An unelected PM tells the unelected Queen to close down the UK's elected Parliament, so that we can "get on" with withdrawing from the EU, which is apparently run by unelected bureaucrats, which is a bad thing. Do I have that right?
Once again, the EU proves just why the UK will miss being a member so much. After a mere 20 years of negotiation, the EU's free trade deal with four South American countries has collapsed because some Austrian politicians have decided they don't like it after all:
The ram wrote:As a REAL Englishman I would like a war.. why should we negotiate with Europe. Time for action!
The last time the "English" got into trouble with the continent, not only did they loose big time, but they wound up having to integrate French into the language. Are you sure you last remaining vestiges of Anglo Saxon heritage want another invasion?
The ram wrote:As a REAL Englishman I would like a war.. why should we negotiate with Europe. Time for action!
The last time the "English" got into trouble with the continent, not only did they loose big time, but they wound up having to integrate French into the language. it ended with English troops marching through Berlin and occupying Germany for four years.
mrswdk wrote:ended with English troops marching through Berlin and occupying Germany for four years.
I thought it was Scottish and Welsh troops incentivized by the thought of very loose, English women back home? (Or loose, English sheep in the case of the Welsh.)
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
BY that time, all Anglo Saxon influence had been eliminated, thanks to said Normans. Remember the Normans were assimilating people; they were originally Vikings, then they adopted the ways of France and then they slowly adopted the ways of England.
Thanks to master negotiator PM Boris Johnson, and despite the consistent efforts of the shameful Remain Traitors who all ought to take a long, hard look at themselves in the mirror, the UK and EU are rocketing towards a Brexit deal being signed in advance of the October 31st deadline for the UK's exit.
Dukasaur wrote:You seem to be pretty generous with this "death" thing.
I think your years in China must have rubbed off on you more than you think.
In the West, we generally think that having one's political opponents killed is so 1618.
Hey, one UK Labour party politician has already been assassinated over the party's handling of Brexit. That sort of thing's becoming a more de rigeur again, just give it some time.
And anyway, please. China - the world's oldest civilization - has a little more class than that. In China you have your opponents locked up.
Dukasaur wrote:You seem to be pretty generous with this "death" thing.
I think your years in China must have rubbed off on you more than you think.
In the West, we generally think that having one's political opponents killed is so 1618.
Hey, one UK Labour party politician has already been assassinated over the party's handling of Brexit. That sort of thing's becoming a more de rigeur again, just give it some time.
And anyway, please. China - the world's oldest civilization - has a little more class than that. In China you have your opponents locked up & their organs harvested.
The UK's press have come together united in demanding that traitor MPs do their duty to the country and to democracy by supporting heroic PM Johnson's new deal:
I particularly like the picture of Boris surrounded by delighted European leaders, all desperate to congratulate him. This man truly is a European hero.
BORIS THE JUGGERNAUT HATH COMMETH
The little Japanese kid represents the Remain traitors who tried to stop the UK reaching this glorious day.
Labour and the Liberal Democrats have nothing to offer except obstructing Boris Johnson for the sake of their own party politics. They have been making this increasingly transparent in their ongoing disruption of Brexit and now all parties all across the EU have become fed up with them:
In France, Le Figaro says: "It should have been a day of clarification; it has been a moment of additional confusion. British MPs have added an incredible episode to the already lengthy Brexit series - by deciding not to decide anything."
Meanwhile, an analysis on Germany's centre-left news website Spiegel Online notes: "Just when you think it cannot get any crazier, the British parliament adds another thing: yet again, it has outmanoeuvred its own government. With that, Brexit, which was almost within reach, is uncertain again."
NRC Handelsblad in the Netherlands says, "Saturday cannot be viewed as a failure for Johnson. It is likely that the 306 members of parliament who voted against the Letwin act will also support him next week." Dutch De Volkskrant agrees: "It is understandable that there were cheers from the opposition benches and the thousands of anti-Brexit protesters in Parliament Square. But this could prove to be a pyrrhic victory."
The MPs deliberately obstructing it have been proven to be nothing more than self-interested snivelling traitors and they all deserve to be locked up in HMP Brixton accordingly.
The MPs deliberately obstructing it have been proven to be nothing more than self-interested snivelling traitors and they all deserve to be locked up in HMP Brixton accordingly.
the article wrote:According to YouGov, slightly more (23%) believe it would be a bad deal for Britain than think it would be a good one (17%). As many as 45% feel they do not know enough to give a view either way.
Similarly, Survation reports while 25% think it would be good for Britain as a whole, 27% believe it would be bad. And just 17% believe the UK would benefit most from the deal, while 28% think the EU would.
The MPs deliberately obstructing it have been proven to be nothing more than self-interested snivelling traitors and they all deserve to be locked up in HMP Brixton accordingly.
the article wrote:According to YouGov, slightly more (23%) believe it would be a bad deal for Britain than think it would be a good one (17%). As many as 45% feel they do not know enough to give a view either way.
Similarly, Survation reports while 25% think it would be good for Britain as a whole, 27% believe it would be bad. And just 17% believe the UK would benefit most from the deal, while 28% think the EU would.
That doesn't change the fact that more people want the deal to be approved by Parliament than want it rejected.
They don't think it's great, but it's the best they're going to get and they're sick of snivelling Remain traitors dragging out the tortuous Brexit process that the country has been subjected to for the past 3.5 years.
Don't forget that the UK would already have left 7 months ago if not for the Remain traitors deliberately sticking their oars in and scuppering the whole process just so they could get some space on the front page of the news for once (instead of being thumbnails buried under stories about cats up trees, which is where the pathetic smug policy-less faces of career road blocks like Chuka Umunna are usually found).
House Speaker John Bercow confirms he has joined the ranks of Chuka Umunna and Hermann Goring by deliberately obstructing the passage of democracy through the UK's legislature: