Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Brexit
59 Answers
Private Eye Number Crunching
£20bn – amount that, as a keen Brexiteer in 2016, Rishi Sunak said ‘we will immediately save’ on leaving the EU
£80bn – Long run annual cost to the UK economy from leaving the EU as assessed by the Office for Budget Responsibility
£20bn – amount that, as a keen Brexiteer in 2016, Rishi Sunak said ‘we will immediately save’ on leaving the EU
£80bn – Long run annual cost to the UK economy from leaving the EU as assessed by the Office for Budget Responsibility
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Must be a different Naomi24 posting on this site advising the person not to read the bad news in Private Eye – see thread below for full details (précis included below).
https:/ /www.th eanswer bank.co .uk/New s/Quest ion1808 126.htm l
//Here is an interesting letter from the current issue of Private Eye:-
‘Sir,
I am a fairly new subscriber to the Eye. Each edition makes me upset and angry. The amount of corruption at both national and local level is appalling. Ignorance really was bliss.
Sheila Kerr-Smith, Worthing’//
Post from a Naomi24 in response to the above thread:-
//Each edition makes me upset and angry.//
She should give it up before it becomes a bad habit.
https:/
//Here is an interesting letter from the current issue of Private Eye:-
‘Sir,
I am a fairly new subscriber to the Eye. Each edition makes me upset and angry. The amount of corruption at both national and local level is appalling. Ignorance really was bliss.
Sheila Kerr-Smith, Worthing’//
Post from a Naomi24 in response to the above thread:-
//Each edition makes me upset and angry.//
She should give it up before it becomes a bad habit.
//...the Breixteers pooh pooh my numbers claiming there are inflated losses from fifth column organisations//
I didn't do that. I simply asked what the source was. I did that because, quite honestly, I've generally no interest at all in any such figures and I don't go scouring newspapers and magazines for them. So thanks for the info. My Private Eye is overdue (probably because of delays caused by postal strikes) so I'll see it then when it arrives.
It may seem incredible to you but many people - me included - are not interested in the minor inconveniences and possible temporary hits to the economy that Brexit has caused. They were expected and in some respects have been less onerous than were expected. The important thing is that we have left that pernicious organisation.
When the USSR broke up many people living in Soviet states were happy and relieved even if it caused them problems - some far more serious than the trivia some people in the UK are moaning about. I am not saying for one minute that the EU resembles the USSR. I'm simply using the analogy to explain (and hopefully help you understand) my earlier point - that you don't sell your soul for a few pieces of silver. Even when those pieces of silver add up to £80bn (assuming the OBR is correct).
We're out of the EU now and neither of the parties likely to be in government in the foreseeable future has any intention of making rejoining part of their manifesto (not that you should particularly pay any heed to what politicians tell you). It really is quite pointless to keep harping on about it but if you do you will always receive similar responses from me.
I didn't do that. I simply asked what the source was. I did that because, quite honestly, I've generally no interest at all in any such figures and I don't go scouring newspapers and magazines for them. So thanks for the info. My Private Eye is overdue (probably because of delays caused by postal strikes) so I'll see it then when it arrives.
It may seem incredible to you but many people - me included - are not interested in the minor inconveniences and possible temporary hits to the economy that Brexit has caused. They were expected and in some respects have been less onerous than were expected. The important thing is that we have left that pernicious organisation.
When the USSR broke up many people living in Soviet states were happy and relieved even if it caused them problems - some far more serious than the trivia some people in the UK are moaning about. I am not saying for one minute that the EU resembles the USSR. I'm simply using the analogy to explain (and hopefully help you understand) my earlier point - that you don't sell your soul for a few pieces of silver. Even when those pieces of silver add up to £80bn (assuming the OBR is correct).
We're out of the EU now and neither of the parties likely to be in government in the foreseeable future has any intention of making rejoining part of their manifesto (not that you should particularly pay any heed to what politicians tell you). It really is quite pointless to keep harping on about it but if you do you will always receive similar responses from me.
gully I love the navy blue passports - which arent like the old one as passports are standardised for machine reading
They (downside catastrophes) were expected and in some respects have been less onerous than were expected.
No by such as TTT we were promised sunny uplands at midday the next day. so.
They (downside catastrophes) were expected and in some respects have been less onerous than were expected.
No by such as TTT we were promised sunny uplands at midday the next day. so.