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Guided Missile

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Everything posted by Guided Missile

  1. The c-word has been used in the English language since 1325. It was only replaced by vagina in 1682. Sometimes, no other word will do...
  2. I happen to know that Lord Duckhunter is bulimic. So much for your prediction...
  3. For those that can't read, here's a picture: Sterling I pity those traitors who bet against sterling...
  4. And the good news continues to roll, here, which allows me to return to the subject matter of the original post on this thread.
  5. Tomorrow, according to BBC sources, David Davis will make clear the UK intends to negotiate and complete trade deals with other countries during the transition, to be ready to sign on the dotted line the moment the transition is over. He's also expected to make plain the UK wants to remain within existing agreements that the EU has stitched together with other countries too. My good feeling about Brexit just continues to grow...
  6. "....not being able to apprehend the meaning of complete sentences...."
  7. Any currency that is supported by a massive and sustained "quantitative easing" is obviously a hostage to the body that controls it. When QE is finally unwound in Europe and the US, you'll find out exactly what's wrong with currency in today's post 2008 economy. Just to give you a clue. It's commonly referred to as debt. A storm is brewing...
  8. More good news, this time from a Remainer, posted on the BBC here. I love the way the traitors on this thread have scuttled under the nearest rocks like cockroaches, with every piece of good news. I can't wait for the negative spin some of the more repellent of these insects will place on this news, in a vain attempt to put our great country down. All in all, rather than our "Darkest Hour", Brexit, so far, has been a vicars tea party
  9. The news from New York here shows what I have long suspected would happen. Finally the reality is catching up with the casino bankers: It seems only yesterday, Goldman Sachs were sticking their oar in here: Mate, running Goldman Sachs is within your control. I'd concentrate on that, rather than giving the UK advice on it's prospects. Talking of foreigners giving advice, remember Mark Carney, our favourite Canadian economic genius? Here he's receiving advice from a prominent Brexiteer: Andy Haldane suggested the bank had a Michael Fish moment over Brexit - he was “being unfair to weather forecasters” Here's how bad we are doing: FTSE Sterling There's a reason we're called Great Britain and the traitors all forgot it. PS I know the real reason we're called Great Britain, but prefer mine. We're a Great Country, Macron. Thanks for reminding us the last time your country beat us was in 1066.
  10. More bad news here... I guess that means we won't hear any more from the traitors. The games up lads and you lost. God save the Queen.
  11. From today's Times: Collez ça dans votre chatte, Lagarde....
  12. You'd think the IMF would have known that before they made their totally inaccurate prediction before the referendum, wouldn't you? Even I did on this very thread and I'm a moron, as many posters have pointed out... I didn't quite realise at the time, how much money the ECB was prepared to print to save Deutsche Bank and the other EU banks, though....
  13. Last year, the IMF predicted: Today, the FTSE 100 finished up 7.6% at 7,687.77 compared to the last day of trading in 2016. Meanwhile, the FTSE 250 ended 14.7% ahead at 20,726.26. Happy New Year everyone!
  14. One of my favourite movies:
  15. No organisation knows more about unfair competitive advantages than the EU. Take the example of the CAP that benefits EU farmers and food producers, to the detriment of poor farmers in Africa, for instance. EU farmers are guaranteed a price for their sugar which is three times higher than the world price. In 2014 Africa —the home of coffee— earned just £1.5 billion from the crop. Yet Germany, a leading processor, earned nearly double that from coffee re-exports. The reason for this is that Africa is punished by the EU with a 7.5 per cent tariff charge on roasted coffee but non-decaffeinated green coffee is exempt. As a result, the bulk of Africa’s export to the EU is unroasted green coffee and German manufacturers reap the rewards. The charge on cocoa is even more debilitating as the EU tariff charge is a massive 30 per cent for processed cocoa products like chocolate bars or cocoa powder, and 60 per cent for some other refined products containing cocoa.
  16. I was thinking of terrorists posing as migrants. You were the one that had Muslim terrorists in mind. Mate, you're a total nutjob...
  17. Extract from this well known racist scumbag rag
  18. Please tell/show me, where I have ever used the term Muslim and I'll agree with you that I'm a racist scumbag. If not, apologise properly and I'll forgive you.
  19. Who's the fool? Lean to read this article and maybe you're lean to understand why one reason Britain voted to leave was the understandable concerns of citizens in this country about the EU's migration policy. A year after we voted to leave and lo and behold. Germany has become the terror hub of Europe. One thing this "racist scumbag thingy" has leaned is that you, Sir, are an abusive poster who refuses to see both sides of an argument and should apologise to me. You've let this site down, you've let your fellow Saints fans down, but most of all, you've let yourself down. I just hope you have leaned from this...
  20. Here's a quote from another racist scumbag Faiez Serraj, quoted in that racist rag, the Times, that connects uncontrolled migration with the risk of terrorism: Still, carry on with the abuse. It just destroys any argument you are making. Best Regards, Racist scumbag
  21. An attempt was made, prior to the referendum, to address the concerns of many of the voters, by David Cameron on a visit to Brussels. It is worth reading the news report at the time, here. For those interested, the detailed result of Cameron's failed negotiations are shown in the final text here. The EU totally failed to meet any aspirations Cameron had of presenting an acceptable agreement to those concerned voters, prior to the referendum. I'll give you one extract from the EU conclusions in the document, regarding migration, that alarmed many in this country. The "EU-Turkey agenda" referred to a grubby deal signed with Turkey in an attempt to solve the migrant crisis. Fast forward two years and we can see the effectiveness of the EU deal makers, having sovereignty over our borders: Here's the consequences of this policy: I wouldn't trust the EU to run a tombola and as the above demonstrates, it's not the UK government or voters that are to blame for Brexit, but the EU's continued inability to address the aspirations and concerns of EU citizens. These wire tapping crooks are happier to give a totalitarian, human-rights abusing dictator like Erdoğan what he wanted, than Cameron and the British voters the square root of f*** all. Think about it. The EU give Turkey €6 billion ($6.8 billion) in aid, visa-free travel to Europe for Turkish citizens and meanwhile the UK agree to pay the EU €50 billion and are told that even after we pay this sum we may not get a free trade deal. All I say is let's get the hell out of Dodge City, as soon as possible, preferably paying nothing.
  22. Exactly. I would describe it as accepting the inevitable, confident in the prospects which won't be changed by a meaningless impact assessment. We already had that from Osborne and the Bank of England and I'm struggling to notice the 500,000 additional unemployed and the inevitable recession the Leave vote was going to cause.
  23. Don't feed the troll, Sergei. It means I have to read his manure to get to your rose bush...
  24. Cheaper food that will accompany Brexit will benefit the poor, far more than the barista loving, restaurant dwelling, cheap labour reliant, liberal elite, who can afford to support political experiments like the EU.
  25. ...if you want a speedy US trade deal, Trump adviser warns A great article in the Telegraph yesterday. I think the US administration has had the EU worked out, as a protectionist cabal, rather than a free market. I also think that a free trade deal with the US is already lined up and modelled on NAFTA, leading our negotiators to string the EU along to save us the divorce bill. Screw them, I say and bring on GMO's and cheaper food...
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