Bit like the ukip spokesperson who said they had done less well in certain areas because the electorate were 'better educated' in those areas. gosh


I seem to recall Farage was a former Tory


puts on best Al Murray voice

But it is a well known scientific fact, that cannot be argued with, that the EU is stuffed full of drunken, power-crazed eurocrats, desperate to force us brits, to eat euro square bananas, despite us having won the war all on our own.It's a liberty, thats wot it is !
As another 'proper brit' on social media observed, 'think of Richard the 1st, Richard the lionheart, a true and proper Englishman' !
Who just happened to have been a plantagenet, and spent the odd day or two here as an adult, with an eye to selling or plundering
Or our own very English monarchs who have been mainly drawn from France, Germany, Netherlands, Scotland, with a few exceptions such as the interregnum period.Some never spoke English at all during their reign. Forrins, refusing to integrate wot.

 


The EU along with others placed mainly financial sanctions on Russia re it's annexation of crimea and sevastapol
Putin responded by restricting agricultural imports etc from those countries.
Unfortunately global oversupply of milk or other products, regardless of trade sanctions tends to cause falling prices in a free market
Reports indicate China is in the process of establishing a 100k dairy herd unit, a far cry from the average largely small-scale dairy herd of a few hundred here in the uk
You could ban or put a prohibitive tax on such imports.The net effect would probably preserve domestic herds, and substantially raise domestic prices, of milk and foodstuffs
This isn't hard to work out




Im wondering why the world is governed by so many trade agreements, when in fact they aren't needed according to some- it's spooky
Oh I know, the world hasn't consulted the combined wisdom on RT -surely that must be the answer?


LOL
It also states While central bankers said they would become more cautious about investing in the pound over the next few years, ie when the UK exits the EU, for the next 2 years plus, the uk remains within the EU.The UK STILL has the advantage of being within the EU
The ECB has a primary policy of negative interest rates and other schemes, whilst the UK mainly try to change investment choices by a QE policy and rates here may rise, short term that may give scope for some speculation. Meanwhile Trump can't seem to even pass his flagship policy on healthcare even with a majority in both houses.


But I expect this global currency 'support' for sterling though is shown in more concrete terms by the $/£ exchange rate - oh wait a mo, it's significantly devalued post brexit lol
HSBC suggesting cable to be around 1.10 by the end of 2017, parity on UK leaving the EU
bet those long term investors can't wait