
Wes Tender
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Everything posted by Wes Tender
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Oh dear, Soggy. You were the most shrill of all the remoaners on here about how unbearable it would be having Johnson continuing as PM, without much concern about how bad the alternative would be. As you say, it will be interesting to watch those you name in the Conservative Party grappling with Brexit and UK unity, but at least now they have a clear mandate from the electorate and the anti-democrat remoaners like you have been put firmly back in their box. Saying that the country is more divided now with a strong majority party in control compared with a hung parliament is just typical of your bizarre thought processes.
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As if Whelk would have been feeling any sympathy at all had Johnson, Raab, IDS lost their seats
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Soubry, Grieve, Wollaston, Lee, all seeking new jobs. Wonderful news.
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Come on, loser, when are you going to consent to the fact that it is over for you remoaners?
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Well, 3am and time to hit the sack, safe in the knowledge that we will avoid a Marxist government, 5 more years of Conservatism, getting Brexit over the line - a bright future awaits us. Eastleigh saw of the Lib Dumbs so great news locally. Happy days.
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We already had a referendum and politicians ignoring it is the reason for the mess.
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Vote Conservative
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You certainly don't
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I am on the right side of the referendum decision, almost certainly right about us not going for the Norway option, where Timmy was almost certainly wrong. I didn't believe all the rubbish spouted by the project fear merchants, one of which was you. I voted for the correct candidate in the Tory leadership election, hated May's surrender deal, and was entirely happy to leave the EU without a deal if something like the super-Canada deal isn't negotiated. Frankly, I don't give a damn what you believe, as it is fair to say that you've also been wrong on much you've stood for. I'm perfectly happy with the way that things have gone, provided that we don't have another hung parliament on Friday.
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Whereas Badger thinks that just one opinion on a single matter by one employee of the BBC is a sufficient barometer of the entire organisation's stance.
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Of course Barnier says it is unrealistic. He's the negotiator who wants us to remain in the EU and failing that, to make leaving it as difficult and as expensive for us as he can. You concluding that Boris is culpable for events in 2021 is a bit premature, isn't it? I suggest that you desist from your premature ejaculations and wait until then before casting aspersions, unless you have a functional crystal ball.
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So this Utopia only exists in your head. Whilst it's in there, it can have free roaming unicorns and flights of pigs too, if your imagination is up to it.
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Where is this Utopia and when will you be moving there? If they'll have you, that is.
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Soggy fails to realise the difference between a current shadow minister slagging off his leader and three Tory dinosaurs, two of whom have been retired for some time and the third who should have retired some time ago. All three of them historically happy with EU vassal state membership of the EU. Ashworth on the other hand, says that Labour's muddled position on the EU has caused the party to lose support. You haven't thought this through very well, Soggy.
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So First Draft then. Frankly, this is laughable. Their credibility is zero if they believe this.
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Ah, so asked to reference the incidents from the organisation that you referenced as overseeing incidents of dubious advertising from the political parties during the election campaign, you are unable to do that, but instead you reference a report from the Biased Broadcasting Corporation. So show me the report from the BBC then. Of course, there are several websites dedicated to examining their left bias politically, so I'm afraid that your link to them will probably not be seen to be any more impartial by me than an article from the Guardian, Mirror, the Not Independent or Sky.
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Show me where you found this. I couldn't find it on their site. However, they have listed several cases where they believe that Labour transgressed their guidelines, along with the usual underhand methods employed by the Lib Dumbs. Yes, the Conservatives have also transgressed their guidelines several times, but to infer that the other parties are lily white is naive, but not surprising from you.
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You and Gavyn seeking comfort in future hypothetical outcomes. Both of you reduced to clutching at straws. What's going to happen to the Labour Party under the same circumstances?
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I think you're right. He's vying with Burgon as to who is the biggest plonker on the Labour front bench (apart from Abbott, Thornberry and Butler, of course) https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2019-50726592 Ashworth commented that he had tried to be too clever by half. That doesn't hold water, as he clearly doesn't have sufficient brainpower to be too clever by half.
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I think that there's far more chance that he's related to you, Gavyn. Burgon really is the gift that keeps on giving. I think that we ought to see more of him in the next couple of days.
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Startling revelation from Richard Burgon - Boris is a Tory! I mean, who knew? Even worse, he's also a Conservative. This could be a significant game-changer, because all those Labour voters who like Burgon might have not known that Boris was a Tory, might not vote for Boris' party now that they know it is in reality the Conservative Party that he leads.
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It's the way you tell 'em.
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Your concern for my health is really touching, but you have nothing to worry about, I'm totally sanguine about the whole thing. As I've said many times before, I've been up for this since Maastricht, so I can be a little bit more patient. Tell me, when did Brexit take place? I thought that we couldn't sign any trade deals until we had left.
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I'm sure that Tamesaint will be grateful to you answering on his behalf, but no doubt he acknowledges your psychological need to vent your spleen with your mandatory insults as your daily release valve. Feel better? The Labour manifesto stated that it accepted the referendum result, then did everything they could to avoid supporting the implementation of it, including taking over the Commons procedures to stop it. Many Labour leave voters feel betrayed by their party and by Corbyn over this. As you know, two thirds of Constituencies, including a majority of Labour ones, returned MPs who voted to remain, when their constituencies voted leave. They will now face the wrath of the electorate they betrayed. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47420525 You're entitled to your opinion over whether you believe that Corbyn has ridden roughshod over his principles in the interest of gaining the keys to Number 10. Of course, only he knows truly whether he has had his head turned and that ditching his lifelong desire for us to leave the EU is now a secondary concern behind running a Marxist government and implementing the usual mass control of everything by the state, and ensuring that they continue in government, fixing subsequent elections by lowering the voting age and allowing resident non-British citizens to vote. There's no need to be so bloody arrogant in pointing out that there's a big world out there. I've visited lots of it during my life and wish us to expand our trade with it unfettered by the restrictions that being in the EU place upon us. You obsessive remoaners are incapable of imagining the vast opportunities we could face when we leave the sclerotic and failing EU and have the gall to call we Brexiteers blinkered.
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We were the better team, Newcastle were very poor, but put away their two goals against the run of play. The cart-horse Carroll made a difference for them with his height and bulk. But it always amuses me how such a hulk as him can go down like a house of cards when tackled by somebody much smaller, such as Boufal. Fellaini was the same. This was similar to the Man City result in terms of the timing of the goals. We held the lead until nearly the 70th minute and then conceded the winning goal in the 86th minute.Ultimately though, having been the better team for much of the match, we had to make our superiority count. I feel really sorry for our poor fans who have to endure the long road back home to Southampton after such raised hopes of points until very late in the match.