
Guided Missile
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Everything posted by Guided Missile
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This was a more successful petition. It got 4,150,262 signatures and got nowhere...
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Mark Carnage changing his tune, ladies: Cliff edge...
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That wasn't your point moron, which you confirm by quoting a radio talk show host against three High Court judges in support of your real point. So, it should really be pointless moron, who is back on ignore (when will I ever learn?)
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Good try, but that argument has been found to be a crock of sh!t at the Appeal Court on March 8th...
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Meanwhile, back on Planet Earth, some real statistics. New ONS figures released this morning reveal that borrowing in the current financial year was £23.1bn, £18bn less than a year before: Two years ago, before the referendum, the Treasury forecast the following: Only £42 billion out...
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A petition backed by all of the faces who had been pretending to care about holding another referendum for the sake of ‘democracy’ have been sharing a new petition entitled ‘Revoke Article 50 and remain in the EU.’ They’re not even bothering to pretend to be democrats any more… The petition saw a suspicious jump in signatures last night, with blatantly fake signatures arising everywhere from Russia, to Afghanistan, to North Korea. Tens of thousands of signatures have also come from EU states including Jean Claude Juncker’s tiny Luxembourg… Suckers...
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Despite Brexit: UK employment rate of 76.1% is the highest since comparable records began in the early 1970s. Inactivity dropped to a record-low of 20.7%. Also: Unemployment rate of 3.9%, lowest since Feb-75. And: Real pay growth of 1.3%y/y Going back 2 years, Mark Carnage and the Treasury forecast:
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But mama said you can't hurry leave No you just have to wait She said leave don't come easy It's a game of give and take You can't hurry leave No, you just have to wait You gotta trust, give it time No matter how long it takes
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They need a motion to vote for, sh!t 4 brains....
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Maybe the leave vote would be less, maybe not, but thankfully, you won't get the chance to find out. You should have dug a bit deeper into the polls you were quoting. Here's some more: Do you think it would help bring the country back together or make it even more divided if britain had a new referendum and voted to remain in the eu after all? Do you think it would or would not respect the result of the original referendum if britain had a new referendum and voted to remain in the eu after all Do you think that it would help bring the country back together or make it more divided if britain left the eu with an alternative deal that included remaining in the single market and customs union There's no appetite in the country for a Losers Vote, mate...
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Ding-dong the witch is dead...
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More from Christopher Hope at 11:48 AM today: Talk in the restaurants of Westminster are now turning to tomorrow's vote on exiting without a deal in the wake of the Geoffrey Cox pronouncement. One source tells me ministers are falling over themselves to say that they will back a no deal in tomorrow's expected vote if as expected it is whipped as a free vote. Ministers who want to get on in the party are seeing it as a chance for them to burnish their Brexit credentials with the grassroots. One said it will be the biggest and most important test for MPs and how they are seen by their grassroots since MPs voted to legalise gay marriage in 2013.
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Meanwhile, the UK is, despite Brexit, smashing it...
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Latest legal advice:
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duplicate
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Professor Gwythian Prins is an Academic Board Member of Veterans for Britain. Sir Richard Dearlove was head of MI6 between 1999 and 2004. Surprisingly, it was at the top of the page Wes linked....
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Amid the joy, what a story to wake up to.
Guided Missile replied to Guided Missile's topic in The Saints
The worst race hate word is, IMHO, n!gg€r and yet, despite that, it appears that most African Americans are able to use the term to address each other, with no problem at all. -
...and Elvis isn't dead." Nick Clegg, the man that wants a second referendum said the above in the Nick Clegg v's Nigel Farage, Europe Debate II, 2nd April 2014, . Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, President of the CDU and the person most likely to take over from Merkel, posted an article in response, 5 years later, on Saturday, to Macron's b@tsh!t crazy plans to reform the EU, here. An interesting quote from this article below: A Franco-German aircraft carrier? Nice to know the surrender monkeys are happy to help re-arm the Germans, although we can all relax. Nick Facebook had his finger on the pulse and Farage and the rest of his ignorant Brexiteers were just spreading fear...
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Amid the joy, what a story to wake up to.
Guided Missile replied to Guided Missile's topic in The Saints
It might help the discussion if you read the OP: -
What are our fans like? Some are total w@nkers. Read this.
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The end of May is to occur on the 12th March, this year...
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He had a beard, mate...
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Mr Draghi is asked why he did not wait for more clarity on some of the "uncertainties" weighing on the economy, such as Brexit. "In a dark room you move with tiny steps, you don't run but you do move," he replies, pointing out that growth is expected to deteriorate this year.
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"Only when the tide goes out do you discover who has been swimming naked"
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The euro has plunged to a 21-month low after the European Central Bank (ECB) unveiled plans for fresh stimulus to revive eurozone growth and warned investors that interests rates will remain ultra-low for longer. The ECB surprised markets by announcing a new round of targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTRO), offering banks more cheap loans to encourage lending in the struggling region. The central bank also revised its guidance on interest rates, warning that investors will be waiting until at least the end of 2019 for the first hike. The new stimulus comes just months after the central bank ended its quantitative easing programme. It slashed its forecasts for the eurozone, expecting growth to slow to just 1.1pc in 2019, down from December's forecast of 1.7pc. The euro slid sharply after the ECB delivered its gloomy outlook for the region, plunging 0.9pc to $1.1206 versus the dollar, a 21-month low.