vememah Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 (edited) 8 hours ago, dragance said: Daily Mail ga ne miriše, verujem da će oni jedini da guslaju o ovom da mu naškode. Pa ne baš. Da ne kačim manje ozbiljna izdanja (i, Mirror, Express, Record), imaš ovde: http://tomorrowspaperstoday.com/ Edited June 22, 2019 by vememah
Marvin (Paranoid Android) Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 11 hours ago, dragance said: Neće ništa biti od toga. Policija došla i otišla, niko se nije žalio. A sused snimao dreku i posle zvao policiju... Daily Mail ga ne miriše, verujem da će oni jedini da guslaju o ovom da mu naškode. Slažem se s ovim gore, a što misliš da ga DM ne miriše?
vememah Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 (edited) Devojka mu je 5 godina starija od najstarijeg, a 11 od najmlađeg bračnog deteta (svi iz drugog braka). Ima barem još jedno dete za koje se grozničavo borio da zataška informaciju o njegovom postojanju. Govnar. Quote Ms Symonds, 31, is heard to complain that red wine has been spilt on her sofa, saying: ‘You just don’t care for anything because you are spoilt. ... Uxbridge and South Ruislip MP Mr Johnson announced last autumn that he and his wife were divorcing after 25 years of marriage. The couple said the decision had been taken some months earlier. Announcement of the split came after newspaper allegations about Mr Johnson having had another extra-marital affair. The break-up of the relationship is said to have severely strained relations between Mr Johnson and the four children he shares with Ms Wheeler. It is not known how many other children Mr Johnson has. In 2013, it emerged he had fathered a child with Helen Macintyre and a judge ruled the public had a right to know after a battle to keep the birth a secret. During the same court case, it was alleged he may have had a sixth child. https://metro.co.uk/2019/06/22/boris-johnsons-tory-leadership-bid-chaos-police-called-home-following-screaming-row-10028361/?ito=cbshare Quote How old are Boris Johnson’s children? Boris Johnson has four children with Marina Wheeler - the pair are currently in the process of getting divorced. The divorce is Mr Johnson’s second after splitting up with first wife Allegra Owen in 1993. ...Lara Lettice is the oldest of Mr Johnson’s four children and was born in 1993. ... Milo Arthur is Mr Johnson and Ms Wheeler’s second child and is 24-years-old. ... Cassia Peaches is the third child and youngest daughter of Mr Johnson and Ms Wheeler. She is 22-years-old and was born in 1997. ...Theodor Apollo is Mr Johnson and Ms Wheeler’s youngest child and was born in 1999. https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1141831/boris-johnson-children-age-how-old-how-many-children-tory-leadership-debate Edited June 22, 2019 by vememah
Max Morlock Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 ... Govnar. ... A istorija nas uči da (ovakvi) govnari pobeđuju. [emoji848]Sent from my SM-N950F using controlled substances...
dragance Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 8 hours ago, Marvin (Paranoid Android) said: Slažem se s ovim gore, a što misliš da ga DM ne miriše? Popičkao se sa glodurom ima već nekoliko godina.
Marvin (Paranoid Android) Posted June 22, 2019 Posted June 22, 2019 Interesting. Nisam pojma imao. Ček, misliš na Paula Dacrea? On nije glodur već jedno godinu dana, mislim.
Sludge Factory Posted June 23, 2019 Posted June 23, 2019 The United Kingdom of Great Britain, Norhern Ireland and Serbia
Gandalf Posted June 24, 2019 Posted June 24, 2019 The Lib Dems are back. Who will lead them? For the first time in almost a decade, life as a Liberal Democrat is good. The party posted its best-ever European election result on May 23rd, scooping up 16 meps. It seems to have seen off Change uk, a challenger to its centrist crown. The party zips along near the top of the polls. Can it last? The task of keeping the boom going will fall to Jo Swinson, the Glasgow-based deputy leader, or Sir Ed Davey, the party’s home-affairs spokesman (both pictured). While Conservative candidates tear strips off each other, Lib Dem hustings are marked by agreement. Both candidates want to position the Lib Dems as an anti-Brexit party with an enthusiastically green agenda—which it already is. Both served in the coalition government with the Tories in 2010-15. Sir Ed is a bit more experienced; Ms Swinson a bit better with the media. They agree on the destination and route for the party. They just disagree over who should be driving.
vememah Posted June 26, 2019 Posted June 26, 2019 (edited) Boris: Tarifa u slučaju no dila neće biti. EU: Hoće i te kako. Boris: Mi izlazimo 31.X pa makar crkli, a tarife nećemo uvoditi. Ako ih Evropa uvede, to će biti povratak na Napoleonovu kontinentalnu blokadu Britanije. Quote Unicorns are still running free in the Tory leadership contest and some candidates seem determined to keep chasing them — particularly when it comes to how the U.K. would fare in a no-deal scenario. A line from front-runner Boris Johnson during the leadership debate on Tuesday was a case in point. He was challenged by Rory Stewart — who was knocked out of the race Wednesday — over colossal tariffs on lamb if the U.K. leaves the EU without a deal. Johnson resurrected a WTO myth that has had trade wonks pulling their hair out for months. "There will be no tariffs and there will be no quotas," Johnson declared. "What we want to do is get a standstill in our current arrangements, under GATT 24 or whatever it happens to be, until such time as we have negotiated the FTA." There's no disputing that Article 24 of the World Trade Organization's General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade exists. Jacob Rees-Mogg, Nigel Farage and other Brexiteers have touted it as a way to keep tariff-free trade flowing across the Channel even if the Withdrawal Agreement is never ratified by the British parliament and there is therefore no Brexit transition period. According to Brexiteers, the legal text keeps tariffs at zero for several years when a free-trade agreement is being negotiated. However, Article 24 only applies to countries who are on the verge of finalizing free-trade agreements with each other — a situation the U.K. would certainly not be in on November 1 this year, whether there is a deal or no deal. https://www.politico.eu/article/why-gatt-24-wont-help-a-no-deal-brexit-uk/ Quote Supporters of Brexit are “completely wrong” if they think recourse to an obscure trade rule will stop tariffs springing up overnight if Britain leaves the European Union without a deal, EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said on Friday. Some British politicians have suggested that in the event of a “no deal Brexit”, Article 24 of the World Trade Organization’s General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade can be invoked to keep Britain and the EU trading without tariffs. “It is completely wrong,” Malmstrom told Reuters. “They will have to trade with us and other countries, until there are trade agreements - and we hope that will be a trade agreement - on the ‘most favored nation’ basis. And that will mean new tariffs.” The “most favored nation” basis is a misnomer because it means no special treatment. Trade experts have repeatedly poured cold water on the idea that Article 24 could soften the economic blow of a “no deal” Brexit, but they say the claim keeps resurfacing. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-trade-idUSKCN1TF24K Quote Johnson first doubled down on his commitment to leaving on 31 October in an interview with Talkradio, saying he was in no way reneging on his firm pledge. “We are getting ready to come out on 31 October. Come what may,” he said. Asked to confirm this, he added: “Do or die. Come what may.” He then said he would scrap Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement and seek a completely new deal before then, as minor changes would not satisfy him. “I mean more than a change,” he said. “It’s got to be, we need a new withdrawal agreement – if we’re going to go out on the basis of a withdrawal agreement.” https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/jun/25/brexit-boris-johnson-britain-will-leave-eu-31-october-do-or-die Quote The ex-London mayor told a radio phone-in that Britain must "get ready to come out without an agreement" and the European Union should match his plan not to impose any tariffs under such a scenario. "It would be very bizarre if the EU should decide on their own -- we wouldn't put up tariffs -- to impose tariffs on goods coming from the UK," he told LBC talk radio. "It wouldn't be in the interests of their businesses, let alone their consumers. "It would be a return to Napoleon's continental system," he added, invoking the 19th-century French emperor who attempted to blockade Britain in the Napoleonic Wars. https://www.france24.com/en/20190625-johnson-urges-eu-abstain-tariffs-no-deal-brexit Novi YouGov o preferencama biračkog tela po pitanju Bregzita i stranaka. Dakle, ako se zbirno gleda prvi i drugi izbor, najprihvatljivija za većinu jeste ostanak u jedinstvenom tržištu i carinskoj uniji, zatim ostanak u EU, tek onda Terezin dil i na samom kraju izlazak bez dila. Quote BREX: 22% (-1) CON: 22% (+2) LAB: 20% (-) LDEM: 19% (-2) GRN: 10% (+1) via @YouGov Chgs. w/ 19 Jun https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1143781632001892353 Edited June 26, 2019 by vememah
Marvin (Paranoid Android) Posted June 26, 2019 Posted June 26, 2019 Quote "It would be very bizarre if the EU should decide on their own -- we wouldn't put up tariffs -- to impose tariffs on goods coming from the UK," he told LBC talk radio. "It wouldn't be in the interests of their businesses, let alone their consumers. "It would be a return to Napoleon's continental system," he added, invoking the 19th-century French emperor who attempted to blockade Britain in the Napoleonic Wars.
Marvin (Paranoid Android) Posted June 26, 2019 Posted June 26, 2019 Quote Boris Johnson would be able to ignore parliament’s efforts to stop a no-deal Brexit and blame the EU if it refuses to give the UK a better deal, one of his supporters has said. Dominic Raab, who is backing the frontrunner after being knocked out of the leadership contest, said any motion from MPs against a no-deal Brexit would have “zero legal effect” and could be overridden. He also said it would be “the EU’s fault” if Britain leaves on World Trade Organization terms because it was possible to strike a better Brexit deal before the end of October if there was sufficient political will.
Recommended Posts