FORUMS FORUMS






RLFANS.COM
Celebrating
25 years service to
the Rugby League
Community!

   WWW.RLFANS.COM • View topic - General Election campaign
::Off-topic discussion.
IR80 
RankPostsTeam
Club Captain2215No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Jun 24 20195 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
3rd Sep 20 02:4026th Aug 20 00:48LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 2:06 pm  
ninearches wrote:
It seems to me that the Boris method of leading with "no deal to get a good deal" is the only sensible way forward against the intransigent burghers of Brussels. It is just a pity that ever since the 2016 referendum certain powers have been at work to scupper the result. Certain MPs & members of elite society have completely side lined the popular vote to look towards the EU
as being in their own best interest in terms of better pay for their personal coffers & possible future jobs to be had within the EU conglomerate.
As for Corbyn ,he has more faces than the town hall clock.


:CLAP:
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Board Member17116No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 22 200122 years256th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
18th Apr 24 12:039th Apr 24 15:46LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Olicana - Home of 'Vark Slayer
Signature
“At last, a real, Tory budget,” Daily Mail 24/9/22
"It may be that the honourable gentleman doesn't like mixing with his own side … but we on this side have a more convivial, fraternal spirit." Jacob Rees-Mogg 21/10/21

A member of the Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati.

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 2:21 pm  
ninearches wrote:
against the intransigent burghers of Brussels.

What do you expect them to agree to?
ninearches wrote:
members of elite society........ being in their own best interest in terms of better pay for their personal coffers

I'm presuming you typed that without any sense of irony?
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years66th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 9:02 pm  
tigertot wrote:
ninearches wrote:
It seems to me that the Boris method of leading with "no deal to get a good deal" is the only sensible way forward against the intransigent burghers of Brussels.
What do you expect them to agree to?

The genuinely tragic thing is, so ill-informed are so many of these Brexiteers, that they genuinely believe that our European partners didn't make huge concessions as part of the withdrawal agreement. The EU negotiators got some pushback from the memer states for some of them.

But unless it's all the cake, fully eaten then they won't have any of it, regardless of what was said during the referendum campaign and their complete lack of mandate for any sort of no-deal exit.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Moderator12580
JoinedServiceReputation
Jun 01 200717 years131st
OnlineLast PostLast Page
18th Apr 24 16:2314th Apr 24 13:02LINK
Milestone Posts
10000
15000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Leicestershire.
Signature
'Thus I am tormented by my curiosity and humbled by my ignorance.' from History of an Old Bramin, The New York Mirror (A Weekly Journal Devoted to Literature and the Fine Arts), February 16th 1833.
Moderator

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 9:31 pm  
ninearches wrote:
intransigent burghers of Brussels.


Very broadly speaking there were always going to be three directions out of the EU.

1. Something like Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, the members of the EEA
2. Something like Canada, with a basic free trade deal
3. No deal, WTO terms

The blame for disappointment for not getting some other imagined better deal belongs to those who imagined it and those who believed them, not the EU. People who don’t like any of the above three options probably shouldn’t have voted Leave.

The Irish border issue could and maybe should have been part of the future relationship negotiations. But given the UK government’s failure to articulate a position, and now with a deeply, deeply dishonest blustering gormclops calling the shots on our side, the EU were probably wise.

As Alan Duncan said the other day we’re all boxed in. We’ve done this to ourselves, all of us. To whine on that the EU won’t put our interests ahead of their own is utterly ridiculous, given the whole point of Brexit is meant to be us striking out by ourselves and standing on our on 140 million feet.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Moderator12580
JoinedServiceReputation
Jun 01 200717 years131st
OnlineLast PostLast Page
18th Apr 24 16:2314th Apr 24 13:02LINK
Milestone Posts
10000
15000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Leicestershire.
Signature
'Thus I am tormented by my curiosity and humbled by my ignorance.' from History of an Old Bramin, The New York Mirror (A Weekly Journal Devoted to Literature and the Fine Arts), February 16th 1833.
Moderator

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 9:38 pm  
One delicious irony/horrifying reality is that Tories called this all on to see off Farage and now they’re pretty much completely beholden to him.

It is like some mad mash-up co-written Michael Dobbs, Mervyn Peake, Lewis Carroll and Franz Kafka.
RankPostsTeam
International Star1100No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
May 25 201113 years236th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
2nd Oct 23 17:392nd Oct 23 14:04LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: General Election campaign : Thu Sep 05, 2019 10:54 pm  
Seem to recall it was teresa May went into the initial negotiations with the EU with the box full of Tory party majic unicorn demands and red lines.

And her eventual deal agreed would have passed were it not for the ERG Group :D
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years66th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: General Election campaign : Fri Sep 06, 2019 5:22 am  
Superblue wrote:
Seem to recall it was teresa May went into the initial negotiations with the EU with the box full of Tory party majic unicorn demands and red lines.

And her eventual deal agreed would have passed were it not for the ERG Group :D
The frothy-mouthed loons have spent all week calling Hammond and Clarke etc "traitors" and saying they were "betraying the will of the people". Putting to one side the violence of the words being used, the tragic irony is these are people who voted for Brexit time and time again earlier in the year, putting their underlying beliefs that we should remain to one side to reflect the referendum result. Whilst at the same time as you say the ERG repeatedly voting against Brexit.

But I suspect this is too complicated for some of our Brexiteer friends to get their minds around.
RankPostsTeam
International Star1768No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Aug 09 201113 years201st
OnlineLast PostLast Page
18th Apr 24 16:4318th Apr 24 07:30LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Deepest North Yorkshire Woodland

Re: General Election campaign : Fri Sep 06, 2019 6:34 am  
The Ghost of '99 wrote:
The genuinely tragic thing is, so ill-informed are so many of these Brexiteers, that they genuinely believe that our European partners didn't make huge concessions as part of the withdrawal agreement. The EU negotiators got some pushback from the memer states for some of them.

But unless it's all the cake, fully eaten then they won't have any of it, regardless of what was said during the referendum campaign and their complete lack of mandate for any sort of no-deal exit.

I would be grateful if you could please inform us of any major concessions that the EU made to us. I am certainly not aware of any. However I am aware the war monger Blair gave up part of Britain’s rebate, this on the promise that the French would sort out and reform the huge sums of money that France receive from the EU. We all know that never happened.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years66th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: General Election campaign : Fri Sep 06, 2019 6:51 am  
Backwoodsman wrote:
I would be grateful if you could please inform us of any major concessions that the EU made to us. I am certainly not aware of any. However I am aware the war monger Blair gave up part of Britain’s rebate, this on the promise that the French would sort out and reform the huge sums of money that France receive from the EU. We all know that never happened.
Well for starters I recommend you stop looking at the EU as a zero sum game where "our" money gets shared out amongst others. The whole point, and it's success is well proven by now, is that this is mutually beneficial, where we all get better off by free-er, barrierless trade and movement. Where the EU funds infrastructure developments in poorer countries which get our goods to market more quickly, where the EU aligns baseline standards so that our goods can sell in other countries without having to re-engineer or re-work them. This is economically beneficial for all of us.

In terms of concessions, it's been well covered but the starting point has to be the EU's red lines, which were to protect the status of EU citizens living in the UK and to protect the interests of the Republic of Ireland, alongside the main practical red line that the single market by definition can't have an open border with a country outside it, hence the backstop. The backstop is the effect of a red line, not the red line itself - and the EU have asked time and time again for Britain to come up with a workable alternative which also tallies with the red lines unilaterally set out by the Conservative government: that we would not be a member of the customs union or the single market - these red lines were not mandated by the referendum result and are the root cause of our current issues because by going for such a hard Conservative Brexit the May government gave away the support they may have otherwise received from Labour in Parliament.

But here's a summary of what the EU conceded -
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brit ... SKCN1NL1WA

But the simple fact is, if you decide not to be part of the EU, not to be part of the customs union, not to be part of the Single Market and not to pay into the EU budget, then you are starting from a weak position. Conservative politicians have been demanding the benefits from all those things but don't want the mechanics that make them work.
Backwoodsman wrote:
I would be grateful if you could please inform us of any major concessions that the EU made to us. I am certainly not aware of any. However I am aware the war monger Blair gave up part of Britain’s rebate, this on the promise that the French would sort out and reform the huge sums of money that France receive from the EU. We all know that never happened.
Well for starters I recommend you stop looking at the EU as a zero sum game where "our" money gets shared out amongst others. The whole point, and it's success is well proven by now, is that this is mutually beneficial, where we all get better off by free-er, barrierless trade and movement. Where the EU funds infrastructure developments in poorer countries which get our goods to market more quickly, where the EU aligns baseline standards so that our goods can sell in other countries without having to re-engineer or re-work them. This is economically beneficial for all of us.

In terms of concessions, it's been well covered but the starting point has to be the EU's red lines, which were to protect the status of EU citizens living in the UK and to protect the interests of the Republic of Ireland, alongside the main practical red line that the single market by definition can't have an open border with a country outside it, hence the backstop. The backstop is the effect of a red line, not the red line itself - and the EU have asked time and time again for Britain to come up with a workable alternative which also tallies with the red lines unilaterally set out by the Conservative government: that we would not be a member of the customs union or the single market - these red lines were not mandated by the referendum result and are the root cause of our current issues because by going for such a hard Conservative Brexit the May government gave away the support they may have otherwise received from Labour in Parliament.

But here's a summary of what the EU conceded -
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brit ... SKCN1NL1WA

But the simple fact is, if you decide not to be part of the EU, not to be part of the customs union, not to be part of the Single Market and not to pay into the EU budget, then you are starting from a weak position. Conservative politicians have been demanding the benefits from all those things but don't want the mechanics that make them work.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Club Coach17880
JoinedServiceReputation
Apr 24 201113 years49th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
14th Apr 24 18:2314th Apr 24 09:14LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: General Election campaign : Fri Sep 06, 2019 7:13 am  
Getting back on the election trail, that is not actually agreed yet.
Why is Boris allowed to go campaigning in Wakefield before the election is actually agreed ??

Those poor trainees having to stand and listen to his lies and waffle, just so that he could pretend to be the leader with "law & order" credentials for the party that cut 18,000 police and now expects them to stand and cheer for announcing the first steps to replace them, what an utter tool.

It's a shame that his own brother has got fed up of him though.

When your own family tell you that you are making a huge mistake, sometimes it's better to listen to them or, it will end in tears further down the line.
PreviousNext

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 214 guests

REPLY

Subject: 
Message:
   
Please note using apple style emoji's can result in posting failures.
Use the FULL EDITOR to better format content or upload images, be notified of replies etc...

Return to The Sin Bin

cron

RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
5m
Saints A next up - IAKOW
weaver93
54
51m
Ticketmaster update
Stanfax
117
58m
State of the Nation
Irregs#16
399
Recent
DoR - New Coach - Investor & Adam - New signings
Jake the Peg
192
Recent
Why have so many big clubs given up on the field
Cokey
19
Recent
David Armstrong potential signing
Cokey
7
Recent
Rugby leagie coaches - analysis request
Captain Hook
11
Recent
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
57105
Recent
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
35273
Recent
Wigan v Sts discussion - THIS THREAD ONLY PLEASE
Jason65
2046
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
54s
RD 8 Huddersfield Giants H
rugbyleague8
38
59s
Shopping list for 2025
Fishface
944
1m
Castleford at home
Father Ted
29
1m
2024 Southstandercom Prediction Competition Week 8
FoxyRhino
21
1m
Fitzgibbon
Uncle Rico
31
3m
cas redevelpment goes to plan B
newgroundb4w
225
3m
Isa
NSW
20
4m
State of the Nation
Irregs#16
399
6m
Seagulls
terry silver
13
7m
FINANCES
MP
5
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
21 Man Squads - Wire v Leopards v
Vancouver Le
5
TODAY
Squad for Leigh
Wires71
16
TODAY
FINANCES
MP
5
TODAY
AI predictions
Rugby Raider
3
TODAY
Sheffield Game
REDWHITEANDB
3
TODAY
Injury update
dboy
11
TODAY
Seagulls
terry silver
13
TODAY
Rugby leagie coaches - analysis request
Captain Hook
11
TODAY
Castleford at home
Father Ted
29
TODAY
David Armstrong potential signing
Cokey
7
TODAY
France v England Internationals Confirmed for 29th June 2024
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
France v England International..
712
Warrington Stun St Helens In C..
1472
2024 Challenge Cup Semi-Finals..
1093
Wigan Warriors Demolish Woeful..
1284
Hull KR Eliminate the Cup Hold..
1340
Bradford Bulls Come From Behin..
1822
Bradford Bulls Beat Feathersto..
2308
Giants Thrash FC Again For Top..
2321
Warrington Brush Aside The Rhi..
1800
Wigan Coast to Victory over Le..
1969
Giants Come From Behind For Ea..
2249
Salford Red Devils Defeat Leig..
2744
Catalans Dragons Win See-Saw E..
2088
St Helens Win Derby Game Over ..
2097
Early Season Double for Hull K..
2150
RLFANS Match Centre
Matches on TV
Table 'boards.stats_fixtures' doesn't exist