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Post by david on Aug 29, 2018 17:41:48 GMT
Definitely! This was definitely not her finest moment as PM. I wonder what she was thinking (if anything!)? I appreciate that it's all for the cameras however I couldn't help but think, on a personal level, is that the way she's dance at a daily party or wedding? The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold.
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 29, 2018 18:00:53 GMT
I appreciate that it's all for the cameras however I couldn't help but think, on a personal level, is that the way she's dance at a daily party or wedding? The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold. Yeah, good idea. Partner her up with Anton
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3,321 posts
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Brexit
Aug 29, 2018 18:05:35 GMT
Post by david on Aug 29, 2018 18:05:35 GMT
The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold. Yeah, good idea. Partner her up with Anton It would be worth watching SCD just for that.
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3,321 posts
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Brexit
Aug 29, 2018 18:06:44 GMT
Post by david on Aug 29, 2018 18:06:44 GMT
The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold. Yeah, good idea. Partner her up with Anton It would worth watching SCD just for that partnership.
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Post by sf on Aug 29, 2018 18:09:15 GMT
I'm sorry, ca i just put this out there? Did anyone else think that Theresa Mays dancing on the news last night was the most horrific thing was the most horrific thing I've seen all week?
It's certainly up there with her Mexican wave at that football match. Appalling as her dancing might be, though, it's nothing like as horrifying as what comes out when she opens her mouth and speaks.
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2,340 posts
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Brexit
Aug 30, 2018 18:17:03 GMT
Post by theglenbucklaird on Aug 30, 2018 18:17:03 GMT
The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold. Yeah, good idea. Partner her up with Anton Both racist?
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5,062 posts
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Brexit
Aug 30, 2018 18:33:38 GMT
Post by Phantom of London on Aug 30, 2018 18:33:38 GMT
Those that can provide an educated forecast, I recognise that the direction and resulting outcome of Brexit is still up in the air and unknown, but are there any *legitimate* predictions about what might happen to property value over the next few years? Is there a good time to invest, eg now, prior? Will finance be harder to ascertain post-Brexit? Will property value crumble? Thanks in advance. If you have your own business, you might want to re-register them in another country such as Ireland and more pacifically Dublin, just like arch Brexiter Jacob Rees Mogg has.
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5,062 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Aug 30, 2018 18:39:40 GMT
The BBC should sign her up for Strictly ASAP. It could be tv gold. Yeah, good idea. Partner her up with Anton Like Ann Widdecombe being pulled by the hair around the dance floor on a past episode of strictly, you won't need Anton to pull Saint Theresa around the dance floor, I would do it, she was a horrific home secretary who went soft on criminals with moped robberies and acid attacks and she is a weak and ineffective prime minister who runs the country on a day to day basis and whatever the Daily Mail or Sun editor thinks.
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Brexit
Aug 30, 2018 18:43:17 GMT
Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2018 18:43:17 GMT
Those that can provide an educated forecast, I recognise that the direction and resulting outcome of Brexit is still up in the air and unknown, but are there any *legitimate* predictions about what might happen to property value over the next few years? Is there a good time to invest, eg now, prior? Will finance be harder to ascertain post-Brexit? Will property value crumble? Thanks in advance. If you have your own business, you might want to re-register them in another country such as Ireland and more pacifically Dublin, just like arch Brexiter Jacob Rees Mogg has. That query was just domestic. Home buying etc. I actually wound up my business last year (unrelated to Brexit) but currently feel like it may have been the right move at the right time. A number of colleagues (and friends) are facing some pretty grim forecasts with regards their businesses. For a lot of people its not just about getting around some mere hassle by registering their trade in an EU country, but the potential requirement to need visa's to travel to and trade in each individual member of the EU, the cost of carnets and documentation required to do so and the entire current uncertainty about anything.
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Post by n1david on Aug 30, 2018 19:20:08 GMT
I’m in the process of winding up my business as most of the work that I did in London (specific role in City firms) is moving to continental Europe, and I don’t want to compromise the type of work I do or travel extensively, assuming I can get the required paperwork. Time to retire.
My brother-in-law is being forced to wind up his business - the bulk of his clients were in Benelux, and he’s fed up being told that they’d like to continue working with him, but given that they don’t know what paperwork will be required after Brexit, they’re going with consultants from the EU27.
But it’s all fine.
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 31, 2018 5:29:56 GMT
Warning. I've just woken up to see on both my Twitter feed and Facebook thread Theresa May dancing again, still in Africa, this time in a purple suit.
Now there's something to carry me through the rest of the day- John Travolta she ain't!
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2018 8:39:28 GMT
Warning. I've just woken up to see on both my Twitter feed and Facebook thread Theresa May dancing again, still in Africa, this time in a purple suit. Now there's something to carry me through the rest of the day- John Travolta she ain't! Do we think that this could be some misguided Press Officer seeing the attention the first video got and setting up a second as a way of people perceiving May more favourably? The better the general public think of her over the coming months the easier it may be to navigate Brexmare.
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4,993 posts
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Brexit
Sept 21, 2018 12:30:24 GMT
via mobile
Post by Someone in a tree on Sept 21, 2018 12:30:24 GMT
Not a good 24 hrs for Theresa well actually scrap her well-being how about the well-being of the UK
I want to go to sleep for 15 years
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Brexit
Sept 21, 2018 16:29:19 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 21, 2018 16:29:19 GMT
It will be DINO, a deal in name only. Europe cannot do a deal that Britain wants without breaking Europe, so they won’t. What will transpire is a country at war with itself and eventually, hopefully, a reckoning,
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1,250 posts
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Brexit
Sept 21, 2018 17:10:43 GMT
Post by joem on Sept 21, 2018 17:10:43 GMT
It will be DINO, a deal in name only. Europe cannot do a deal that Britain wants without breaking Europe, so they won’t. What will transpire is a country at war with itself and eventually, hopefully, a reckoning, Europe is broken, hence the inexorable rise of the far-right parties.
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Brexit
Sept 21, 2018 17:57:20 GMT
sf likes this
Post by Deleted on Sept 21, 2018 17:57:20 GMT
It will be DINO, a deal in name only. Europe cannot do a deal that Britain wants without breaking Europe, so they won’t. What will transpire is a country at war with itself and eventually, hopefully, a reckoning, Europe is broken, hence the inexorable rise of the far-right parties. Reference was to the EU. As for the rise of the right, the blame for that goes partly on the reaction to the banking crisis and the way it rewarded the guilty and hurt the innocent and, secondly, the way that certain media entities, amplified by both supra-national political agitators and the black ops of certain countries, have used the ignorance and fear of those affected by the first factor. As I say, a reckoning is coming for those who created this, and it will not just be this country where that happens.
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3,321 posts
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Post by david on Sept 21, 2018 18:40:24 GMT
Anybody remember the PMs mantra last year of strong and stable leadership? Nice to see it in effect at this current time! Has anybody tried switching the Maybot on/off again to see if a reboot will help the current situation?
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1,972 posts
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Post by sf on Sept 21, 2018 20:32:29 GMT
As for the rise of the right, the blame for that goes partly on the reaction to the banking crisis and the way it rewarded the guilty and hurt the innocent and, secondly, the way that certain media entities, amplified by both supra-national political agitators and the black ops of certain countries, have used the ignorance and fear of those affected by the first factor. Exactly. Look at who benefits from destabilising the EU, and from pulling one of the major players out of the union. Follow the money. The trail - thanks to the sterling work done by journalists like the Guardian's Carole Cadwalladr - is not at all difficult to follow. It's fascinating, isn't it, that our government has shown such reluctance to set up an equivalent to the Mueller investigation in response to the various revelations about Cambridge Analytica, Russian interference, dark money and all the rest of it. And it's not as if the opposition are applying any meaningful pressure there either. (Of course, it would help if we had a leader of the opposition who was capable of actually leading the opposition - you know, as opposed to an out-of-his-depth Wolfie Smith clone with no leadership skills and the intellect of tofu.)
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 10:05:52 GMT
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3,321 posts
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Post by david on Sept 22, 2018 10:37:22 GMT
Its times like this,I wish spitting image was still on TV. They would of had a field day with the brexit choas and trump.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 12:57:28 GMT
Satire is pretty much redundant at the moment, what else can you say when the actuality is so shocking?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 15:15:58 GMT
I've always had an interest in what life was like in medieval times and soon I'll get to experience it for myself. When petrol is too expensive to import I can get a horse. Perhaps I'll become a blacksmith.
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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 16:49:55 GMT
via mobile
sf likes this
Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 16:49:55 GMT
They reckon the cost of petrol is going down soon, by a whole £1.50 a tank. Considering it took me £65 to fill my tank this morning, I'm furiously excited about these forthcoming savings.
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1,972 posts
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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 18:51:28 GMT
Post by sf on Sept 22, 2018 18:51:28 GMT
Satire is pretty much redundant at the moment, what else can you say when the actuality is so shocking?
Sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words:
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19,797 posts
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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 19:00:40 GMT
Post by BurlyBeaR on Sept 22, 2018 19:00:40 GMT
Good grief. Just listen to yourselves. I hate the term “butthurt” because it’s cheap and ridiculous, is used by people on line trying to appear younger than they are and shows zero imagination but wow, the epitome of it is demonstrated above. I voted remain but if I’d been in a room with you lot I might not have.
It’s going to happen. How about looking for solutions instead of inspecting your hurt butts?
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