For the first time in my life ever, on Saturday, I march.
Wish I was.
Child care demands etc. Its their future, so I may be in a strange mood tomorrow.
For the first time in my life ever, on Saturday, I march.
Wish I was.
Child care demands etc. Its their future, so I may be in a strange mood tomorrow.
As I seem never to tire of saying, Vote Leave campaigned on a promise to the voters that there would be a new deal before Article 50 was triggered.
Not quite the first partition. See wiki.Cyprus was partitioned by turkey invading.
What seems to make it difficult is that the UK just up and left, without any idea how it would actually do so.I have one nagging worry about this. If it turns out that the process of leaving the EU is so complicated as to be impossible in practice, then the statement that "we could leave the EU any time we want to" isn't exactly correct. Unfortunately, there's a recipriverse excluson involved here (to borrow a Douglas Adams term for something that's defined as anything other than itself); if it turns out that we can't leave the EU, then the leavers had a point that our sovereignty was limited, whereas if it turns out that we can, then it turns out that they didn't. Either way, the only possible option is the wrong one.
Dave
Not quite the first partition. See wiki.The Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia ... is a British Overseas Territory on the island of Cyprus. The areas, which include British military bases and installations, as well as other land, were retained by the British under the 1960 treaty of independence, signed by the United Kingdom, Greece, Turkey and representatives from the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities, which granted independence to the Crown colony of Cyprus. The territory serves an important role as a station for signals intelligence ...
In Ireland the UK relinquished 26 counties and kept 6 and that was definitely a partition. I was surprised recently to learn that the SBAs have a significant civilian population. Wiki saysThat's not partition in the sense of the programme dialogue. It was more us just deciding to keep a couple of bits, but vacating the rest.
Pinched off FB.
LEAVER: I want an omelette.
REMAINER: Right. It’s just we haven’t got any eggs.
LEAVER: Yes, we have. There they are. [HE POINTS AT A CAKE]
REMAINER: They’re in the cake.
LEAVER: Yes, get them out of the cake, please.
REMAINER: But we voted in 1974 to put them into a cake.
LEAVER: Yes, but that cake has got icing on it. Nobody said there was going to be icing on it.
REMAINER: Icing is good.
LEAVER: And there are raisins in it. I don’t like raisins. Nobody mentioned raisins. I demand another vote.
DAVID CAMERON ENTERS.
DAVID CAMERON: OK.
[...]
FPTP is inherently flawed, undemocratic and creative of two-party systems.Via reddit:
[qimg]https://i.redd.it/mtqua17o4vs11.jpg[/qimg]
Quite stark. Strong argument against FPTP, IMHO.
Fascinating, a very interesting point.Food issues in the event of a no-deal:
http://www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2018/07/27/this-is-what-no-deal-brexit-actually-looks-like
Stat that jumped out at me:
"British vets like setting up small clinics in a village somewhere and saving the family dog. Admit it. That's the image in your head when someone says the word 'vet'. They do not envision spending their career watching cow carcasses being washed down in an abattoir. The culture of veterinary checks in food is much more common in Europe, especially in Spain. EU citizens consequently make up 95% of the veterinary workforce in UK food production."
If EU vets leave (and many are), we have major issues in the coming years.
In Ireland the UK relinquished 26 counties and kept 6 and that was definitely a partition. I was surprised recently to learn that the SBAs have a significant civilian population. Wiki says7,700(Cypriots; estimate); 8,000 non-permanent (UK military personnel and their families; estimate)So it's quite small, but a partition of territory nonetheless. And it's listed as a British Overseas Territory, not a U.K. Base on Cypriot territory
Thank you.
Via reddit:
[qimg]https://i.redd.it/mtqua17o4vs11.jpg[/qimg]
Quite stark. Strong argument against FPTP, IMHO.
Nevertheless, it is generally recognised that, in order to access the Single Market, goods must comply with EU rules. Conformity is the way of overcoming the NTB. But what advocates of the WTO option have not realised is that there is more to it than that . Much more. Potential exporters not only have to ensure their goods conform, they must provide evidence of their so doing. This requires putting the goods through a recognised system of what is known as "conformity assessment".
We are at this point entering serious nerd territory. If your eyes are beginning to glaze over, all we can say is welcome to the world as it really is. It has taken years of mind-numbing, tedious study to understand this amount of detail, and either you know it, or you don't. If you don't, you are going to make serious mistakes.
Yes I am ignoring it.I think you're ignoring that when people talk about the partition of Cyprus, it's between the Turkish-occupied north and the south, not the Sovereign Base Areas. The latter are largely non-contentious, especially compared to the former.
Yes I am ignoring it.