Chris JL
Junior Member
Posts • 1,766
Likes • 1,852
March 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Chris JL on Sept 4, 2018 12:10:11 GMT 1, You know Brexit is a bad thing when the Donald LOVES and supports it! As does Putin.
You know Brexit is a bad thing when the Donald LOVES and supports it! As does Putin.
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gd79
Junior Member
Posts • 1,129
Likes • 1,220
September 2015
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by gd79 on Sept 4, 2018 12:29:05 GMT 1, He's obviously talking about the reptilian overlords. Take the red pill. Or, if he's part of Jeremy Corbyn's labour we all know who he means. Argh ok, cheers bob.
Actually I meant posterbob and the guy that runs graffiti prints. Everyone else is just a pawn in the game.
Oh, and shy.
He's obviously talking about the reptilian overlords. Take the red pill. Or, if he's part of Jeremy Corbyn's labour we all know who he means. Argh ok, cheers bob. Actually I meant posterbob and the guy that runs graffiti prints. Everyone else is just a pawn in the game. Oh, and shy.
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caruso
Junior Member
Posts • 1,181
Likes • 818
August 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by caruso on Sept 4, 2018 13:14:13 GMT 1, This is brexit.
This is brexit.
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wrigs
New Member
Posts • 497
Likes • 417
July 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by wrigs on Sept 4, 2018 17:15:06 GMT 1, I can imagine it will be a race to the bottom in terms of regulation etc
I can imagine it will be a race to the bottom in terms of regulation etc
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Poster Bob
Junior Member
Posts • 5,802
Likes • 5,417
September 2013
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Poster Bob on Sept 4, 2018 19:57:45 GMT 1, I might as well chime in with my pathetically reductionist opinion on this: barriers to trade are bad, mmmkay.
I might as well chime in with my pathetically reductionist opinion on this: barriers to trade are bad, mmmkay.
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Fake
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,376
Likes • 2,143
July 2008
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Fake on Sept 13, 2018 17:39:25 GMT 1, at the moment posting prints to outside the EU is a pain for us, extra paperwork, and the customer, import duty...will it be like that for everywhere? YES!
at the moment posting prints to outside the EU is a pain for us, extra paperwork, and the customer, import duty...will it be like that for everywhere? YES!
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jensen
New Member
Posts • 215
Likes • 416
March 2018
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by jensen on Sept 13, 2018 18:47:20 GMT 1, I guess I will buy less art in GB after the Brexit, because the customs make it horrible. It‘s not the fees but the efford to get there in short time to pick things up. I had one Pose-print that I couldn‘t pick up in time (10 days) and that was sent back to the US. So I had to pay another expensive postage to get it back...
I guess I will buy less art in GB after the Brexit, because the customs make it horrible. It‘s not the fees but the efford to get there in short time to pick things up. I had one Pose-print that I couldn‘t pick up in time (10 days) and that was sent back to the US. So I had to pay another expensive postage to get it back...
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Deleted
Posts • 0
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 19:22:08 GMT 1, people who voted to earn less money and have poorer living standards for themselves and their children
Good job, you must be so proud .
people who voted to earn less money and have poorer living standards for themselves and their children
Good job, you must be so proud .
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Schrödinger's Chat on Sept 13, 2018 19:24:07 GMT 1, Yeah but it's the next generation (as yet born) who will reap all the benefits of Brexit, it will be a land of milk and honey for them - Rees Mogg told me.
As I highlighted to my friend who voted leave, the above is going to be cold comfort to the person who loses his job can't find another one and is stockpiling baked beans in his living room!
Yeah but it's the next generation (as yet born) who will reap all the benefits of Brexit, it will be a land of milk and honey for them - Rees Mogg told me.
As I highlighted to my friend who voted leave, the above is going to be cold comfort to the person who loses his job can't find another one and is stockpiling baked beans in his living room!
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PS
New Member
Posts • 807
Likes • 733
April 2016
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by PS on Sept 13, 2018 19:49:39 GMT 1, Yeah but it's the next generation (as yet born) who will reap all the benefits of Brexit, it will be a land of milk and honey for them - Rees Mogg told me. As I highlighted to my friend who voted leave, the above is going to be cold comfort to the person who loses his job can't find another one and is stockpiling baked beans in his living room!
Spoke to one of managers in my local supermarket today as I seen him pulling a pallet full of baked beans tins. He told me sales have trebled in the last few weeks! People are really starting to stockpile!!!
Yeah but it's the next generation (as yet born) who will reap all the benefits of Brexit, it will be a land of milk and honey for them - Rees Mogg told me. As I highlighted to my friend who voted leave, the above is going to be cold comfort to the person who loses his job can't find another one and is stockpiling baked beans in his living room! Spoke to one of managers in my local supermarket today as I seen him pulling a pallet full of baked beans tins. He told me sales have trebled in the last few weeks! People are really starting to stockpile!!!
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Guy Denning
Artist
New Member
Posts • 636
Likes • 1,281
July 2007
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Guy Denning on Sept 13, 2018 21:21:42 GMT 1, Bollocks to the financial benefits to the blue-chip art market. That's not art anyway - it's tax-free money movement. We're potentially right up the swannee with BREXIT. All our rights (UK citizens living in France for the last 11 years) are predicated on the UK being part of the European community. It's a sh1te-show - start to finish. I've been annoying politicians etc this side and that side of the Channel and we're none the wiser as to where we stand. Frigging farce.
Bollocks to the financial benefits to the blue-chip art market. That's not art anyway - it's tax-free money movement. We're potentially right up the swannee with BREXIT. All our rights (UK citizens living in France for the last 11 years) are predicated on the UK being part of the European community. It's a sh1te-show - start to finish. I've been annoying politicians etc this side and that side of the Channel and we're none the wiser as to where we stand. Frigging farce.
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Pysgod
Junior Member
Posts • 1,677
Likes • 1,347
December 2016
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Pysgod on Sept 13, 2018 21:30:58 GMT 1, Oh stop with all the remoaning.
Oh stop with all the remoaning.
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Guy Denning
Artist
New Member
Posts • 636
Likes • 1,281
July 2007
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Guy Denning on Sept 13, 2018 21:40:52 GMT 1, Oh stop with all the remoaning. Yeah alright. It's only my home, work, life for the past decade etc...
37.46% voted for Brexit 34.74% voted to remain 27.80% did not vote
So in actual fact a little over a third of the electorate actually chose to take the UK down the tumultuous political river we’re now paddling – with little sign of any active paddle work. Brexiters are NOT in the majority. Admittedly a third of the electorate didn’t bother to turn out, for whatever reasons, but that clearly shows that a UK Brexit wasn’t a major concern to that third if they couldn’t be bothered to make their mark on the ballot paper. They were contented enough to assume everything would stay as it is. Some of the commentary I’ve suffered via the media and in person displays a level of idiocy that defies reason. Thick as pigshit reasons for leaving the EU I’ve encountered include, unbelievably:
“When we leave Europe they have to give us back all the money we’ve paid in since 1973.” “I want Brexit because I don’t agree with all the money we give to corrupt African states.” “Britain was great when it was an empire and I want Great Britain back.” “Because the EU closed the coal mines.” “We need to stop immigrants coming here to use the NHS for free.” “We can get our own car industry back and stop being made to build Japanese cars.” “I don’t like David Cameron.”
I understand the frustrations that some people have with the problems of the European Union. It is now, in essence, another neo-liberal political talking shop that has contributed to the problems ordinary people face today. But its origins were steeped in socially progressive communitarianism; controlling the excesses of unregulated capitalism and creating the cultural spaces for social and welfare reforms by levelling the playing fields of business between member states – primarily reinforcing the ongoing project to bring peace to a Europe that had warred for decades. Following the increasing influence of Friedman free-market economics in the 1980s many of the interventionist policies have been reduced or destroyed and now we have an economic area that is essentially operating with the same predatory capitalist outlook as the United States of America. These are the issues that effect the day to day lives of working people and these are the issues that need taking to task. The essence of working, and living, together as a borderless union of individually different states (with less overall integration than the USA) is a positive and not a negative thing. Despite having no customs borders, despite having the same money, despite having freedom of movement of people, nobody would say that the Spanish are the same as the French or the Greeks. All the states within the European Union have their own specific social and cultural identities. They have not been subsumed into a superstate of bureaucratic anonymity. The idea of a greater over-arching community of individual states where each has its voice heard is a positive step away from the petty, divisive politics of narcissistic nationalism and it should be encouraged and returned to more fully. The problems that this union has should be addressed, and I’m sure that they will be considering the still parlous state that the world is in economically (whatever politicians say we are NOT out of the financial crisis that hit the world initially in 2007/8); not to mention the impending problems of climate change that cannot be successfully approached without a united front. Leaving the union puts the UK in a position of weakness when it comes to these two most urgent issues; we cannot expect to be treated favourably by our nearest neighbours when we walk away from communal debate and action. The European Union needs to instigate serious investigation, debate and action to address the issues that are fanning the fires of petty nationalist fractures and that can only happen from within by the members themselves who have a vested interest because of their membership. If the UK is on the outside of the EU I think it will be the European politicians telling the British politicians ‘to whistle’ and not the other way around.
But what would I know – I’m just a bloody artist. Yeah - I'm pissed off when the talking point is 'will it be good for the frigging art market'.
Oh stop with all the remoaning. Yeah alright. It's only my home, work, life for the past decade etc...
37.46% voted for Brexit 34.74% voted to remain 27.80% did not vote
So in actual fact a little over a third of the electorate actually chose to take the UK down the tumultuous political river we’re now paddling – with little sign of any active paddle work. Brexiters are NOT in the majority. Admittedly a third of the electorate didn’t bother to turn out, for whatever reasons, but that clearly shows that a UK Brexit wasn’t a major concern to that third if they couldn’t be bothered to make their mark on the ballot paper. They were contented enough to assume everything would stay as it is. Some of the commentary I’ve suffered via the media and in person displays a level of idiocy that defies reason. Thick as pigshit reasons for leaving the EU I’ve encountered include, unbelievably:
“When we leave Europe they have to give us back all the money we’ve paid in since 1973.” “I want Brexit because I don’t agree with all the money we give to corrupt African states.” “Britain was great when it was an empire and I want Great Britain back.” “Because the EU closed the coal mines.” “We need to stop immigrants coming here to use the NHS for free.” “We can get our own car industry back and stop being made to build Japanese cars.” “I don’t like David Cameron.”
I understand the frustrations that some people have with the problems of the European Union. It is now, in essence, another neo-liberal political talking shop that has contributed to the problems ordinary people face today. But its origins were steeped in socially progressive communitarianism; controlling the excesses of unregulated capitalism and creating the cultural spaces for social and welfare reforms by levelling the playing fields of business between member states – primarily reinforcing the ongoing project to bring peace to a Europe that had warred for decades. Following the increasing influence of Friedman free-market economics in the 1980s many of the interventionist policies have been reduced or destroyed and now we have an economic area that is essentially operating with the same predatory capitalist outlook as the United States of America. These are the issues that effect the day to day lives of working people and these are the issues that need taking to task. The essence of working, and living, together as a borderless union of individually different states (with less overall integration than the USA) is a positive and not a negative thing. Despite having no customs borders, despite having the same money, despite having freedom of movement of people, nobody would say that the Spanish are the same as the French or the Greeks. All the states within the European Union have their own specific social and cultural identities. They have not been subsumed into a superstate of bureaucratic anonymity. The idea of a greater over-arching community of individual states where each has its voice heard is a positive step away from the petty, divisive politics of narcissistic nationalism and it should be encouraged and returned to more fully. The problems that this union has should be addressed, and I’m sure that they will be considering the still parlous state that the world is in economically (whatever politicians say we are NOT out of the financial crisis that hit the world initially in 2007/8); not to mention the impending problems of climate change that cannot be successfully approached without a united front. Leaving the union puts the UK in a position of weakness when it comes to these two most urgent issues; we cannot expect to be treated favourably by our nearest neighbours when we walk away from communal debate and action. The European Union needs to instigate serious investigation, debate and action to address the issues that are fanning the fires of petty nationalist fractures and that can only happen from within by the members themselves who have a vested interest because of their membership. If the UK is on the outside of the EU I think it will be the European politicians telling the British politicians ‘to whistle’ and not the other way around.
But what would I know – I’m just a bloody artist. Yeah - I'm pissed off when the talking point is 'will it be good for the frigging art market'.
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wrigs
New Member
Posts • 497
Likes • 417
July 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by wrigs on Sept 13, 2018 21:47:12 GMT 1, Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities
Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities
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Deleted
Posts • 0
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 21:49:12 GMT 1, Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities
Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though.
Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though.
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Coach on Sept 13, 2018 21:57:39 GMT 1, Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though.
I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk.
Carney doing his best to help proceedings this evening by stating house prices could drop by 35% if no brexit deal on the table. Think if we got anywhere near that (I don’t) buying art would be somewhat down the list of priorities Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though. I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk.
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Schrödinger's Chat on Sept 13, 2018 22:03:18 GMT 1, Taking back control though innit 😵
Taking back control though innit 😵
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Deleted
Posts • 0
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 22:06:21 GMT 1, Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though. I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk.
Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol
Only reason we've kept him on is so he has the chance to get a prediction right before he fucks off back to Canada. This isn't the one though. I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk. Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 22:36:28 GMT 1, Do you really think Johnson, Rees Mogg, Gove, Farage et al have been right about everything, they still don't even know themselves what people were to vote for.
Do you really think Johnson, Rees Mogg, Gove, Farage et al have been right about everything, they still don't even know themselves what people were to vote for.
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Coach on Sept 13, 2018 23:03:16 GMT 1, I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk. Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol
I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?)
I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk. Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?)
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 23:10:14 GMT 1, Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?)
Just google it, that way you can choose your source. It's been all over the news. And it's pretty obvious I was laughing at the absurdity of the prediction.
Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) Just google it, that way you can choose your source. It's been all over the news. And it's pretty obvious I was laughing at the absurdity of the prediction.
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dogstar
New Member
Posts • 665
Likes • 811
October 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by dogstar on Sept 13, 2018 23:16:30 GMT 1, Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) Carney told Theresa May and her senior ministers of the potentially dire economic consequences of leaving the EU on poor terms.
Cabinet sources said he painted a bleak economic picture of unemployment potentially reaching double figures in percentage terms, house prices falling by 25-35% over three years, and transport links with the EU, including air travel and the Eurostar, stalling.
One cabinet minister said "He wasn’t saying it was all going to happen but I think there is a recognition that you do have to contemplate the worst-case scenario.”
Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) Carney told Theresa May and her senior ministers of the potentially dire economic consequences of leaving the EU on poor terms. Cabinet sources said he painted a bleak economic picture of unemployment potentially reaching double figures in percentage terms, house prices falling by 25-35% over three years, and transport links with the EU, including air travel and the Eurostar, stalling. One cabinet minister said "He wasn’t saying it was all going to happen but I think there is a recognition that you do have to contemplate the worst-case scenario.”
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Pysgod
Junior Member
Posts • 1,677
Likes • 1,347
December 2016
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Pysgod on Sept 13, 2018 23:20:02 GMT 1, Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) the equivalent of laughing in your face
Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) the equivalent of laughing in your face
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Coach on Sept 13, 2018 23:23:34 GMT 1, I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) Just google it, that way you can choose your source. It's been all over the news. And it's pretty obvious I was laughing at the absurdity of the prediction.
Well, I have. I’ve looked at the guardian, the times and sky website. None agree as to what he said. The Times - he said house prices would drop by 35% over 3 years (I don’t think you mentioned the timescale) Sky - house prices could (note, not would) drop by a third. (No mention of timescale) The Guardian - warning of house prices falling by 25-35% over 3 years (25%?) So I’m none the wiser. I do think that the country could fall in to a very bad recession. I said so prior to the vote on that thread. I do think house prices will fall substantially. I am not qualified to comment by how much.
I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) Just google it, that way you can choose your source. It's been all over the news. And it's pretty obvious I was laughing at the absurdity of the prediction. Well, I have. I’ve looked at the guardian, the times and sky website. None agree as to what he said. The Times - he said house prices would drop by 35% over 3 years (I don’t think you mentioned the timescale) Sky - house prices could (note, not would) drop by a third. (No mention of timescale) The Guardian - warning of house prices falling by 25-35% over 3 years (25%?) So I’m none the wiser. I do think that the country could fall in to a very bad recession. I said so prior to the vote on that thread. I do think house prices will fall substantially. I am not qualified to comment by how much.
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Coach on Sept 13, 2018 23:25:43 GMT 1, Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it..
Only good if the owners can weather it. If owners loose their jobs and it coincides with a big drop in house prices, then people will be loosing their homes whilst in negative equity.
Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it.. Only good if the owners can weather it. If owners loose their jobs and it coincides with a big drop in house prices, then people will be loosing their homes whilst in negative equity.
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Coach on Sept 13, 2018 23:26:17 GMT 1, I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) the equivalent of laughing in your face
Lol
I didn’t hear him say that and don’t know the context in which it was said. Do you have a link so that I can consider his comment in context (and in full). Lol (why do so many people finish posts with this? Is it an online equivalent of laughing at one’s own joke?) the equivalent of laughing in your face Lol
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 23:42:39 GMT 1, Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it.. Only good if the owners can weather it. If owners loose their jobs and it coincides with a big drop in house prices, then people will be loosing their homes whilst in negative equity.
That's a lot of loosing!
Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it.. Only good if the owners can weather it. If owners loose their jobs and it coincides with a big drop in house prices, then people will be loosing their homes whilst in negative equity.
That's a lot of loosing!
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 13, 2018 23:47:36 GMT 1, Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it..
Vastly inflated based on what? Sure in terms of income ratio, I agree. But in terms of demand and supply, I don't see anything changing any time soon.
I know in the current climate I'm meant to pick a side... and preferably an extreme one. But I'm neither for or against Brexit. I think the EU is a complete joke, but I have never trusted our politicians to do this properly. But I am against a negative governer who forgets he's supposed to be apolitical and continues to make predictions that turn out to be horribly wrong.
Why absurd? Property prices in London anyway are vastly inflated atm, no one knows quite what a no deal Brexit will bring.. maybe a bit exaggerated but a price crash certainly, might be the only good thing to come out of it..
Vastly inflated based on what? Sure in terms of income ratio, I agree. But in terms of demand and supply, I don't see anything changing any time soon.
I know in the current climate I'm meant to pick a side... and preferably an extreme one. But I'm neither for or against Brexit. I think the EU is a complete joke, but I have never trusted our politicians to do this properly. But I am against a negative governer who forgets he's supposed to be apolitical and continues to make predictions that turn out to be horribly wrong.
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Chris JL
Junior Member
Posts • 1,766
Likes • 1,852
March 2017
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Chris JL on Sept 14, 2018 7:24:47 GMT 1, I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk. Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol
In euros UK housing prices have already gone down by 30% or more since the referendum... I.e. we are massively poorer than we used to be - thank you brexiters (and their Kremlin sponsor). And if you don’t get why the euro value matter, remember that roughly half the UK households’ consumption bundle is produced in the EU. And if even with this in mind you don’t understand that we are already not that far from that claim... I guess you voted for leave 😞
I heard him interviewed on the radio recently and he gave a clear reasoned explanation as to why no deal would be a very bad thing, and expressed concerns that no deal seemed to be a very real possibility. Rees Mogg was interviewed about Carney’s comments. All he could muster was that Carney is a high priest of project fear. Nothing of substance. Just hyperbole. The likes of Mogg and Johnson can survive a recession without any difficulty. They take no risk. Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol In euros UK housing prices have already gone down by 30% or more since the referendum... I.e. we are massively poorer than we used to be - thank you brexiters (and their Kremlin sponsor). And if you don’t get why the euro value matter, remember that roughly half the UK households’ consumption bundle is produced in the EU. And if even with this in mind you don’t understand that we are already not that far from that claim... I guess you voted for leave 😞
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Deleted
Posts • 0
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January 1970
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Brexit positive or negativefor the uk and Europe art market , by Deleted on Sept 14, 2018 7:29:18 GMT 1, Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol In euros UK housing prices have already gone down by 30% or more since the referendum... I.e. we are massively poorer than we used to be - thank you brexiters (and their Kremlin sponsor). And if you don’t get why the euro value matter, remember that roughly half the UK households’ consumption bundle is produced in the EU. And if even with this I’m mind you don’t understand that we are already not that far from that claim... I guess you voted for leave 😞
Last time I checked I paid for my house in pounds not euros. Completely irrelevant.
And you guess wrong.
Carney has been consistently wrong about everything so far, to use your own words nothing of substance. Do you really think the property market is going to tank 35%?! Lol In euros UK housing prices have already gone down by 30% or more since the referendum... I.e. we are massively poorer than we used to be - thank you brexiters (and their Kremlin sponsor). And if you don’t get why the euro value matter, remember that roughly half the UK households’ consumption bundle is produced in the EU. And if even with this I’m mind you don’t understand that we are already not that far from that claim... I guess you voted for leave 😞 Last time I checked I paid for my house in pounds not euros. Completely irrelevant. And you guess wrong.
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