callan
Striker
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2006
- Messages
- 3,603
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36353013
More lies from the leave campaign about Turkey.
You get more like Cameron every day!
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36353013
More lies from the leave campaign about Turkey.
You get more like Cameron every day!
TTIP (at least in its present form) won't happen.
I am absolutely fed up to the back teeth of all the "this will happen if we leave" crap. No-one can accurately predict at this stage because it is an unknown, there is no precedent so everything is just conjecture and speculation.
Sorry.
Doesn't answer the question.
0/1
I am absolutely fed up to the back teeth of all the "this will happen if we leave" crap. No-one can accurately predict at this stage because it is an unknown, there is no precedent so everything is just conjecture and speculation.
I don't let my students mark (correct is another matter) their own homework.Doubtless if I did, they'd all give themselves 10/10. :winking:
And the predicted recession is a direct result of actions by 'the party of fiscal responsibility'Let's face it.The Brexit camp have lost the economic argument.http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-the-papers-36355538
All they're left with now is the immigration dabate.Hence today's focus on Turkey.:thumbdown:
So am I. There's simply no way the leave campaigners can predict what will happen if we leave.
The main "lie" is that a Tory Government minister doesn't seem to be aware of the elementary fact that the leader of any one of the 28 member states can veto the accession of any new state into the EU.QED.
Which is what I have been saying, and why I believe this really comes down to gut feeling and peoples' attitude to risk.
Absolutely. Both sides are as bad as each other. Just present the FACTS, don't keep coming out with new people every day to tell us WHAT WILL happen unless it is an actual fact. To my knowledge, the "remain" campaign have been worse at doing this than the "leave" one.
And the risk angle is an interesting one. Many seem to focus on the perceived risks of leaving, overlooking that there would inevitably be risks in staying. Perhaps the next question to ask is who to trust to act in our best interests and help to mitigate those risks, the EU or the UK itself.
But there is far less risk in staying because it just maintains the status quo. We already know what it will be like: better the devil you know and all that.
Well we know what it is like now. Assuming that will never change is in itself a risk.
I'm not going to assume that my mortgage rate will never go up just because UK base rate has been unchanged for years.