Boris Johnson humiliated.

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Isolationist English twats.
 
Even pro-Brexit fact manipulators disagree with you.
https://www.ft.com/content/4d6b3be1-627e-4784-afc5-91da326cabdc

Did I understand you right? You think the Financial Times is pro-Brexit? :laugh:

Take a look at this from just before the Brexit referendum:
https://www.ft.com/content/3748166e-3151-11e6-ad39-3fee5ffe5b5b

The FT feared that a Leave vote would be a “grievous blow to the post-1945 liberal world order”. Instead, Britain should do its duty to the liberal order by remaining in an organization with an unelected Commission, a toothless Parliament, and every major decision made by back-room deals among the Big Three (now Two).

Ever closer ... but to what?
 
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Foster's article is pro-Brexit and Foster is the FT public policy editor.

I couldn’t read past the headline of that article – you have to be a subscriber - so I can’t comment on how it relates to the FT’s well-known anti-Brexit line.

I will say that the democratic deficit in the EU is there by design. The founders blamed the people for the rise of fascist dictatorships across much of Europe. Their solution was never to “give” the people any real influence over affairs.

It may not have mattered when the EEC had few overt political ambitions, but it matters now. The EU system is grotesquely cumbersome and at the same time largely unaccountable. It is also probably incapable of reform. If it ever has to face a real test, I don’t know what will happen.

This is what Remainers and their many sympathizers, especially in America, see as a pillar of the liberal world order.
 
The EU isn't suffering any post-Brexit deprivations- whereas you're in very deep effluent.
Claim that it isn't Brexit related until you're even bluer in the face- but you'll be joining the ranks of the ridiculous.
 
Did I understand you right? You think the Financial Times is pro-Brexit? :laugh:

Take a look at this from just before the Brexit referendum:
https://www.ft.com/content/3748166e-3151-11e6-ad39-3fee5ffe5b5b

The FT feared that a Leave vote would be a “grievous blow to the post-1945 liberal world order”. Instead, Britain should do its duty to the liberal order by remaining in an organization with an unelected Commission, a toothless Parliament, and every major decision made by back-room deals among the Big Three (now Two).

Ever closer ... but to what?

That in itself reveals just how little that fool really knows about the issue. The FT has always been vehemently anti-Brexit, which anybody with the first clue would know.
 
That in itself reveals just how little that fool really knows about the issue. The FT has always been vehemently anti-Brexit, which anybody with the first clue would know.

You view the world through the prism of the Denier and corporate parasite, maggot. I'd be surprised if you could correctly negotiate a traffic light.
 
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It's really beyond satire. Still..........



Haw, haw, haw, haw..............................haw.
 
Claim that it isn't Brexit related until you're even bluer in the face

Okay. France has a shortage of 43,000+ HGV drivers but it isn’t Brexit related. :)

Speaking of France, if Boris could run for the Elysée, Macron wouldn’t stand a chance:

According to a study in the news magazine Le Point, 51 per cent of French voters have a favourable opinion of the Prime Minister, at least 10 points clear of recent polls assessing the popularity of the President.
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/why-boris-is-loved-by-the-french
 
‘Only yourselves to blame’: UK’s shortages seen from abroad
US and European media give their verdict on the fuel, food and labour crisis they say is caused by Brexit


“One is tempted to tell the British: ‘You have only yourselves to blame,’” said Gabi Kostorz on ARD’s Tagesthemen, a leading German news show. “We tried to talk you out of it, but you decided otherwise. Now you have to face the consequences.”

https://www.theguardian.com/busines...elves-to-blame-uks-shortages-seen-from-abroad

The Europeans are, in fact, being very polite.
 
Britain’s Comedy of Errors

28th September 2021 / United Kingdom


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For centuries, Shakespeare’s ‘Comedy of Errors’ has entertained audiences in Britain and beyond with its story of a series of wild mishaps taking place in a period of 24 hours. Unlikely characters, theft, false accusations, mistaken identity and farcical outcomes make up what was one of Shakespeare’s shortest plays that really created slapstick comedy for the stage.

The comparison to this government, a government led by a man often referred to as “Bozo The Clown” is rich in many ways. The Financial Times pulls no punches when it headlined with (link) – “Calling Boris Johnson a clown is unfair to clowns.” The FT’s first words to that article were – “The term is often used as an insult. In fact, it is a compliment he does not deserve.” It then goes on to say that clowns can be clumsy and gaffe-prone, and live in a world of chaos. But how they respond to that world is different. “Clowns want to make things better. Boris uses his act to get himself out of troubles of his own making.”

Read on;

https://truepublica.org.uk/united-k...1DBbZJFhWkS-jkfXwmIFDgWH-VRamdjojiqXjc_Q2FrU0
 
The Financial Times pulls no punches when it headlined with (link) – “Calling Boris Johnson a clown is unfair to clowns.” The FT’s first words to that article were – “The term is often used as an insult. In fact, it is a compliment he does not deserve.”

But last week you said the FT is pro-Brexit and I believed you! I always believe what you post. :)
 
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