
DISGUSTING Homeless GoFundMe Scam Exposed, Bhad Bhabie Iggy Azalea, & Chaotic Brexit Breakdown
video description
Date: 2019-11-01
Comments and reviews: 9
Beth Moore
Update to the Brexit story: - May is to go to Brussels for a EU Council Summit on the 25th November. - Dominic Raab has been replaced by former Health Minister and Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury Stephen Barclay - which effectively tells us that May has taken control of what is left of the negotiations (interestingly control of the negotiations has been leaving DExEU for No. 10 since Oliver Robbins moved from DExEU, Where he was Permanent Under Secretary, to become May's Europe Advisor in No. 10. - Esther McVey (who was one of those members of the Cabinet who was disliked by a lot of the public) has been replaced by former Home Secretary, and remainer, Amber Rudd. - The European Research Group is split on whether they want to oust May now, or after the vote on the agreement. - Sir Graham Brady hasn't yet received 48 letters, rightfully hasn't told anyone how many he has received, and suggested that some of those who say they have sent letters, haven't sent letters. - Most MPs believe that even if the 48 letters do come in any time soon, at this point she would win a vote of no confidence. - Therefore MPs are holding out on sending in their letters, because if she wins, she is safe from any further votes of no confidence for 12 months. - The Court of Justice of the European Union will hear the case for whether Article 50 can by unilaterally withdrawn by the UK, after the government failed in it's appeal at the Supreme Court. - Of the 5 original Brexiteers (that is to say, those who backed it in 2016) in Cabinet, otherwise known as the Gang of five or Pizza Club, most of them want changes to the agreement and won't resign yet, but understand that these changes will not be able to come about immediately, and they are waiting for the vote on the deal. - May has no intention of changing her position.
reply
Update to the Brexit story: - May is to go to Brussels for a EU Council Summit on the 25th November. - Dominic Raab has been replaced by former Health Minister and Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury Stephen Barclay - which effectively tells us that May has taken control of what is left of the negotiations (interestingly control of the negotiations has been leaving DExEU for No. 10 since Oliver Robbins moved from DExEU, Where he was Permanent Under Secretary, to become May's Europe Advisor in No. 10. - Esther McVey (who was one of those members of the Cabinet who was disliked by a lot of the public) has been replaced by former Home Secretary, and remainer, Amber Rudd. - The European Research Group is split on whether they want to oust May now, or after the vote on the agreement. - Sir Graham Brady hasn't yet received 48 letters, rightfully hasn't told anyone how many he has received, and suggested that some of those who say they have sent letters, haven't sent letters. - Most MPs believe that even if the 48 letters do come in any time soon, at this point she would win a vote of no confidence. - Therefore MPs are holding out on sending in their letters, because if she wins, she is safe from any further votes of no confidence for 12 months. - The Court of Justice of the European Union will hear the case for whether Article 50 can by unilaterally withdrawn by the UK, after the government failed in it's appeal at the Supreme Court. - Of the 5 original Brexiteers (that is to say, those who backed it in 2016) in Cabinet, otherwise known as the Gang of five or Pizza Club, most of them want changes to the agreement and won't resign yet, but understand that these changes will not be able to come about immediately, and they are waiting for the vote on the deal. - May has no intention of changing her position.
reply
steve cairns
Northern Ireland Citizen here. Brexit is a mess, merely down to the fact that the governments and controlling powers are unwilling to make it an easy process, for fear that other member states may leave also. The reality is, is that a shared revenue from all member states props up the weaker states, the single market prevents economic growth outside of EU and prevents freedom of choice for whole nations, EU regulations rarely benefit all, and usually benefit those with the most money to loose otherwise. What we have is a democratic communist regime, whereby the illusion of democracy is used to chain nations in to a system which controls everything from regulatory power, to where we buy our oranges from. This power does not want to appear weak and so there will never be an agreement set forward to benefit UK and EU equally, as for one to thrive is for another to submit. Thats just the agreement, never mind the day to day impact free movement and closed trade markets has on all uk ecosystem. If we want to leave EU (which we should, we will most likely have to go it alone. The Irish border is a whole different issue, one that will only be resolved with increased border controls, a halfway house style arrangement, or relinquished control of NI back to Ireland as a single state. No great option either way. Gonna go find a cave and grow potatoes.
reply
Northern Ireland Citizen here. Brexit is a mess, merely down to the fact that the governments and controlling powers are unwilling to make it an easy process, for fear that other member states may leave also. The reality is, is that a shared revenue from all member states props up the weaker states, the single market prevents economic growth outside of EU and prevents freedom of choice for whole nations, EU regulations rarely benefit all, and usually benefit those with the most money to loose otherwise. What we have is a democratic communist regime, whereby the illusion of democracy is used to chain nations in to a system which controls everything from regulatory power, to where we buy our oranges from. This power does not want to appear weak and so there will never be an agreement set forward to benefit UK and EU equally, as for one to thrive is for another to submit. Thats just the agreement, never mind the day to day impact free movement and closed trade markets has on all uk ecosystem. If we want to leave EU (which we should, we will most likely have to go it alone. The Irish border is a whole different issue, one that will only be resolved with increased border controls, a halfway house style arrangement, or relinquished control of NI back to Ireland as a single state. No great option either way. Gonna go find a cave and grow potatoes.
reply
Marcus W
Soft Brexit = staying in the customs union locking the U. K. into the Eu rules and it strictly states no member of the Eu customs union may engage in trade without the Eu authorisation meaning they cant trade with anyone els Hard Brexit= leaving the Eu customs union allowing the U. K. to make its own deals with anyone they want No nation ever could ever allow a foreign alliance to make laws of another nation. The U. K. has been the fastest and largest growing economy in Europe for 5 years in a row. even since the 2016 vote the U. K. has still been growing and the last quarter the U. K. grew more than all of Europe. laughter and jeering is normal in parliament. Their can only ever be one Brexit leave or stay you cant stay half in Last night Theresa won the vote on the first peace of legislation to enact the deal. Theresa May was the Home Secretary for 6 years (Secretary of state) longer than any politician ever, shes not going anywhere And 50% of conservative MPs dont have to write letters. thats not true. its only 49 letters are needed to trigger a leadership contest. And its Michelle barnier not MichaelI voted remain, but i now want to leave. And recent Gallup polling shows about 66% (ish) of the U. K. want to leave too.
reply
Soft Brexit = staying in the customs union locking the U. K. into the Eu rules and it strictly states no member of the Eu customs union may engage in trade without the Eu authorisation meaning they cant trade with anyone els Hard Brexit= leaving the Eu customs union allowing the U. K. to make its own deals with anyone they want No nation ever could ever allow a foreign alliance to make laws of another nation. The U. K. has been the fastest and largest growing economy in Europe for 5 years in a row. even since the 2016 vote the U. K. has still been growing and the last quarter the U. K. grew more than all of Europe. laughter and jeering is normal in parliament. Their can only ever be one Brexit leave or stay you cant stay half in Last night Theresa won the vote on the first peace of legislation to enact the deal. Theresa May was the Home Secretary for 6 years (Secretary of state) longer than any politician ever, shes not going anywhere And 50% of conservative MPs dont have to write letters. thats not true. its only 49 letters are needed to trigger a leadership contest. And its Michelle barnier not MichaelI voted remain, but i now want to leave. And recent Gallup polling shows about 66% (ish) of the U. K. want to leave too.
reply
Morgan Yu
Phil. there is no such thing as 'Soft' or 'Hard' Brexit. That was the narrative of the Remainer press. A 'Soft' Brexit entails remaining in the Customs Union. Which ostensibly means remaining in the EU. There is only Brexit. Every household in the country got a pamphlet explaining the gravity of the vote. Once in a generation. And the options were 'In' or 'Out'. Out won the democratic vote. But now we have that overwhelmingly Remainer press pushing for a second vote by trying to say people didn't understand what they were voting for. It is insulting. The establishment media and career politicians are out of step with the people. But remember for future stories. There is only Brexit. Not soft or hard. Just Brexit. Anything less than what the Remainer press calls a 'Hard' Brexit. isn't a Brexit at all, and it is not what the people voted for. For references of pushing for second votes and the EU. Go look at the results of the vote for the Maastrich Treaty, Nice Treaty et al. If a population doesn't vote the way the EU likes, they are forced to vote again and again until the EU gets the result it wants. This is the state of democracy in Europe, and this what the British people voted to LEAVE
reply
Phil. there is no such thing as 'Soft' or 'Hard' Brexit. That was the narrative of the Remainer press. A 'Soft' Brexit entails remaining in the Customs Union. Which ostensibly means remaining in the EU. There is only Brexit. Every household in the country got a pamphlet explaining the gravity of the vote. Once in a generation. And the options were 'In' or 'Out'. Out won the democratic vote. But now we have that overwhelmingly Remainer press pushing for a second vote by trying to say people didn't understand what they were voting for. It is insulting. The establishment media and career politicians are out of step with the people. But remember for future stories. There is only Brexit. Not soft or hard. Just Brexit. Anything less than what the Remainer press calls a 'Hard' Brexit. isn't a Brexit at all, and it is not what the people voted for. For references of pushing for second votes and the EU. Go look at the results of the vote for the Maastrich Treaty, Nice Treaty et al. If a population doesn't vote the way the EU likes, they are forced to vote again and again until the EU gets the result it wants. This is the state of democracy in Europe, and this what the British people voted to LEAVE
reply
Jaydin Marshall
Hey so I'm like three months late on this and I almost never comment, but I wanted to weigh in on the Pokemon story. Warning, I'm gonna get cheesy on y'all. I've been playing Pokemon pretty much my whole life. It was the first video game I completed by myself and while I did fall out of love with the series for a while in my teenage years, I picked it back up a little while ago. I can tell you that every time there's a new Pokemon game announced, I'm there at launch to pick up my copy. And what I saw at the store was so beautiful. I saw SO many young kids that were the same age as I was when I first picked up the game. And they were excited And that honestly makes me so happy. Something about the fact that kids today are going to get what may be their first experience with the franchise in the same in-game region I started in is just beautiful. Sure, it's a remake, but it makes me overwhelmed with joy to have this in common with my little cousins and to see them mention the same towns and the same stories that I did when I was their age. Overall just really really loved the experience with the game. It made me really happy and I just wanted to share
reply
Hey so I'm like three months late on this and I almost never comment, but I wanted to weigh in on the Pokemon story. Warning, I'm gonna get cheesy on y'all. I've been playing Pokemon pretty much my whole life. It was the first video game I completed by myself and while I did fall out of love with the series for a while in my teenage years, I picked it back up a little while ago. I can tell you that every time there's a new Pokemon game announced, I'm there at launch to pick up my copy. And what I saw at the store was so beautiful. I saw SO many young kids that were the same age as I was when I first picked up the game. And they were excited And that honestly makes me so happy. Something about the fact that kids today are going to get what may be their first experience with the franchise in the same in-game region I started in is just beautiful. Sure, it's a remake, but it makes me overwhelmed with joy to have this in common with my little cousins and to see them mention the same towns and the same stories that I did when I was their age. Overall just really really loved the experience with the game. It made me really happy and I just wanted to share
reply
michelle angel
I'm from Scotland. We voted tp remain. I myself voted to leave. But wish to change that to remain. I voted go leave the UK. England are arrogant toss pots. And only listen to themselves. Scotland has voted for another independence vote. England have said No. So we are stuck with them. Think of it this way. You own your home. You rent out a spare room. The tenant in that room tells you how to spend your money. How to decorate your own home and in turn charges you for them living there. You have to live with there house rules. And all the while be happy with that and see them brake there own rules they force on you. All the while telling you it's for your own good. Scotland has no chance of getting any power what's so ever. Scotland can vote for English laws. But not Scottish laws. They give us laws and we have to pick the less evil of the two and they claim they 're generousWe need out of under the English rule. I wa for staying in eu. But this article 13 has me questioning that. But I think the eu is the lesser of the two evils.
reply
I'm from Scotland. We voted tp remain. I myself voted to leave. But wish to change that to remain. I voted go leave the UK. England are arrogant toss pots. And only listen to themselves. Scotland has voted for another independence vote. England have said No. So we are stuck with them. Think of it this way. You own your home. You rent out a spare room. The tenant in that room tells you how to spend your money. How to decorate your own home and in turn charges you for them living there. You have to live with there house rules. And all the while be happy with that and see them brake there own rules they force on you. All the while telling you it's for your own good. Scotland has no chance of getting any power what's so ever. Scotland can vote for English laws. But not Scottish laws. They give us laws and we have to pick the less evil of the two and they claim they 're generousWe need out of under the English rule. I wa for staying in eu. But this article 13 has me questioning that. But I think the eu is the lesser of the two evils.
reply
Thomas Fraiß - RECHTECK
Even as a member the UK always wanted to get all the benefits of membership without contributing much to the European community. The most famous insult to the community is the so called UK rebate that was pushed through by Margaret Thatcher in 1984. The UK voted to stay out of Schengen and against the implementation of the Euro. So in reality the UK was always a bit out while it was still in (in the sense that it had a say and a vote within the European institutions. If the protocol is signed and enacted as proposed it will be rather the opposite, the UK will be a bit out without having any say within the European institutions. I cannot see how either side of the last referendum could agree with that result because it's not what any of the sides wanted. In my opinion that situation can only be resolved by another referendum and general elections at the same time. Either way the position of the UK in Europe will be weakened by the first Brexit vote, whether the UK leaves or remains after all.
reply
Even as a member the UK always wanted to get all the benefits of membership without contributing much to the European community. The most famous insult to the community is the so called UK rebate that was pushed through by Margaret Thatcher in 1984. The UK voted to stay out of Schengen and against the implementation of the Euro. So in reality the UK was always a bit out while it was still in (in the sense that it had a say and a vote within the European institutions. If the protocol is signed and enacted as proposed it will be rather the opposite, the UK will be a bit out without having any say within the European institutions. I cannot see how either side of the last referendum could agree with that result because it's not what any of the sides wanted. In my opinion that situation can only be resolved by another referendum and general elections at the same time. Either way the position of the UK in Europe will be weakened by the first Brexit vote, whether the UK leaves or remains after all.
reply
Teddy Peony
+PhilipDeFranco During the whole Brexit campaign I was literally on the fence on what to vote for a while and I didn't follow any of the campaigning. It wasn't until I watched Nick Robinson's Them or Us. that I became interested about the voting. However it wasn't until when I had the ballot papers in front of me that I made the choice Brexit because I went with my gut which said out because I don't believe that a government in another country should be making choices for other countries since each country works differently. A few days later I was have lunch with my friend and her family when we talked about Brexit. He was a banker he said even though he wouldn't vote for Brexit. he said that soon EU would collapse on it own. I am tired of rudeness between the people in and out. I am like move on. We made our choices and now we should work together to leave EU as a unit. I feel that the parties should pushed their political agenda side and work together. But that's never going to happen.
reply
+PhilipDeFranco During the whole Brexit campaign I was literally on the fence on what to vote for a while and I didn't follow any of the campaigning. It wasn't until I watched Nick Robinson's Them or Us. that I became interested about the voting. However it wasn't until when I had the ballot papers in front of me that I made the choice Brexit because I went with my gut which said out because I don't believe that a government in another country should be making choices for other countries since each country works differently. A few days later I was have lunch with my friend and her family when we talked about Brexit. He was a banker he said even though he wouldn't vote for Brexit. he said that soon EU would collapse on it own. I am tired of rudeness between the people in and out. I am like move on. We made our choices and now we should work together to leave EU as a unit. I feel that the parties should pushed their political agenda side and work together. But that's never going to happen.
reply
Italktocarrots
Thank you for actually explaining about Northern Ireland, we often get left out or thought of as just Ireland It could have detrimental effects on us having a hard border as there is still sectarian things going on and it could break us out in war again, we currently have no government in office so we are ran by England and our country relies almost totally on the tourism in Belfast so really even just leaving we could crumble, we voted remain and I think a lot of people could see this all coming, i was 16 at the initial vote and now I am 18, ever since I first read about it I have wanted to stay but only now am I old enough to vote so I am really hoping for a referendum so I can actually have my say. No matter if its a hard or soft boarder the peace here is really going to be threatened, there is no telling if the paramilitary groups would fully resurface and we could have another version of the troubles again -if you could cover more on Northern Ireland sometime that would be great
reply
Thank you for actually explaining about Northern Ireland, we often get left out or thought of as just Ireland It could have detrimental effects on us having a hard border as there is still sectarian things going on and it could break us out in war again, we currently have no government in office so we are ran by England and our country relies almost totally on the tourism in Belfast so really even just leaving we could crumble, we voted remain and I think a lot of people could see this all coming, i was 16 at the initial vote and now I am 18, ever since I first read about it I have wanted to stay but only now am I old enough to vote so I am really hoping for a referendum so I can actually have my say. No matter if its a hard or soft boarder the peace here is really going to be threatened, there is no telling if the paramilitary groups would fully resurface and we could have another version of the troubles again -if you could cover more on Northern Ireland sometime that would be great
reply
Add a review, comment















