Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
I'm still waiting for a bold positive from him, have we had one yet?
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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---------- Post added at 18:58 ---------- Previous post was at 18:54 ---------- Quote:
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
I want a hard brexit
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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There's no logic that dictates that 50% of articles will be positive and 50% negative. Posting like this would not make a poster unbiased, it would make them unrepresentative of Brexit developments. But if you look at the article that I posted before the most recent one "Irish PM calls for Brexit transition deal, warns against punishing UK" I'm sure many Brexiters would have found it encouraging. ;) http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/sh...&postcount=168 |
Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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What it appears (rightly or wrongly) you are doing is just "cherry picking" news reports postulating nothing but the downside of Brexit with the odd positive one. You don't even attempt to discuss the issues of the reports you post. |
Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
Well said Pip
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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That's good Andrew (I did have to do a double take to check that it actually was you ;)) But to be fair, I think you've posted one positive article against goodness knows how many negative articles. But it's important to look at the publishing source of these articles. Expect the Mail and the Express to publish pro Brexit articles and organisations such as FT and the BBC to feature anti Brexit articles. Multinational organisations such as Google and Facebook, will, pretty much always, have an anti Brexit stance; it's not a coincidence, that they are also anti Trump |
Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
So the FT puts forward it will take longer than 2 years to reach a deal. Article 50 says otherwise.
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The Mail is no longer trusted by Wikipedia The Express was found to be wrong when it said house prices had risen after the Brexit vote when the data it used covered the month before the vote. The Sun was censured for incorrectly stating that 1 in 5 British Muslims have sympathy for Jihadis With regard to Google and Facebook, they're more platforms than news sources themselves. I look at a wide variety of sources and post articles from reputable sources like The Daily Telegraph, Reuters, Sky News, Financial Times, BBC and The Guardian. I won't venture my opinions of these sources as I think we'll go off on a big tangent. :) ---------- Post added at 21:16 ---------- Previous post was at 20:59 ---------- Quote:
The €60bn is also an issue that has not been given much prominence by the media but is a figure we'll be hearing more of this year. |
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Re: UK Exit of EU (Brexit)
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