Monday 7th January 2019
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Welcome to FTN. New posters are welcome to join the conversation. You can follow us on Twitter @FlythenestHaven You are responsible for the content you post. This is a public forum. Treat it as if you are speaking in a crowded room. Site admin and Moderators are volunteers who will respond as quickly as they are able to when made aware of any complaints. Please do not post copyrighted material without the original authors permission.
Monday 7th January 2019
Morning all.
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
https://amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- RogerOThornhill
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Morning all.
On the way to and from the newsagent I met the usual small group of parents with kids who hadn't read the communication from school properly and assumed that school was open today...one woman told me she definitely read an email saying it was Monday 7th....which I checked when I got home and of course it said Tuesday 8th...
Apparently Boris has used his weekly column to attack May's plan - yes, I was shocked too. I love Andrew Sparrow's first comment on the extract...
On the way to and from the newsagent I met the usual small group of parents with kids who hadn't read the communication from school properly and assumed that school was open today...one woman told me she definitely read an email saying it was Monday 7th....which I checked when I got home and of course it said Tuesday 8th...
Apparently Boris has used his weekly column to attack May's plan - yes, I was shocked too. I love Andrew Sparrow's first comment on the extract...
Like many of Johnson’s Brexit assertions, this is, even on the most generous of assessments, questionable.
If I'm not here, then I'll be in the library. Or the other library.
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Tea spilt on laptop Saturday morning (not by me). Hoping it's just the keyboard that's knackered - think might have got away with just that. Time to check nature of 'accidental damage' cover on insurance and hope that I actually named the laptop as a specific valuable item (I think I did). Although my last experience with trying to make an insurance claim for something was so shite I ended up giving up and paying for the thing myself.
We have a nice shiny new building, supposed to have been ready beginning of last December, that we've moved into this morning. Not much works.
We have a nice shiny new building, supposed to have been ready beginning of last December, that we've moved into this morning. Not much works.
I still believe in a town called Hope
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Good for the soul. Or something.HindleA wrote:https://amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... ssion=true
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Good-morning, everyone
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Fat nylon prick is confused representing the SDP on Politics Live (7,6).
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Amusing clip from Owen Jones
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
You don't spell it like that!AnatolyKasparov wrote:Morefternoon, even?
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Good morfternoon.
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
I stand corrected.PorFavor wrote:Good morfternoon.
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Sour banyan alert!
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Laura Kuenssberg
@bbclaurak
Sounds like PM won't be the one answering the Q that Corbyn has been granted in Commons later - all a bit fluid but sounds like No 10 are planning to send someone else
@bbclaurak
Sounds like PM won't be the one answering the Q that Corbyn has been granted in Commons later - all a bit fluid but sounds like No 10 are planning to send someone else
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Pot, kettle springs to mind.Hilary Benn, the Labour chair of the Commons Brexit committee, asks Barclay to rule out a no-deal Brexit.
Barclay says it is not enough to MPs to be against something. They have to decide what they want. Referring to the letter, signed by more than 200 MPs, urging the government to rule out a no-deal Brexit, he says those MPs favour a variety of alternative options.
What was PfY's anagram for Barclay?
One world, like it or not - John Martyn
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Interesting read.
https://gapingsilence.wordpress.com/201 ... from-here/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://gapingsilence.wordpress.com/201 ... from-here/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
If the party’s committed to a Labour Brexit, that must mean that we know what one of those is – what kind of Brexit would be good for Labour and good for Britain. And if the answer’s ‘none’, there is no way the party can possibly admit it – not without going back on its endorsement of the referendum as a democratic process and all the commitments it’s made since the referendum. Heading towards March 29th denouncing the existing deal and demanding the impossible is probably as close to endorsing Remain as Labour – under any imaginable leader – can get, given the starting-point in 2016. (Which is to say, given that the Labour Party didn’t denounce the referendum and lead a campaign of abstention.)
One world, like it or not - John Martyn
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
His blog is generally good, if infrequently updated.
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
He's a good one!gilsey wrote:Pot, kettle springs to mind.Hilary Benn, the Labour chair of the Commons Brexit committee, asks Barclay to rule out a no-deal Brexit.
Barclay says it is not enough to MPs to be against something. They have to decide what they want. Referring to the letter, signed by more than 200 MPs, urging the government to rule out a no-deal Brexit, he says those MPs favour a variety of alternative options.
What was PfY's anagram for Barclay?
I think I went for "preach absently", but "banters cheaply", "peasantry belch", "patchy enablers" and "herby placentas" all have a certain charm
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
That is goodgilsey wrote:Interesting read.
https://gapingsilence.wordpress.com/201 ... from-here/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;If the party’s committed to a Labour Brexit, that must mean that we know what one of those is – what kind of Brexit would be good for Labour and good for Britain. And if the answer’s ‘none’, there is no way the party can possibly admit it – not without going back on its endorsement of the referendum as a democratic process and all the commitments it’s made since the referendum. Heading towards March 29th denouncing the existing deal and demanding the impossible is probably as close to endorsing Remain as Labour – under any imaginable leader – can get, given the starting-point in 2016. (Which is to say, given that the Labour Party didn’t denounce the referendum and lead a campaign of abstention.)
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
I thought Barry Gardiner on Ridge got as close as anyone has to explaining this clearly.citizenJA wrote:That is goodgilsey wrote:Interesting read.
https://gapingsilence.wordpress.com/201 ... from-here/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;If the party’s committed to a Labour Brexit, that must mean that we know what one of those is – what kind of Brexit would be good for Labour and good for Britain. And if the answer’s ‘none’, there is no way the party can possibly admit it – not without going back on its endorsement of the referendum as a democratic process and all the commitments it’s made since the referendum. Heading towards March 29th denouncing the existing deal and demanding the impossible is probably as close to endorsing Remain as Labour – under any imaginable leader – can get, given the starting-point in 2016. (Which is to say, given that the Labour Party didn’t denounce the referendum and lead a campaign of abstention.)
It's really important to keep on emphasising that May has got into her unenviable "hole" by having red lines that were irreconcilable.
One that hasn't been discussed for a while perhaps is the possibility of the UK paying for its special access, which is an impossibility for the ERG brigade.
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
What exactly would this "special access" be, though? The economic benefit of the single market derives from the four freedoms of movement which turn external markets into one big internal market. You can only either be inside an internal market, which means accepting the four freedoms, or trade with it from the outside. There isn't really anything else. We can get very good terms trading with the EU from the outside, I'm sure, but this is the kind of deal Theresa May appears to be pursuing. I just can't quite see what Labour are offering that is different, except they would actively pursue a customs union, whereas May would just end up in one by default because there is no other acceptable solution to the Irish Border problem. Unless Labour would be willing to commit to the single market, but nothing Corbyn has said suggests this is likely. Without long term promotion of a single market solution it will be hard for Labour to pivot to that position anyway, I would have thought. Besides which, "people's vote" has now got expectations up over somehow being able to remain in the EU, squeezing any single market, soft Brexit compromise out of the picture as far as I can tell.PaulfromYorkshire wrote: I thought Barry Gardiner on Ridge got as close as anyone has to explaining this clearly.
It's really important to keep on emphasising that May has got into her unenviable "hole" by having red lines that were irreconcilable.
One that hasn't been discussed for a while perhaps is the possibility of the UK paying for its special access, which is an impossibility for the ERG brigade.
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Monday 7th January 2019
goodnight, everyone
love,
cJA
love,
cJA
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
IMHO the wiggle room is around Freedom of Movement.Willow904 wrote:What exactly would this "special access" be, though? The economic benefit of the single market derives from the four freedoms of movement which turn external markets into one big internal market. You can only either be inside an internal market, which means accepting the four freedoms, or trade with it from the outside. There isn't really anything else. We can get very good terms trading with the EU from the outside, I'm sure, but this is the kind of deal Theresa May appears to be pursuing. I just can't quite see what Labour are offering that is different, except they would actively pursue a customs union, whereas May would just end up in one by default because there is no other acceptable solution to the Irish Border problem. Unless Labour would be willing to commit to the single market, but nothing Corbyn has said suggests this is likely. Without long term promotion of a single market solution it will be hard for Labour to pivot to that position anyway, I would have thought. Besides which, "people's vote" has now got expectations up over somehow being able to remain in the EU, squeezing any single market, soft Brexit compromise out of the picture as far as I can tell.PaulfromYorkshire wrote: I thought Barry Gardiner on Ridge got as close as anyone has to explaining this clearly.
It's really important to keep on emphasising that May has got into her unenviable "hole" by having red lines that were irreconcilable.
One that hasn't been discussed for a while perhaps is the possibility of the UK paying for its special access, which is an impossibility for the ERG brigade.
It can't be true that you need complete freedom of movement to have the Single Market, because such a thing has never existed.
It's not appealing because of the racist undertones, but restricting freedom of movement is not inherently racist. And IMHO there has to be some compromise somewhere or it's civil war!
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Re: Monday 7th January 2019
Something like this then
https://labourlist.org/wp-content/uploa ... et-2.0.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Common-Market-2.0
https://labourlist.org/wp-content/uploa ... et-2.0.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Common-Market-2.0