http://www.breitbart.com/london/2016...n-signatories/
https://theconservativetreehouse.com...ve-in-the-u-k/
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More on the petition fraud —
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/andrewa...-fake-n2183567
How did Brexit devolve to Palin? Odd that she would still dominate the liberal mind so thoroughly.
For those wondering and who haven't been keeping up — our markets are as if Brexit never happened. Scare from one-worlders was bullsh!t.
Oh, EU is slowly or, speedily depending on your point of view, falling apart like a cheap watch.
At this point in time, all the scaremongering of the "experts" prior to Brexit predicting financial doom for GB continues to fall flat on its face. GB is doing just fine thank you.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/702...scaremongering
Check back on this six months from now and see how they are doing.
You might not have to wait 6 months. The pound is at a three decade low.
...and being an opportunist and our 50th wedding anniversary on the horizon, I have given my wife a lengthy leisurely tour of England, Ireland and Scotland. I'm now in the waiting game to secure her spending money. :cool:
The pound sterling continues to drop as speculation sets in —
https://www.ft.com/content/dfb375be-...7-e7ada1d123b1
I wish the Brits no misfortune but while I understand their misgivings toward the EU I believed at the time the exit was not a good move and I still hold that opinion. This is from today's WSJ:
Quote:
Brexit is turning ugly in financial markets. The pound is the most obvious casualty, with Friday bringing a short-lived collapse against the dollar in Asian trading hours. But U.K. government bonds are also suffering. That is an unpleasant mix.
The pound has now dropped more than 25 cents against the dollar since the Brexit vote and more than five cents this week alone. Friday, the currency dropped more than 6% in minutes before rebounding back above $1.24, a move that is being attributed to algorithmic trading in thin markets. The respite was short-lived, with sterling then slipping below $1.23 in London. Meanwhile, 10-year gilt yields have risen more than 0.2 percentage point this week, a big move, taking yields to a three-month high. That is despite the Bank of England’s ultraloose policy and renewed bond purchases.
The problem with Brexit is reconciling the political need to assuage the myriad concerns that generated the June 23 vote to leave the European Union with the reality of a U.K. economy that is deeply entwined with the continent. That task looks hard to manage, which raises the risk of a disruptive departure that affects many of the U.K.’s established relationships. That requires a political-risk premium to be priced in—something that advanced-economy markets only do when forced to, leading to sharp adjustments.