We can't even assert control over all our territorial waters right now.
The UK government don't seem very keen on commenting about Irish boats fishing illegally near Rockall. Unless the UK govt has renounced our claims on the island and told no one.
all that "wiff-waff" shit from the oylmpics is a distant memory nowadays. Underneath it all he's got nothing.All that education and opportunity and he's a fucking idiots. He isn't even funny, he has no talent of note.
BJ: Paragraph 5B. Article 24. Get the detail right. Get the detail right, Andrew. It's Article 24 paragraph 5B.
AN: And how would you handle paragraph 5C?
BJ: I would confide entirely in paragraph 5B, because that is
AN: How would you get round what's in 5C?
BJ: I would confide entirely in paragraph 5B which is enough forour purposes.
AN: Do you know what's in 5C?
BJ: No.
AN: I thought you were a man of detail.
BJ: There's enough in paragraph 5B to get us the agreement that
we want.
AN: No. 5C says you don't just need the EU's approval; you need
to agree with the EU the shape of a future trade agreement –
BJ: Yes.
AN: And a timetable to getting towards it. Now can I just point
out –
BJ: But why should that – can I ask you –
AN: Okay, I'll tell you why.
BJ: Why, why this defeatism? Why this negativity?
Hi everyone. I know a guy who is seriously considering leaving his job soon due to being unhappy there. He works as a software engineer and looking to work for a similar sized company in London. He is wondering whether it is safe to change jobs before no deal or whether it's safer to stick to his current job and wait for the dust to settle (if ever) before changing. Given software industry probably wont be hugely affected by the econonic impact of no deal compared to other industries, I told him it didn't matter either way, but not 100% sure. Any advice for him would be great, thanks.
Services would be the worst hit.Hi everyone. I know a guy who is seriously considering leaving his job soon due to being unhappy there. He works as a software engineer and looking to work for a similar sized company in London. He is wondering whether it is safe to change jobs before no deal or whether it's safer to stick to his current job and wait for the dust to settle (if ever) before changing. Given software industry probably wont be hugely affected by the econonic impact of no deal compared to other industries, I told him it didn't matter either way, but not 100% sure. Any advice for him would be great, thanks.
What am I supposed to tell him? Just wait for no deal to happen before making a move?
What am I supposed to tell him? Just wait for no deal to happen before making a move?
What am I supposed to tell him? Just wait for no deal to happen before making a move?
Fwiw, I just hired a software developer and it was really hard because there are not enough people to fill developer jobs, so many positions are filled as contract posts for a significant bump in salary over hiring someone permanently. So, even given the uncertainty, I'd say there shouldn't be a lack of job opportunities. The best practical thing he could do is get on LinkedIn and contact a bunch of recruiters who can give him a bunch of leads on jobs and introductions in any eventuality.
BJ: Paragraph 5B. Article 24. Get the detail right. Get the detail right, Andrew. It's Article 24 paragraph 5B.
AN: And how would you handle paragraph 5C?
BJ: I would confide entirely in paragraph 5B, because that is
AN: How would you get round what's in 5C?
BJ: I would confide entirely in paragraph 5B which is enough forour purposes.
AN: Do you know what's in 5C?
BJ: No.
AN: I thought you were a man of detail.
you just assume minimum requirement for working at a think tank is a brain but here we are
you just assume the minimum requirement for working at a think tank is a brain but here we are
Because the Irish government are the ones being """"unreasonable"""" and insisting on the backstop, so if you want it gone you get them to agreeWait, why would you go to Dublin about that? It's the DUP opposed to the backstop
Please don't use the word gammon it's a pejorative descriptor of people's beliefs xknowing gammon like him, probably famine or some other fucking yikes relic of our history.
It is not racist to call racists racist.Please don't use the word gammon it's a pejorative descriptor of people's beliefs x
Please don't use the word gammon it's a pejorative descriptor of people's beliefs x
you just assume the minimum requirement for working at a think tank is a brain but here we are
They think that they have pacified Ireland. They think that they have purchased half of us and intimidated the other half. They think that they have foreseen everything, think that they have provided against everything; but the fools, the fools, the fools! - they have left us our Fenian dead, and while Ireland holds these graves, Ireland unfree shall never be at peace.
Is she still in the job? If that's the case whether she has cancer or not is really immaterial to her performance and the scrutiny of it. That sounds harsh, but you don't let pilots, doctors or lawyers away with malpractice just because they're sick.
you'd think but some people don't like accurate descriptors
Seriously.It's not just that, when my wife (who's Irish) saw it, the first think she thought of was this
which is one of the most famous rallying calls of Irish independence and taught in every Irish school. I mean you couldn't have tweaked a larger cultural lodestone if you'd tried.
Great, more flag waving bullshit. What's different about the team this time that let England get their first World Cup? I mean Brexit is in play so that must be it, right?
Oh....
oh my god. I thought it was some sort of typo. Jesus.I just can't believe he censored the word damn. Yet they accuse the left of virtue signalling.