Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Osbourne says no to currency union.
- This topic has 12,714 replies, 258 voices, and was last updated 10 years ago by konabunny.
-
Osbourne says no to currency union.
-
seosamh77Free Member
Junkyard – lazarus
Aka people who know what they are talking about.
Bless them for the guidance and insights without them we would be lost and we would experience recessions and stuff like that.Aye poor souls, concerned about everything bar their own bank accounts and siphoning off as much of societies wealth as they can.. 🙄 No self interest there what so ever.
Anyhow, I’m done with this thread, happy voting everyone! 🙂
oldblokeFree MemberBless them for the guidance and insights without them we would be lost and we would experience recessions and stuff like that.
Some of us bean counters predicted what would happen, but a bit like the YES campaign, weren’t listened to because it didn’t fit with populist thinking. “scaremongering” was a word bandied around then too but we know how well that went.
agent007Free MemberIndependence is not the change you need, and it’s not the change the UK needs. It’s just lashing out at the nearest thing.
Whoaaaa, what’s the world coming to – I finally agree wholeheartedly with Molgrips here?
Grass is always greener and all that. Happy voting guys.
seosamh77Free Memberoldbloke – Member
Bless them for the guidance and insights without them we would be lost and we would experience recessions and stuff like that.
Some of us bean counters predicted what would happen, but a bit like the YES campaign, weren’t listened to because it didn’t fit with populist thinking. “scaremongering” was a word bandied around then too but we know how well that went.In a, fnar fnar, my bank account is extremely large, this can’t possibly continue kind a way I’d imagine! 😆
toodaloo! 😀
Rockape63Free MemberAnyhow, I’m done with this thread, happy voting everyone!
Yeah right! 😉
I’m still going for 60% ‘No’ vote. I’m very rarely wrong about anything. 8)
mikewsmithFree MemberSome of us bean counters predicted what would happen, but a bit like the YES campaign, weren’t listened to because it didn’t fit with populist thinking. “scaremongering” was a word bandied around then too but we know how well that went.
Same issue in Australia if your view don’t fit the plan your wrong
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-17/costello-says-australias-economic-luck-is-running-out/5751286oldblokeFree MemberIn a, fnar fnar, my bank account is extremely large, this can’t possibly continue kind a way I’d imagine!
Thought you were going.
But no, your uninformed prejudice is showing through a bit there. I’m an accountant. I looked at Gordon Brown’s numbers. They didn’t add up. It really wasn’t that hard to see so my main irritation with the Tories is that they didn’t challenge that hard enough.
mikewsmithFree Memberand if the Yes side was looking for another nutcase we can loan you one
Senator Bernardi said Scottish independence would give the country a fresh opportunity.
“There is an opportunity for it to pursue a different path than perhaps the many other Western European nations which have been hamstrung by bureaucracy and high taxation,” he said.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-17/bernardi-backs-scottish-independence-despite-abbotts-stance/5751198
One from the real bonkers right…jambalayaFree MemberI suppose you don’t need to count beans if you’ve been promised a big bag of magic beans…
@kona – top post !I’m still going for 60% ‘No’ vote. I’m very rarely wrong about anything.
@Rockape I see we share that quality 🙂 On another website what I frequent my signature is “often wrong, seldom in doubt”I think the actual vote will be fascinating, either a narrow Yes or a clear No.
Good luck to all and best wishes. As her Majesty said Think carefully
bencooperFree MemberAs her Majesty said Think carefully
I don’t need someone who only got her job by an accident of birth telling me how to think, thanks 😉
jambalayaFree MemberI see today John Swinney described the economic crises as “Westminster’s recession”
Hum, the one overseen by a Scottish chancellor/prime minister from the long serving government the Scots did vote for, the one who’s greatest costs came from rescuing two Scottish run banks who had over extended themselves massively. Nice re-branding attempt John.
@ben the SNP aren’t daft, they know the Royal family are popular in Scotland and they bring in lots of tourist revenue. Her Majesty will be offering carefully chosen words of advice whichever way the vote goes.
rebel12Free MemberI don’t need someone who only got her job by an accident of birth telling me how to think, thanks
Nope, far better to be told how to think by someone who’s got (a not so) hidden agenda to become the new PM of Scotland and who got to where they are by bullying, promising the moon on a stick, and pulling the wool over peoples eyes!
konabunnyFree MemberSenator Bernardi said Scottish independence would give the country a fresh opportunity.
“There is an opportunity for it to pursue a different path than perhaps the many other Western European nations which have been hamstrung by bureaucracy and high taxation,” he said.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-17/bernardi-backs-scottish-independence-despite-abbotts-stance/5751198
One from the real bonkers right…He is certainly loopy, but…if iScotland exists, its first premier is likely to be an ex-banker Tartan Tory. And more than that, a premier who’s going to have a civil service in flux and with administrative blind spots, and who’s going to need to procure a shitload of goods and services simultaneously in the middle of a recession/stagnation/whatever. He’s already promised to cut corporation taxes. He could easily end up as every bank, consultancy and business process outsourcing provider’s bitch.
There’s an assumption that iScotland will be some sort of soft socialist republic – but thats an assumption based on nothing. It’s just as likely to end up as a rightwing low tax mini state like Estonia.
jambalayaFree MemberAn independent Scotland is going to have more bureaucracy per head than does the UK as it replicates all the shared services. As Salmond cuts corporation tax to attract and retain business he is going to have to raise taxes substantially elsewhere to meet all the transition/replication expenses and to support this fairer society people seem to believe he can create.
molgripsFree MemberBless them for the guidance and insights without them we would be lost and we would experience recessions and stuff like that.
Oh give me a break. Because some reckless self interested lenders lined their pockets, that means everyone who is involved in anything economic or financial is always wrong? FFfS that is brainless. You might as well allege that all doctors are evil because of Shipman.
I don’t need someone who only got her job by an accident of birth telling me how to think, thanks
Argh! This is exactly what I am talking about, idiotic spin to bolster your own position. She’s an old lady with a lot of experience giving some very sound and neutral advice. It’s not telling you how to think, but suddenly you take the accident of her birth and twist it to make jt into your own propaganda.
You should be properly ashamed of that. Very very poor.
bencooperFree MemberNope, far better to be told how to think by someone who’s got (a not so) hidden agenda to become the new PM of Scotland and who got to where they are by bullying, promising the moon on a stick, and pulling the wool over peoples eyes!
Is that better or worse than being told what to think by randoms on an internet forum?
What we’re discovering with this referendum is that telling people what to think isn’t working any more – there’s no Yes-supporting daily newspapers, the TV news is biased towards the Union, yet people are reading up, talking to each other, and making their own minds up.
bencooperFree MemberShe’s an old lady with a lot of experience giving some very sound and neutral advice.
And why is her advice more important than that of many other elderly women? She’s a nice person I’m sure. But I refuse to be deferential to her.
mikewsmithFree MemberOh give me a break. Because some reckless self interested lenders lined their pockets, that means everyone who is involved in anything economic or financial is always wrong? FFfS that is brainless. You might as well allege that all doctors are evil because of Shipman.
Don’t forget all those people who borrowed more than their house was worth and invested recklessly 🙂
molgripsFree Memberyet people are reading up, talking to each other, and making their own minds up.
You seem to be entirely ignorant of how people’s minds work in peer groups!
People are reading things starting with a preconceived viewpoint and then finding reasons to dismiss the other side to confirm that viewpoint. Happening on this thread, happening everywhere. I include myself.in that, but at least I’m aware and trying to avoid it.
konabunnyFree MemberShe’s an old lady with a lot of experience giving some very sound and neutral advice.
A hahahahahahaha! Classic molgrips! What a ledge
molgripsFree MemberHer advice was to think carefully. How can anyone argue with that? Are you saying people should not think?
bencooperFree MemberYou seem to be entirely ignorant of how people’s minds work in peer groups!
Against the might of the media and government spin, it’s remarkable that Yes has got anywhere – that’s not down to peer group pressure, if it was then the polls would have started off much closer together and we’d now be looking at a solid Yes win.
If anything, No was the peer group pressure option – we’re still seeing that today with Labour’s “If you don’t know, vote No” slogans. People start off as No, it’s a default thing, but once they have time to think about it and do their own research they shift to Yes.
bencooperFree MemberIt’s not any more important! No-one said it was!
Why mention her, then? “Ethel Smith of 37 Greenlees Avenue, Skegness, says she thinks everyone should think carefully about what they’re doing”
The whole point of mentioning the Queen is to make people think that they should be interested in what she thinks.
jambalayaFree MemberIs that better or worse than being told what to think by randoms on an internet forum?
@ben, welcome back – as you can see things haven’t changed much since you’ve been away. Sadly AS has far more profile and influence than all of us internet randoms put together. It is hugely ironic to many of us that by a country mile the most deceitful self interested politician in this debate is AS as he keeps pushing the big lie of the “Westminster elite” and a promise of utopia.jambalayaFree MemberThe whole point of mentioning the Queen is to make people think that they should be interested in what she thinks.
But do you not think she is the ultimate neutral ? She will still be Queen, Scotland will be in the Commonwealth.
molgripsFree MemberWhy mention her, then?
Because it was something that was heard and was good advice. Plus I didn’t mention her. I was simply pointing out the idiocy of discounting someone’s advice based on that person’s birth is rather than its merit.
People start off as No
No they don’t, but that’s more meaningless guff trying to make Yes look more attractive by appealing to emotions. Did you work in advertising before your current job? People change to yes once they’ve heard enough emotive bullshit*
* see I can do it too
ninfanFree MemberNice to see Ben already queued up on the ‘it was the biased media’ bandwagon for why Yes are about to lose
Nothing to do with shite planning, economic illiteracy and downright lies – its all the medias fault 🙄
bencooperFree MemberSadly AS has far more profile and influence than all of us internet randoms put together.
True, but he has a lot less than Cameron, Clegg or Miliband – a glance at the media on any given day will tell you that.
But do you not think she is the ultimate neutral ?
Perhaps – I doubt she has as much direct experience of food banks as she has of polo, so I don’t think she is unbiased or neutral, but she does a good impersonation of being so.
However, that makes it even more nonsensical to mention her. It’s like those Father Ted “Careful Now” signs. What message is mentioning the Queen supposed to give?
jambalayaFree MemberI mentioned the Queen. It is relevant for the reasons we mentioned and because Salmond ha said she would remain Queen of an independent Scotland.
oldblokeFree MemberBack to EU membership then – looks like the Spanish won’t let any of the ScotGovt proposed easy shortcuts happen. Going to have to do it the long way.
Spanish PM says Scotland would have to reapply to join EU as a new member state
mikewsmithFree MemberIf anything, No was the peer group pressure option – we’re still seeing that today with Labour’s “If you don’t know, vote No” slogans. People start off as No, it’s a default thing, but once they have time to think about it and do their own research they shift to Yes.
Either 50% are not doing any research or you’re only half right there 🙂
bencooperFree MemberEither 50% are not doing any research or you’re only half right there
Maybe. There’s a lot of cultural inertia there, from people who have only known the UK their whole lives. That might be behind the age split – the over-65 age group is the only group that’s backing No. That age group is also the least likely to be able to access other forms of discussion – less able to use the internet, less likely to go out to meetings.
sadmadalanFull Memberthey shift to Yes.
But what about those who were Yes and have moved to No. Are they “wrong”? As you said people do their own research and reach a conclusion. Not everyone chooses “Yes” so by definition the argument for an iS does not satisfy all voters.
bencooperFree MemberBut what about those who were Yes and have moved to No. Are they “wrong”?
I believe they are, but I would say that.
A brief glance at the polls will tell you that a lot more people have shifted from No to Yes (or at least undecided at the moment) than the other way around.
konabunnyFree MemberHer advice was to think carefully. How can anyone argue with that? Are you saying people should not think?
It’s an absurdly unhelpful, moronic statement. It means absolutely sod all. I have no idea why you’re trying to extract meaning from it. In more than fifty years of observing British history and politics from up close, she has never shown the slightest sign of intelligence. Not only is it unsolicited advice from an old lady, it’s a particularly dullwitted thing to say. Ethel McKinty from Loch Rannoch would get an eye roll if she came out with this stuff.
It is probably the best argument for the abolition of the monarchy if the best guidance she can give in the most important constitutional event in 300 years is “think carefully”. WTF.
TurnerGuyFree MemberSalmond ha said she would remain Queen of an independent Scotland.
he has to support that or he could be guilty of treason – and all that goes with it.
bencooperFree MemberGood to see some people are planning ahead for a Yes result:
😀
ninfanFree MemberAre they “wrong”?
No, they’re stupid, because Yes is the only possible correct answer, and anyone who votes No either doesn’t understand the arguments for Yes, or hasn’t heard them enough yet…
The topic ‘Osbourne says no to currency union.’ is closed to new replies.