- Mon Sep 13, 2021 3:55 pm
#9938
It's US English, not British English - something I vaguely recall you railing about in the past.
Boiler wrote: ↑Mon Sep 13, 2021 5:57 pm US language creep via soshul meejah?No. The two spellings are of equal age (17th century) and as is so often the case the much-derided-by-pub-bores, must be the fault of the kids on their phones 'neologism' is in fact the older.
Mind you, Peppa Pig is teaching the kids of the Colonials proper English...
UK government threatens to suspend Northern Ireland protocolLucky that the EU doesn't have anything it could do in response, eh? Like collapse the whole trade deal.
Brexit minister Lord Frost tells House of Lords that the European Commission must take renegotiation proposals seriously
Abernathy wrote: ↑Mon Sep 13, 2021 11:20 am I never even noticed that the wee crown mark wasn't on a pint glass any more.The answer is... yes.
In fact, I'm instantly skeptical that it was ever taken off because of dem faceless EU bureaucrats. Was it, in fact ?
We want to make sure that the United Kingdom is more competitive, bolder and more forward-leaning than any other country on the planet. We are supporting our exporters and investors through trade and investment hubs right across our country.Patrick Minford wrting about Brexit bonuses in the Sun from 2016
So why are we doing all of this?
Pretty much for the same reason that Robert Peel abolished the protectionist Corn Laws. It is about answering what he called the “great question – what is calculated to increase the comforts and to improve the condition” for working people?
Peel’s reforms marked a new era of prosperity - GDP tripled by the end of the 19th century. And what we face now is significant economic challenges as we recover from the pandemic. Inflation is rising globally with commodity prices soaring, which heightens the need to keep prices down for consumers. Across the world, we see disrupted supply chains, labour shortages and costs rising. https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/ ... ade-policy
We’d stop listening to French farmers and instead the UK would help struggling
farmers in our own country stand on their own two feet while protecting our
beautiful rural environment in different ways.
Prices would fall by up to eight per cent
This will not only cost George Osborne and the British economy much less than
the current Common Agricultural Policy, it will keep food prices low.
If we decided to leave, the UK would simply revert back to paying world prices
for exports and imports.
Prices of goods would fall by up to eight per cent.
The cost of a BMW or the price tag of an imported fridge would suddenly drop
and our resources would shift from manufacturing to services — raising
living standards for all of us.
More importantly, our economy would be boosted by four per cent. https://www.thesun.co.uk/archives/polit ... even-brie/
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 6:12 pm Is this tweet actually connected to anything in the news? Food miles is a bollocks measurement anyway. What matters is the footprint of production. If somewhere has a better growing season than here, we can import it and still be saving emissions compared with producing here.Spot on Tubs.
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