Leroy42 wrote: » What the massive national debate going on when you were in your twenties? And what was the access you had to information at the time? We have 24 hour news, smartphones. Brexit is everywhere you look.
mickoneill31 wrote: » When I was in my 20s I wouldn't have had much of a clue about this kind of stuff.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I don't think driving the clown car off the cliff is going to improve matters. I am really amazed that young people are taking all of this so quietly- their future is about to go up in smoke, and they are Keeping Calm and Carrying On. Why haven't 5 million of them marched on Westminster and threatened to burn it down?
Peregrinus wrote: » now they're matched by people who look at the clown-car-heading-for-a-cliff that is the UK political system attempting to engage with Brexit, and who also conclude that, yeah, the British political system is quite seriously broken.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » Are British people not ashamed at how low their societal discourse has sunk? Or are they simply beyond shame? Or is it okay because there are yellow jacket protests in France so anything goes?
Thomas_IV wrote: » Wasn't the first time she got harassed and complained about it publicly. But this doesn't bother the Police nor does it bother the 'infamous' PM May and her cabinet which created and nurished the hostile environment set out to make foreign nationals leave the UK but also includes every anti-Brexit person. The Brexiteers will certainly and finally achieve the break up of the UK itself and even that's not what they want, it's what they'll get in the end. It is just a matter of time as by their delusions they'll most certainly crash out of the EU with no deal, unless commonsense prevails at the very last minute.
mickoneill31 wrote: » So in the age of everybody having a smartphone and social media to get proof of your claims we have to go to an event to see the militant moron lefties. It's just an unlucky coincidence that the videos we see all over the place are the militant moron guys on the right. Do you even believe the stuff you're typing yourself?
brickster69 wrote: » They are not leaving, they have to leave !
Peter Flynt wrote: » I'm not seeing much condemnation on Twitter regarding the thugs around Anna Soubry & Owen Jones from those who led the brexit campaign.
cryptocurrency wrote: » Go to any event and count the militant antfia
cryptocurrency wrote: » People find a few loons and the media is all over it. They never show the genome of the leftie loons who are at that craic all the time. It's all distasteful but let's be honest the left leaning folk who are that loud could outnumber his kind 10 to 1 in the UK.
As of the withdrawal date, undertakings and organisations that are established in the United Kingdom but not in the EU, and natural persons who reside in the United Kingdom will no longer be eligible to register .eu domain names or, if they are .eu registrants, to renew .eu domain names registered before the withdrawal date.
British citizens with a .eu domain should buy a dotcom replacement and lawyer up, the UK government has formally advised. In official guidance put out over the Christmas break, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) warned that "if you currently hold a .eu registration… you should consider transferring your registration to another top level domain… Examples of other top level domains include .com, .co.uk, .net or .org."
Iain Duncan Smith has said not a single job would be lost in a hard Brexit, insisting concerns fears of leaving with no deal are "nonsense"
brickster69 wrote: » Yes, assets generate wealth for the holders of the assets. However tax on those profits are mostly paid back in the home nation. Which is the case for Amazon, Starbucks & Facebook etc. The normal operating margins ( commission ) on opening and closing trades for UK traders are less than 0.00??% of value traded. Tax is obviously due on that after operational expenses. If these companies are wanting to trade EU financial services in the UK then they will have to set up UK companies and capitalise those companies independantly. They are not leaving, they have to leave !
prawnsambo wrote: » Assets generate wealth and wealth generates taxes. That's what the loss of 'them' assets means.
lawred2 wrote: » Should be easy enough to source a few examples so...
road_high wrote: » I guess if you go looking for something you will find it. Carefully picked their conversations I sense
FrancieBrady wrote: » Funny how everyone said exactly what you would expect the stereotype to say. On both sides. Pure fantasy stuff and very exploitative.
Seth Brundle wrote: » "You ain't even fu**in British!" If that's what it means to be British then it's no wonder thousands want an Irish passport!
road_high wrote: » That article went from bizarre to disturbing. Not sure if it’s exaggerated for effect but hard to believe we share the same island with some of these “characters”.
prawnsambo wrote: » Ah yeah, that jump in the polls was worth a measly seven seats or something. The point is though, that Labour are slipping when they should be absolutely slaughtering the tories in the polls. And the lift that the Lib-Dems got is illustrative of how their brexit policy is killing them.
brickster69 wrote: » It is not UK assets. They are owned by overseas banks. Just try to think that an American held assets in Ireland and he moved them to another country. Does that mean Ireland lost them assets ? FFS, you could not make it up. Next thing you know, planes wont be able to fly.
brickster69 wrote: » It is not UK assets. They are owned by overseas banks. Just try to think that an American held assets in Ireland and he moved them to another country. Does that mean Ireland lost them assets ?
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Yeah they got 50% more seats in 2017 than in 2016. Sounds good until you remember they dropped from 57 seats to just 8 in 2016. Like FF here they'll be wandering around in the wilderness for a while. And their last stint in power didn't win them any friends.
correct horse battery staple wrote: » https://edition.cnn.com/2019/01/07/investing/brexit-banks-moving-assets/index.html They should put that on a side of a bus and drive it up and down the length of the country.
MrMusician18 wrote: » Given the value of all UK assets is about £10tn, $1tn is not to be sneezed at