ChatterBank0 min ago
Trouble In Paradise
Answers
//Not sure your point in even posting it?//
Eyy?
We do like a laugh though. The ponzi scheme will collapse soon and the sooner we start doing the opposite of their proposals the further away from the debis we will be. The Germans will show you what far right really is soon and the term has been worn out rendering the phrase meaningless.
It does matter.
For some inexplicable reason the UK government seems to want to outdo the rest of the world when it comes to burnishing its "green" credentials. The original date for the ban on the sale of IC cars across the EU was 2040. That was cut back to 2035 but the UK decided that wasn't good enough and cut it back further to 2030. Mr Sunak then decided that was a bit optimistic and reset the deadline to 2035.
This chopping and changing, with no scientific rationale whatsoever, throws into chaos and uncetainty, one of the major manufacturing industries. But it was all done on a whim, a fancy, by politicians with no idea (and even less concern) what the implications of their decisions mean.
If the EU is unable to enact the necessary legislation to enforce their lunatic schemes it may pursuade the UK government to re-examine some of its less sensible ideas.
Since we are talking about obsessing Van der Leyen has predicted that it will be the young peopole who will rectify the mistake of Brexit. Haha. Are these the same young people who can't face a 40 hour week, decide whether they are male, female or a hundred things in between and can't eat meat without crying? The future belongs to me ... indeed.
we should be dumping all these green loony plans, reopen the coal mines start fracking, we have plenty of energy under our feet, it means we all prosper as a nation, like we once did with jobs aplenty, all the run down coal and steel towns would come back to life, result would be shops in the high st reopening, pubs would be full again happy days, all environmentalists can go live on a wind swept scottish island or further.
It is ramping up Webbo. Common sense is breaking free all across the EUSSR it seems.
//Britain was 'dead right' to leave the EU, the co-leader of the country's hard-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party said today. 'It's a model for Germany, that one can make a sovereign decision like that,' Alice Weidel said in an interview with the Financial Times newspaper.//