stickygirl
All the witches
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2012
- Posts
- 21,320
Serkis? Doesn't sound very British does it? I reckon he'll need to watch his back. We've got plenty of proper British actors out of work
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Tom Peck: 'Theresa May is out of ideas, out of time, out of luck, ...and soon she'll be out of a job too'.
https://www.independent.ie/opinion/...-soon-shell-be-out-of-a-job-too-37618301.html
(That sums it up, very nicely.
yikes
I had no idea that PM May had so much in common with Trump.
Very sad day, to see America and UK mirror each other's worst aspects.
PM Theresa May and her supporters flounce off to their Christmas holidays, Trump and his supporters crawl away under cover of darkness, security guards, and secrecy, to their Christmas holidays. Leaving their countrymen and countrywomen in a state of worry.
Well here we are: the slo-mo trainwreck of UK government is sliding into platforms 1 through 9 with a buffet carriage thick with pigs snouts, half-drowned in gravy. What a bunch of complete wankers, most of them now much richer wankers. Bring on No Deal - who gives a fuck, when no one has a say in it?
Exactly, so I may have to stand at the next erection myself and put my mouth where the money isEveryone had a say at the last General Election. The British people elected the "wankers" so it is really the people who are to blame. They can't agree amongst themselves what they want, why do you expect their representatives to be any different.
Exactly, so I may have to stand at the next erection myself and put my mouth where the money is
They're still wankers and should never have been given a task beyond their ( collective ) abilities.
Individual voting decisions may have been base on some of those, but given the way that the EU had been represented in the largely right wing media in the UK, people voted in a display of irritation. Yes, people were unjustifiably pissed off with Europe, because only the down-side of it was news-worthy. A parallel referendum might have been "The smell of French garlic soup- yes or no?", without realising that it also meant getting rid of the air that carried the smell.Unfortunately, when you have a binary choice as you did in the referendum, people make the choice they do for a variety of reasons. In that respect, parliament does reflect the people. Some wanted to leave with no deal. Some thought that as soon as we said we were leaving, the EU would be falling over themselves to offer us a better deal than we had when we were in. Some thought they could take the trade aspect and dump all the bits they didn't like. Add to that Ego stoking that always goes on in government and you get what we have now. You have some genuinely concerned for the welfare of their constituents. You have others who want the destruction of their own parties because they hope to take over the remnants and become leader. Then you have those who are acting purely out of self-interest. Their money is largely invested in countries with which the EU has no trade agreement and if they can make Britain a backdoor into Europe they stand to make even more money.
I just look at it all and say 'Now you know why referenda form no part of the UK constitution.'
Sure it does. Sir Kiss.Serkis? Doesn't sound very British does it? I reckon he'll need to watch his back. We've got plenty of proper British actors out of work
never could understand why the English liberals WANT to be part of the new Reich...
Churchill did his damndest to end Adolph and his Reich, yet when modern day germans redid it with a new name..... you bent over and spread your ass cheeks with a big smile and said "thank you" after words.
Once again Jonathan Pie hits the nail on the head. ....
snip....
Like Jonathan Pie I am now feeling very sad for my country.
Hundreds of thousands of people opposed to Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union marched through central London on Saturday to demand a new referendum as the deepening Brexit crisis risked sinking Prime Minister Theresa May’s premiership.
After three years of tortuous debate, it is still uncertain how, when or even if Brexit will happen as May tries to plot a way out of the gravest political crisis in at least a generation.