's emergency local fund in area with large immigration and had made certain that incoming EU citizens were not paid less that UK born citizens if there was a problem. They also could have done more to invest and to train young people. But in times of austerity it is the immigrant who gets the blame
  2. I think this team selection is very important and one of the most important Puel has had to make all season. I personally would go for bust and put out a very strong team Forster Soares Fonte Yoshida McQueen Romeu Classie Davis Tadic Long Redmond and hope for the best against Palace I think it is next weekend
  3. Seems to be working to me still in League Cup a win away from the knockout stage of the Europa League and in 10th place in PL with four games against lower placed teams coming up. I thinking he has done pretty well considering injuries and the lack of form of J Rod
  4. It was the the right wing press and UKIP which convinced the working class that the EU and immigration was responsible for falling living standards and losing their jobs. When in fact it was the Tory's choice to shrink the state with Austerity invest less in housing and training so that trained immigrants from the EU were blamed when they came to the UK. The Tories could also have alleviated the problem if they had built more homes had not cancelled Labour's emergency local fund in area with large immigration and had made certain that incoming EU citizens were not paid less that UK born citizens
  5. I doubt that would have been the case but blaming Brexit for Tory Economic mismanagement is a change from blaming Labour they were very unlikely to have met this years targets even if Brexit had not occurred Brexit is just part of the reason that the UK Economy is in a bad state the main cause however as DuckHunter has said recently is down to Cameron Osborne and the Tories Especially as there is little evidence that Business is investing http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu-economy-idUKKCN1290ZR Just because more people voted for leaving the EU on one particular day does that mean that Brexit was the right decision. with many unable or could not vote. I heard of somebody that voted out by post had died before the 23 June and probably there were some that voted Remain did not make it either. Leave said things that would happen if we left the EU which were plainly wrong and untruthful Such as Extra £350m each week for the NHS Turkey was going to join the EU and the country was going to be flooded by Turks A new points based immigration system was going to be implemented to reduce immigration even though we need it to grow the economy as we have an aging population. We could still have tariff free dealings with a market of 550billion people Inward investment would continue and we could get fantastic trade deals with the rest of the world. The incompetent Cameron and Osborne scared people with there economic rhetoric so much so that people like Batman did not realise that there would be economic consequences for leaving the EU as sterling would fall inflation would rise and growth and productivity would fall which is very likely to happen. We joined the EU when I was a young man because we were economically unsuccessful and in the forty years or so since we have grown to be a very successful economy with average growth about 2% every year with both Tory and Labour Governments It has been the policy of all Political Parties during the last forty years that our economic future was best served by being in the EU . So I find it strange that we are now out with no plan on how the EU is going to be replaced but many are estatic about the prospect as they hope that it will be alright on the night. But there is a very strong chance that millions of us will be poorer live for a shorter life and will be very unhappy
  6. 'Workers in Britain face the biggest squeeze on their pay for 70 years as a Brexit blow to the economy knocks wage growth and stokes inflation, according to an analysis of the UK’s government’s latest tax and spending plans.' And that's probably the best we can expect. The worst is hyperinflation, mass unemployment, and a reliance on a bankrupt state to fund the growing demands on the welfare state and NHS, which will both collapse. All in the name of 'taking back control'. I have seen no details or value estimates of the 'huge trade opportunities' that await Brexit Britain. Unless posters can give tangible details instead of waffle and hype they should shut up.
  7. So are we in in or out of the single market. Are we in or out of the customs union If we have to trade with WTO rules what will be the levels of tariffs these things are leading to uncertainty I cannot see many companies wanting to invest in the UK if they dont know what the rules are .
  8. You are as usual wrong I agree George Osborne's has mismanaged the economy but Brexit has compounded the situation so £220bn has been added to the Debt. £78bn of that is due to the expected post-referendum slowdown in the economy, £16bn is from government spending and tax decisions, and most of the rest is the result of measures taken by the Bank of England in August to avert recession (its initiatives to help banks lend and to purchase bonds). So it's reasonable to suggest that £220bn increase in the national debt is the financial cost of Brexit and in all likelihood this amount will increase. I agree Osborne has ruined the economy but Brexit has made it even worse I know you will not admit it but if you think you are right perhaps you tell me in figures why Brexit has not caused a major problem with the economy Here are the details of how much Britain now has to borrow. 2016-2017: £68.2bn deficit, up from £55.5bn in the Budget in March 2017-2018: £59bn, up from £38.8bn 2018-2019: £46.5bn up from £21.4bn 2019-2020: £21.9bn compared with a surplus of £10.4bn 2020-2021: £20.7bn compared with a surplus of £11bn
  9. Hammond’s statement was a chance to make a first big assessment of the impact of Brexit on the UK economy. The verdict is, without question, bleak. Growth is down, borrowing has to rise, and the dream of a surplus has been deferred to “as soon as practicable”, ie never
  10. I think I will take notice of people with a little more economics knowledge than some so called pompous bloke on a football forum who seems to think that whatever he believes is right especially as Brexit vote wiped £1.2tn off UK household wealth in 2016
  11. There has been almost zero British wage growth since global financial crisis which is shown in the graph in the post above. Figures from recruitment giant Korn Ferry underlines weakness of UK average pay since fall of Lehman Brothers http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/zero-british-wage-growth-since-global-financial-crisis-new-data-shows-a7226961.html mostly because of Tory Policies which advantage the wealthy In fact the UK joins Greece at bottom of wage growth league https://www.theguardian.com/money/2016/jul/27/uk-joins-greece-at-bottom-of-wage-growth-league-tuc-oecd How people think the Tories are economically competent beats me. Taking us into BREXIT makes it even worse
  12. Very true but BREXIT is the the most econimically stupid thing has happened to the UK as inflation grows growth and investment reduce and we all get poorer Things only appear OK at the moment because consumer debt is increasing as real wages are significantly less than in 2008
  13. I agree with your sentiments but really that is our only choice we just dont have the resources to compete with the big City teams we were lucky last year as Liverpool and Chelsea were so poor but it is not the case this season
  14. According to the Guardian: The government’s independent economic watchdog will tear up its previous forecasts for the UK’s growth prospects as it gives its first official verdict on the outlook for post-Brexit Britain this week. The Office for Budget Responsibility is expected to paint a gloomy picture of lower growth, higher inflation and a larger-than-expected deficit as the UK negotiates its way out of the EU. Now the OBR has a well founded reputation for getting its forecasts wrong: they are always too optimistic. In this case that is no comfort: expect things to be worse than they say. And what this shows is how resoundingly fickle people are. They bought the austerity narrative until they bought the EU / migration narrative. And then they voted to make themselves worse off. All that can be concluded is that politics is no longer just about the economy. Or that people can be conned, and are.
  15. Apparently he is one of the best in Europe he reffed the 2016 UEFA Champions League Final and the UEFA Euro 2016 Final so he must be pretty good I would have thought
  16. I think we have done OK especially as we have been involved in Europe and the League Cup and had a few injuries to attacking players
  17. I agree but it is not easy getting a reliable goal scorer. We usually lose these type of games lets hope our luck continues 0 0 would be a decent result
  18. There are no services in the customs union only stuff What do you mean no services in single market Services maybe involved if you sell something
  19. A pretty disgraceful post from a loud mouth perhaps who thinks money grows on trees Support the team they cannot always win every game especially as they did really well on Thursday I dont expect the team is particularly happy playing in Hull after beating Inter on Thursday
  20. We lost a bit upset but that is football if you cannot accept losing what is the point of playing the game
  21. It is not in dispute that 17,410,74 voted to leave the EU what is in dispute is what does leaving the actually meanmean. It certainly does not mean that £350million per week is going to the NHS it does not mean that we are going to get a points based immigration system. It does however mean that people's standard of living are going to fall as inflation and unemployment rise and economic growth falters. It means a great deal of uncertainty for large numbers of UK citizens because of concerns in relation to foreign companies investing in the UK and UK citizens living in Europe on their future status. There are huge concerns in the island of Ireland on how Brexit is going to affect their daily lives. Is OK voting out but but when you dont know what voting out means I think is slightly naive . The referendum was just a political ploy by the Conservatives in order to win the 2015 GE it had nothing to do with the well being of the country and its citizens. Now unelected PM Mrs May wants to BREXIT by coming up with ideas of her own and her cabinet without any discussion and inspection by our democratically elected MPs. We are going to leave the EU but we need agreement from most of the population otherwise we are in for a great deal of social grief in the future if the way some people are reacting with threats and violence Theresa May has handled all this so badly. If when she first took charge she had said something along the lines of "we need to follow-through with what people voted for, but it's not going to be an easy task. The voices of those who voted remain should also be acknowledged. We will leave, but there may be some compromises to get the best possible situation for the UK. We will have a parliamentary session to trigger article 50 and begin negotiations, at the end of which we will present to the public for them to have a final say over whether to proceed." I think that would have acceptable to to the majority of people on both sides of the debate and would be democratic and people would know what they were voting for.
  22. There are times when MPs need to rise above their party interests, their own interests and the views of their constituents. That may risk being voted out, but they may earn more respect by standing up for the national interest as best they can determine: that’s what representative democracy is for. In times of war or national crisis, defending the country from grave error, at whatever personal cost, is their duty. Brexit is the greatest threat to national wellbeing since the war, and this will test the mettle not just of individual MPs, but of the nature and purpose of a representative democratic system. The pound soared following today’s high court news because markets are idiotic, shaped by punters second-guessing one another’s idiocy. This doesn’t suggest, alas, that Brexit is much closer to being reconsidered. Reality will take the pound back down, predicted to sink further with each step towards to the exit gate. Next year’s prices will rise, NIESR reckons, by 4%, hitting those who are “just managing” even harder. Every day another bad effect is revealed before anything has even happened. Today reveals an acute labour shortage in the food processing industries, as east Europeans are reluctant to come here. The shrinking pound decreases the value of their pay, and they hear awful stories of racist attacks and abuse. Without actually leaving, we are already keeping EU immigrants away. The damage is beginning already. The latest regreters are the £4bn curry house operators, who voted out. They were lied to outright, as Priti Patel and others told them fewer EU migrants would open the door to the chefs they desperately need and promised a points-based system to let chefs in. This has now been reneged on. There will be massive closures, they say. How naive could they be? A public stirred by Mail and Sun anti-migrant horror stories were made even more fearful of Muslim refugees pouring than of Poles: of course the government now says the screw is tightening and there will be no more Asian visas. Others too will find how badly they were lied to. Only 37% of the UK voted leave - since when is this a "majority" that many pro-Brexiteers are talking about Theresa May's government is skating on very thin ice. The Royal Prerogative is incompatible with the sovereignty of Parliament, not to mention democracy - more so if it is to be used by an unelected Prime Minister to pursue a policy she has claimed she did not think was right for Britain, and has now flipped 180 degrees on the basis of a referendum decision that resulted from a fraudulent campaign that was seriously and deliberately misleading. The fiction that an MP appointed by the government as Attorney General can be an 'honest' legal adviser is equally preposterous. Brexit has amounted to a coup d'etat to seize power by a clique of right wing demagogues who deliberately led a campaign based upon deception, lies and reckless disregard of any planning for the consequential destruction of the trade agreements, and the destabilisation of pan European partnerships upon which the prosperity and long term security of the now disunited Kingdom is primarily dependent. These political clowns are rightfully ridiculed by European leaders of every hue. Guy Verhfostadt sums them up perfectly here. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/28/brexit-negotiator-hits-out-at-uk-ministers-mixed-messages Neither this government, nor our dysfunctional, archaic, and unfit for purpose Parliament, have any credibility that can give legitimacy to the politically corrupt Brexit campaign. Brexit has destroyed the unity of the United Kingdom; it has exposed how hollow and rotten is the constitutional pretence that we have a democratic system of government protected by strong checks and balances. House of Commons Select Committees are lacking in power to bring Ministers to acount. Prime Ministers are loose cannons. Neither the fractured United Kingdom, nor England, will ever be reunited by this rogue unelected premiership nor by a Parliament that seeks to pass over what has happened by, meekly acquiescing to the ludicrous undemocratic Royal Prerogative. Britain should be deeply ashamed that it has become so disreputable. The constitutional legitimacy of the shallow dishonest Brexit campaign and the validity of the referendum as an informed democratic decision must be challenged in the House of Lords and/or the Supreme Court by Public Legal Officials acting on behalf of UK citizens. There must also be a thorough inquiry as to what is so wrong with our entire system of government in the UK that it has lost touch with so many regions, and has failed the nation for so long that it has brought the nation to the brink of disintegration and collapse. Nothing less than a total Constitutional Reformation is now required. Parliament is effectively an unrepresentative sham democratic one House institution. The fictional 'make it up' as you go along unwritten Constitution is a wizard of Oz construct. It is high time Britain got rid of fake democracy. Parliament has become a decayed house of ill repute as decrepit as the building in which it resides. It is this or risk a constitutional crisis that might well provoke a second Cromwellian reformation. Either Parliament is seen to act honourably to cleanse itself or it will fall. Using the Royal Prerogative may end up bringing down Parliament and the Monarchy.
  23. No one is saying we shouldn't leave the EU. They are saying that the UK constitutional process for anything that changes a person rights in law is for a parliamentary act. Brexiters need to get a grip and get over it. I voted remain but would support my MP voting for Article 50 to leave the EU. because I understand democracy. Changing our constitution where parliament is no longer sovereign is the first step to dictatorships and fascisim. You do make an interesting point that the average person does not understand the issues relating to the EU and Brexit and have been led to believe untruths and lies. Even yesterday Bill Cash was either intentionally or possibly because he did not know saying things about the EU on how it works which were factually untrue. On the World at One Sir Keir Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, says he accepts that Britain should leave the EU. But parliament needs to be consulted on the terms of leaving He says the government cannot get away with refusing to reveal its negotiating stance. This needs to be repeated over and over until even the thickest Brexitbot gets it...the decision is not about overturning the referendum but about ensuring parliament correctly acts as a brake on the Executive and post EU the country is reasonable state with people in jobs. It's clear that the government is blundering around blindly in search of a strategy and yet some people think that parliament should pass up the oversight function How irresponsible would that be? May and the Brexiters need to get their arses into gear and start formulating a strategy and then explaining it. I agree with Andrew Tyrie, the Conservative chair of the Commons Treasury committee (and a remain voter in June), on the court ruling who said . Whatever the supreme court decides, the government should be much more transparent about its objectives in the negotiations, in some detail, and the sooner the better. It should also ensure that parliament can scrutinise the objectives, and vote on them. There are many good reasons for this. Among several, it can enable the construction of broad-based public consent for the UK’s future relationship with the EU. The UK is leaving; a public debate is needed about where we want to arrive. Before taking off, it is always a good idea for the pilot to discuss with the passengers and crew where they might want to land. Second, clarity about the government’s objectives would enable a serious discussion with other Member States to get underway, prior to the triggering of article 50. And third, it can reduce the economic damage caused by uncertainty over the likely shape of the UK’s future relationship with the EU. It is the uncertainty about the terms of that relationship, far more than the additional time required to clarify the negotiating position, that carries the more significant cost. But at least SFC are still in Europe and our European Manager and Players are doing well
  24. Surely you should be cheering today’s high court judgment as one of the loudest defenders of parliamentary sovereignty. So the judges have heeded your earnest plea to make parliament supreme. Your insistence that Westminster be the ultimate arbiter of our national affairs has been given the judicial seal of approval. Except, of course, you are not ,you wanted to leave in the name of wrestling power from Brussels to Westminster went strangely quiet when it came to the question decided by the court today: who has the power to trigger article 50? Suddenly you have found that parliament was not quite so sacred or central, that some things were best left to ministers to decide. Well, the judges have called out that hypocrisy. They have decided that the Brexiteers should have to comply with their own logic – and bow to parliament.
  25. Affirmation of parliamentary sovereignty - just what the Brexiteers wanted! Great! So far May’s team have been all over the place when it comes to prioritising what is best for Britain, and it’s time they pull their socks up and started taking this seriously. Ultimately, the British people voted for a departure but not for a destination, which is why what really matters possibly allowing them to vote again on the final deal, giving them the chance to say no to an irresponsible hard Brexit that risks our economy and our jobs.
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