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Guided Missile

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Everything posted by Guided Missile

  1. You really need to understand that you don't need a trade treaty to trade. The EU doesn't have one with either the US or China, but we could.
  2. Screw them. Let's join NAFTA. 440 million customers, sell in dollars, not cr@ppy euros and no political interference. An added bonus that one of the members is a commonwealth country. You only have to go to Southampton Docks to see where the majority of the JLR cars are shipped and it's not the IoW.
  3. Personally, I think that's a load of cr@p. Of course we can negotiate trade deals now. Maybe we can't sign them, but I can't believe we can't negotiate them. Anyway, what are they going to do if we do? Throw us out of the EU? Invade us? Just a bunch of jobsworths that we didn't vote for...
  4. Bl00dy freedom of movement....
  5. I still think Jezza's the man to put his finger in the dyke. It's why I voted for him....
  6. Not half as uncomfortable as when Russia invades Ukraine. Then we'll see how the ex-nazis, anti-capitalists and surrender monkeys treat the UK then.
  7. I've got a green card, matey and my wife is American, so I think it does.
  8. I'm still waiting for the emergency budget we were promised...
  9. So you didn't read the paper then, pal...
  10. Hamilton was saying it is a neo-liberal institution, you're saying it is neo-conservative. I am not really arguing with you, as you may be right, but our Canadian pensioner is wrong, either way. The only thing I took from the site was (in my opinion) an excellent paper published by two PhD's about the need for a trade deal if the UK exits the EU, one which I bet you haven't read, pal.... PS. It's scholarly, BTW. You know...it means the ability to spell.
  11. Total b0ll0x. To quote from their website: Quite like the EU, then, except with no freedom of movement. Anyway, you didn't get to vote in the referendum, so back in your box...
  12. To be continued....
  13. The links were posted, both as hyperlinks and in full.Trying to disguise them with a hyperlink? That's right:lol: . The paper by the two PhD's obviously have too many words for you to bother with. You're the one with the "pre-determined viewpoint" and as I said, if you're not going to read the document I refer to, to support an argument I'm wasting my time engaging with you, apart from saying we have 12,000 customers in Germany. Bye, bye and I'll look forward to revisiting this topic in a year when the UK economy is flying, the EU is in the cr@pper and your teeth are still in a glass of water at night...
  14. According to this video, she's expecting a call on her mobile at any minute from Donald Tusk...
  15. She can always go back to Spain, if she thinks the EU trade deals are doing such a good job, although the chances of her kids getting a job there are pretty remote...
  16. I posted two links. Here is the one you had trouble clicking on. If you need a hand with using the TV remote, let me know....
  17. Like I said, not a clue and if you aren't prepared to read and learn about the options open to the UK in those links I posted, then me posting the 50 page summary of the EU regulations covering my business and the 100's of associated regulations and guidance documents, is a waste of time. Having seen German and French companies ignore the uniform principles of the EU, to use these regulations against SME's and larger UK companies have, I think, provided me with the experience you obviously lack and from which you aren't prepared to learn. The UK regulatory authorities always applied EU law fairly. The Germans and the French? It was summed up by the German authorities, when asked why they hadn't approved one of our products for sale in Germany, after approval in the UK, asked me if I had a supply agreement in place with Bayer.
  18. Like I just posted...selling washers.
  19. You just don't have a clue, Whitey. The EU is a regulatory nightmare, one I am just waking up from. Alright if your selling washers, but for anything the Germans and French want to protect, you're f*****
  20. Here's another one for you to read and the original one is here. Read and learn. You're never too old! PS: The UK have a very large number of lawyers and civil servants who will be out of a job, now that we have left the EU.
  21. Rejoin EFTA in the meantime, then. You should remember EFTA, Whitey. I still have the stamps. Here is the free trade agreements they have and none of it involves kowtowing to Brussels, only filling in an application form:
  22. The Democratic party in the US is similar in political position of the centre of the Conservative party, which was Blairite itself under Cameron. The main danger to trade deals is if Corbyn gets in. (I had trouble typing that. It's not easy when you're laughing uncontrollably)
  23. You should have read the paper I linked. To quote a small part:
  24. Banks are nothing like bookies or insurance companies. They 100% rely on confidence in the strength of their asset base. If that goes, they are screwed. Unlike bookies and insurance companies. they are unable to cover their positions, should everyone withdraw their deposits. Once a run starts, that is the end. Deutsche Bank are too big to be allowed to fail, but also too big to rescue. I am sure they are not the only EU financial institution screwed...
  25. I'm relying on the price of Deutsche Banks 5 year credit default swaps and the fact no one knew about Lehmans because bankers all whistle in the dark. A lot of the EU problems were swept hidden from us voters until the referendum was over. It'll all come out over the next few months. Italy, Spain and Portugal are in the ****, with Greece a basket case. I assume you know something that I don't that leads you to a different view? I doubt it...
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