zuricity wrote:"http://m.imgur.com/gallery/qu9DGm9"
Here to help zuri, more cooperation than we can expect between the UK and the EU now.
zuricity wrote:"http://m.imgur.com/gallery/qu9DGm9"
carl_feedthegoat wrote:I just dont know what all the fuss is about....put some bob marley on and it will all go away.
Slim wrote:zuricity wrote:"http://m.imgur.com/gallery/qu9DGm9"
Here to help zuri, more cooperation than we can expect between the UK and the EU now.
carl_feedthegoat wrote:On a personal basis Im happy as a patriot that we will no longer have these cunts in Europe telling us what we can and cannot do.......when I said Germany have more power than us I meant it...maybe not on paper, but I believe privately these cunts treated the UK with contempt , and I also believe they were and still are power crazy....they all clubbed together against the UK when it came to concessions........its all about power with them.
Cocacolajojo wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:On a personal basis Im happy as a patriot that we will no longer have these cunts in Europe telling us what we can and cannot do.......when I said Germany have more power than us I meant it...maybe not on paper, but I believe privately these cunts treated the UK with contempt , and I also believe they were and still are power crazy....they all clubbed together against the UK when it came to concessions........its all about power with them.
When Germany entered the Euro the sacrificed their D-mark and made a pledge for a stronger Europe at the cost of a German economy dominating the rest of Europe. Since the recession they've pumped billions into different polities of southern Europe to keep the Euro afloat, money they're not likely to get back. If the German secretely have a club that aims for Germany to dominate the rest of Europe they sure chose a strange and indirect path to it. The irony is, now that the UK leaves the EU, Germany will have even more of a say about the EU's agenda as the strong voice of the UK will no longer be there. To whose benefit it will be though only time will tell. It's your choice and good luck and all that.
MilnersJaw wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:I just dont know what all the fuss is about....put some bob marley on and it will all go away.
you've got really short legs. Are you Tevez/
Cocacolajojo wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:On a personal basis Im happy as a patriot that we will no longer have these cunts in Europe telling us what we can and cannot do.......when I said Germany have more power than us I meant it...maybe not on paper, but I believe privately these cunts treated the UK with contempt , and I also believe they were and still are power crazy....they all clubbed together against the UK when it came to concessions........its all about power with them.
When Germany entered the Euro the sacrificed their D-mark and made a pledge for a stronger Europe at the cost of a German economy dominating the rest of Europe. Since the recession they've pumped billions into different polities of southern Europe to keep the Euro afloat, money they're not likely to get back. If the German secretely have a club that aims for Germany to dominate the rest of Europe they sure chose a strange and indirect path to it. The irony is, now that the UK leaves the EU, Germany will have even more of a say about the EU's agenda as the strong voice of the UK will no longer be there. To whose benefit it will be though only time will tell. It's your choice and good luck and all that.
john@staustell wrote:What other motivation would Germany have to chuck away billions? Pure altruism maybe?
patrickblue wrote:I don't think that buying their way to domination is at all strange. And I don't think it's a secret that they believe that they are best equipped to run Europe. Not that I think it's a bad thing, and I personally think that leaving is a huge mistake we'll live to regret.
carl_feedthegoat wrote:A Prime Minister resigned. The £ plummeted. The FTSE 100 lost significant ground. But then the £ rallied past February levels, and the FTSE closed on a weekly high: 2.4% up on last Friday, its best performance in 4 months. President Obama decided we wouldn't be at the 'back of the queue' after all and that our 'special relationship' was still strong. The French President confirmed the Le Touquet agreement would stay in place. The President of the European Commission stated Brexit negations would be 'orderly' and stressed the UK would continue to be a 'close partner' of the EU. A big bank denied reports it would shift 2,000 staff overseas. The CBI, vehemently anti-Brexit during the referendum campaign, stated British business was resilient and would adapt. Several countries outside the EU stated they wished to begin bi-lateral trade talks with the UK immediately. If this was the predicted apocalypse, well, it was a very British one. It was all over by teatime.
Not a bad first day of freedom.
zuricity wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:A Prime Minister resigned. The £ plummeted. The FTSE 100 lost significant ground. But then the £ rallied past February levels, and the FTSE closed on a weekly high: 2.4% up on last Friday, its best performance in 4 months. President Obama decided we wouldn't be at the 'back of the queue' after all and that our 'special relationship' was still strong. The French President confirmed the Le Touquet agreement would stay in place. The President of the European Commission stated Brexit negations would be 'orderly' and stressed the UK would continue to be a 'close partner' of the EU. A big bank denied reports it would shift 2,000 staff overseas. The CBI, vehemently anti-Brexit during the referendum campaign, stated British business was resilient and would adapt. Several countries outside the EU stated they wished to begin bi-lateral trade talks with the UK immediately. If this was the predicted apocalypse, well, it was a very British one. It was all over by teatime.
Not a bad first day of freedom.
Well i just sent some money back to the UK at 1.33 chf to the pound , thursday it was 1.44 to the pound.
Just in case Yaya does actually go ( he is still a city player ). Those two beers are so far looking good Carl.
What was it now start of the season or first PL game for two beers ? Either way , so far so good :-)
carl_feedthegoat wrote:My round mate !
Tokyo Blue wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:My round mate !
Most generous of you. I’ll have a pint of the guest ale and a bag of pork scratchings, please.
zuricity wrote:Tokyo Blue wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:My round mate !
Most generous of you. I’ll have a pint of the guest ale and a bag of pork scratchings, please.
Are you really from Wolverhampton ?
Tokyo Blue wrote:zuricity wrote:Tokyo Blue wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:My round mate !
Most generous of you. I’ll have a pint of the guest ale and a bag of pork scratchings, please.
Are you really from Wolverhampton ?
LOL, no mate.
I hope you aren't in Saint Etienne chucking stuff at the Poland players.
Cocacolajojo wrote:john@staustell wrote:What other motivation would Germany have to chuck away billions? Pure altruism maybe?
Of course not, they're trying to save their own skins because like it or not, they're in the Euro mess with the rest of the countries. But my point is that it would have been better for Germany to stay out of the Euro. Their currency was solid as a rock and they sacrificed it for a project that would make Germany less independent and tie the country's destiny to the much weaker economies of southern Europe AND, eventually, the unstable economies of eastern Europe. If they would have wanted to dominate Europe they would have said: good luck with the Euro, if it's a success we'll join eventually but if it's not we'll be standing strong while your economies plunge into recession. And of course the EURO-zone want to dominate world politics, it's cynical, but it's not a plan for Germany to dominate the rest of Europe. If anything, Germany had already accomplished that by the time the Euro was introduced. Like it or not. Bavaria was/is currently keeping the continental economy ticking, perhaps not single handedly but not far from it.patrickblue wrote:I don't think that buying their way to domination is at all strange. And I don't think it's a secret that they believe that they are best equipped to run Europe. Not that I think it's a bad thing, and I personally think that leaving is a huge mistake we'll live to regret.
I think all countries strongly believe in their plan on how the EU should be run, not saying that is not the case. And of course Germany has clashed with the UK on a number of policies. That's politics. And I think it's legitimate to leave if one feels that one's country isn't getting much out of being in the EU, anything else would be absurd. I'm just disagreeing with the notion that the EU is Germany's secret plan to fuck the rest of Europe. The people in Germany who do want to fuck with Europe want to leave the EU too.
patrickblue wrote:Don't know about Carl, but I don't think that Germany want to fuck the rest of Europe, they just think they're best equipped to run it.
zuricity wrote:Slim wrote:zuricity wrote:"http://m.imgur.com/gallery/qu9DGm9"
Here to help zuri, more cooperation than we can expect between the UK and the EU now.
Thanks,but we in CH don't need the EU. They need us( to pay all their bills ha ha ! )
Slim wrote:zuricity wrote:Slim wrote:zuricity wrote:"http://m.imgur.com/gallery/qu9DGm9"
Here to help zuri, more cooperation than we can expect between the UK and the EU now.
Thanks,but we in CH don't need the EU. They need us( to pay all their bills ha ha ! )
Well if you're not going to use the Nazi gold for something, what good is it really?
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