numnuts Posted June 11, 2024 Author Share Posted June 11, 2024 (edited) 20 hours ago, factJack said: this manifesto still hasn't been released and the article in the origional post was from February. I wonder what the hold up is Labour are probably waiting for their resident racism expert, the Sugar Daddy Monster, to give it the once-over. Then, Konstipated Keir's missus will need to sign off on it as well. Once published, the levels of wordsmithery contained within, will probably even make the most deceitful freemasons brightly blush. Edited June 11, 2024 by numnuts Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
numnuts Posted September 9, 2024 Author Share Posted September 9, 2024 I will update this thread soon. Meanwhile, I did have to chuckle at this recent 'The i' headline. Yes, the term 'softer Brexit', which always really meant 'no Brexit', is now back in use. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
numnuts Posted February 3 Author Share Posted February 3 Does anyone still believe even one word that Starmer says? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0e4rv2rw4eo 'Starmer first PM to join EU leaders' meeting since Brexit.' Sir Keir Starmer is heading to Brussels to join a gathering of European Union leaders – the first time a British prime minister has done so since Brexit. Starmer is heading over the English Channel for talks focused on defence and security co-operation and will also meet Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte. The trip is part of what he calls a "reset" between the UK and the European Union. The government has promised the UK will not re-join the EU's Single Market or Customs Union, or sign up to freedom of movement. But ministers do want what they see as a better relationship on defence and security, crime and trade. They hope to sort this out by the spring and finalise it at a UK-EU summit, possibly in April or May. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jason57 Posted February 4 Share Posted February 4 Surely this commie cunt won't last the full 5 years. He's going to be hounded out by the public. He's actually worse than the Tories. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1velocity7 Posted February 4 Share Posted February 4 47 minutes ago, Jason57 said: Surely this commie cunt won't last the full 5 years. He's going to be hounded out by the public. He's actually worse than the Tories. they let rishi run his full term and he was unelected no way is starmer going anywhere 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
factJack Posted February 4 Share Posted February 4 15 hours ago, Jason57 said: Surely this commie cunt won't last the full 5 years. He's going to be hounded out by the public. He's actually worse than the Tories. no CHance the english are stuck with him. Just like France they've had protests, riots, yellow vest yet Macron still there. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jason57 Posted February 5 Share Posted February 5 10 hours ago, factJack said: no CHance the english are stuck with him. Just like France they've had protests, riots, yellow vest yet Macron still there. I guess David icke was wrong then. There's really nothing the billions can do Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
numnuts Posted June 16 Author Share Posted June 16 Here is one of the BBC News articles that covered the so-called 'Brexit Reset' deal that Seditious Starmer, who kept extremely quiet about Brexit during his general election campaign, somehow felt entitled to sign last month. What a surprise! Unless he is stopped, this is only the beginning. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce9v28r7vlxo 'UK-EU deal moves us on from Brexit rows, Starmer says.' In a post on X, Johnson said under this "sell out of a deal the UK will have to accept EU law on a host of measures from food standards to emissions trading". He said Sir Keir had agreed that the UK "will once again be paying countless millions of pounds into EU coffers - for the privilege of becoming the non-voting punk of the EU Commission". The prime minister's spokesperson said payments to the EU in relation to the deals on agricultural products and energy were "not big", but not did confirm the costs. The government said there was a difference between these "administrative costs" and the payments required to be part of EU programmes, which would be part of future negotiations. (I would trust BoJo about as far as I could throw him, but what he says is very true. We will again be paying vast sums of cash to the E.U. and not getting much out of it.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
numnuts Posted August 26 Author Share Posted August 26 (edited) Even the village idiots must have figured out that those who give policy orders to Rachel Reeves are trying to destroy our economy and society. With this story, I think that we could have another 'push us back towards the E.U.' angle. As in, we have to get a bailout to keep paying pensions, we can't get a bailout unless we agree to the IMF's terms and the IMF's terms push us back towards the E.U.. If not that, then it's another agenda at play. The PTB always love to give their frontmen a 'our hands are tied' angle. Not us, guv! https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/08/23/rachel-reeves-britain-debt-bailout-1970s-imf-economy/ 'Britain ‘heading towards IMF bailout’.' Rachel Reeves’ tax-and-spend gamble is driving Britain towards a 1970s-style debt crisis and bailout from the International Monetary Fund, leading economists have warned. They have said the Chancellor’s handling of the economy risks a return to the years of high inflation and borrowing that ended with Britain being forced to borrow billions from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) 50 years ago. It came as leading retailers sounded the alarm over the rising cost of taxes and red tape, which is pushing the country into an era of “stagflation”. On Saturday night, Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader aid the economic situation was like “the 1970s all over again”, while Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative Party leader, said that the surging cost of government borrowing was “the price” of Labour’s “economic mismanagement”. Ms Reeves is under huge pressure ahead of the autumn Budget, with forecasts showing rampant borrowing has created a £50bn black hole. She is widely expected to put up taxes again to cover the shortfall despite warnings that doing so will only further stunt Britain’s anaemic growth. Prof Jagjit Chadha, who recently stepped down as the head of the National Institute for Economic and Social Research, claimed the economy was at risk of “collapse”. He said the financial situation was “as perilous the period leading up to the IMF loan of 1976”, when Britain had to be bailed out by the global banking body. He told the When the Facts Change Substack, written by the Telegraph columnist Liam Halligan: “I’m in a world in which I could imagine it [an IMF bailout] happening, and we’ll be bereft in that case. “We will not be able to roll over debt, we will not be able to meet pensions payments, benefits will be hard to pay out.” Edited August 26 by numnuts 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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