No border of course means anyone can travel from ireland to the North without a visa, eh?
I think Ireland should now join Schengen.
It would just soooooo fuck up the Brits - all those refugees flooding into Belfast to ask for asylum having ripped up their papers and claiming to be unprocessed trash. It'll take them fucking years to sort the shambles out and they'll never get rid and If they are returned then the Garda will just let them walk back over the "non-border" to start the process all over again.
Har, har.
Seeing as the UK is Ireland's biggest trading partner, id personally put up a hard border and really give them something to bitch and moan about.
Joining Schengen meanS those who obtained residence in one country could move to another within Schengen signatory countries. Ireland joining would mean all those millions of Somalis, West Africans etc could fly to Dublin and pour into Norther Ireland from where they could pour over the Irish Sea by ferry ( under CTA rules there is no intra CTA border control) into England whereupon they could rip up their documents and claim asylum.
You spastic twat, if the values are calculated using the same methodology in applying them to one specific vector, then measuring outcomes based thereon, and assessing significance, is equally valid when making comparisons.
You mofo bat guano.
The only spasticated twat is your tertiary syphilis suffering self trying to claim Ireland does more trade with Belgium than the UK. Thick retarded twat.
Forget the Irish border problem look at the Gibraltar border.
The EU want to retain the existing open border between Spain/EU with Gibraltar. The ameristans want to retain it's UK vassal's sovereignty over Gibraltar to ensure access to the Mediterranean's western entry point. Otherwise potentially the EU can block it when Gibraltar citizens vote to become an EU member country.
Any polls being done in Gibraltar?
A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.
A poll for what? Gibraltar was 96% for remaining in the EU. I can't see them changing their mind easily.
^True when part of the UK, would they break from the UK to remain in the EU or not??
horribly quiet on the Brexit front
Did May succeeded with her Russian diversion
funny because it seems that a deal is imminent, with passporting etc... and she has caved in on about everything
Of course she's caved in on everything as she is a remoaner with no back bone who will go down as the worst PM in history. Is amusing though that the Tories are 3 points ahead of Labour in the latest yougov poll as any decent opposition would have a double digit lead.
hey I guess everyone is having second thoughts about that thing after all,
including the voters, hence why she is getting new support
the Russia diversion did well, no wonder the rest of Europe followed, they wanted to help her with her strapon
EU wins, again
^ The do say a leopard never changes its spots....
well, you couldn't expect the Tories establishment to respect the British people votes
after all they can make up all the rules they want, they decide behind closed doors, not the people
what a better way to sabotage the results of a referendum than to pretend to be on board and fuck your voters British style with a big fake smile on your face
you two face Brits always crack me up
all nice talks, all fucks in the ass with a strap on
^
yeah, but fooking third world dictator peasants is perfectly normal, even by your standards
I guess PM May did sell her ass virginity after all to the EU
UK regulators: Firms can count on smooth Brexit transition
The Bank of England and the UK Financial Conduct Authority have assured banks and insurers operating in the UK a Brexit transition period will prevent business disruption. The central bank says firms likely can "continue undertaking ... activities during the implementation period in much the same way as now."
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...banks-boe-says
yet, we are still in the fog in terms of long term clarity
Financial firms still far from clarity on Brexit
The Brexit decision is almost two years old but UK financial firms say they still face numerous unanswered questions. One executive describes the situation as "replete with uncertainty".
https://www.ft.com/content/0a97f718-...&segid=0800933
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