When did I use the 350 figure? Now it is you who are lying.The 350 figure you used is a lie and you know it.

When did I use the 350 figure? Now it is you who are lying.The 350 figure you used is a lie and you know it.

JD has blocked me from starting new threads on the GD forum. Can someone do a poll of how people actually voted, would then take into account the undecided.
Cheers
Not a bad analogy except that the £6 returned from the EU has to be spent on hookers, it cannot be spent on anything else. In effect the EU is telling the UK how to spend some of its money and if the UK decide not to spend it the way the EU want it spent then the EU will not give it back to the UK.Suppose I have an arrangement to give you £10 a week and you give me back £6 each week to spend on hookers.
But Jerry knows how to fix his own car so his subscription to the AA serves no function. But let's continue all the same:Let's suppose Gerry joins the AA.
As noble as those causes may be, it's still enforced charity.some goes towards putting up yellow signs for village shows and rock festivals, some goes towards helping villages where floods have damaged the roads.
OK now you've lost me. Your analogies are terrible.Gerry has a sign-posting service, For this he gets paid £25 a year. Only paid-up members are offered these jobs. As a member, he also gets free or subsidised admission to the exhibitions
And is told that if he does, the AA may choose to punish him and deliberately damage his vehicle. So he leaves on principle; him and his neighbour will fix the car from now on.Gerry says he wants to leave the AA.
we would not get back £350m a week by leaving the EU.
True, they won't pay it back as we will no longer be handing it over to them. Simples.
Let's suppose Gerry joins the AA. The normal annual subscription is £100, but due to his disability he only pays £65.
................
Gerry says he wants to leave the AA. .... He says this will leave him £100 a year better off, which he intends to spend on cheap cider.
Is he right?
Let's suppose Gerry joins the AA. The normal annual subscription is £100, but due to his disability he only pays £65.
.....Gerry has a sign-posting service, and puts up signs for his village fete and the leek show. For this he gets paid £25 a year. As a matter of policy, only paid-up members are offered these jobs.
......Gerry says he wants to leave the AA. He says he wants to carry on visiting the museums every year. He says this will leave him £100 a year better off, which he intends to spend on cheap cider.
Is he right?
OK OK, we get it already, the figure isn't £350M per week it's £248M per week. That doesn't suddenly make EU membership any more attractive.No, he is talking rubbish because he doesn't pay £100 in the first place, so he cannot be £100 better off.
Actually he may get a pay cut, but he won't lose all of it. Fortunately his neighbours also need signs putting up (but were previously unable to employ him, according to AA policy), which will easily make up for the loss.He will lose the £25 which is paid to him for putting up the signs.
Let's suppose Gerry joins the AA. The normal annual subscription is £100, but due to his disability he only pays £65.
...... As a member, he also gets free or subsidised admission to the exhibitions of historic motor vehicles at 20 museums around the UK. The normal admission ticket is £2 and he visits about five a year.
Gerry says he wants to leave the AA. He says he wants to carry on visiting the museums every year. He says this will leave him £100 a year better off, which he intends to spend on cheap cider.
Is he right?
Fair enough, so he has swapped his £65 a year mebership fee and £25 salary in exchange for a £10 a year fee, a £10 pay cut, plus a new £10 a year salary from his neighbours. Gerry is £55 better off. Be like Gerry.He will in future not get free admission, he will have to pay £2 x 5 visits = £10 a year (like his friend from Norway has to pay for access).
Both.Is he
(1) A numbskull
(2) A liar?
(3) Both?