And I am the one you say is charged up. :) I cannot imagine what it is like living with you with more questions than answers - a simple "what would you like for breakfast?" would be met with "has the milk for my cereal been farmed in accordance with EU regulations? if I have a kipper (or maybe...
Using your analogy - was it therefore cowardly that the remainers voted remain, never wishing to take a risk??? It is not exactly the unknown is it, unless you are living in a bubble. The UK actually existed before we were part of Europe and we can do so again, and can forge new deals both...
We all know how volatile the markets are and many have recovered and the City of London no doubt made massive profits by clever trading prior to the result. Sterling was artificially inflated before the vote so the downward spiral was exaggerated by that. There are no easy answers but the fact...
Maybe that is because we are not Government policy makers. We are in a state of political upheaval with Cameron jumping ship, and the need to vote in a new leader. These things take time - Europe is a sinking ship and the Brexiters have found a "lifeboat" - you may well be happy about that in...
The government underestimated the feelings of the British public and arrogantly thought "remain" was a foregone conclusion. Talk about being out of touch.
Yes exactly and one the greatest reasons for voting out. Are you claiming that it has been wonderful, with all the restrictions/red tape affecting our farms and fisheries policy, and how we have to keep the scum of the earth here because of the European Court of Human Rights? We now have a...
I am not celebrating. Many of those who voted remain were, and now still are, harbingers of doom. The amount of hyperbole used by the remain camp was ridiculous and it may well have been for that very reason that people turned against them. I say financial institutions should give the UK a...