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Is Brexit actually going to happen?

Will we have a brexit?


  • Total voters
    362
I'm waiting to hear what the furniture makers guild have to say.
Richard Jessup: what does Brexit mean for British manufacturing?
Furniture News. Oct 17, 2017
Richard Jessup, sales director at Lectra – a leading provider of integrated solutions to the upholstered furniture industry, covering design, product development and automated cutting – talks Brexit, British manufacture and the importance of the Manufacturing Guild Mark.
tldr. boring tbf. Weak pound maybe good for domestic manufacturing.
 
Richard Jessup, sales director at...
...habits of the Millennials...
Companies can think of Brexit as an opportunity or a threat. Forward thinking companies are ......
We have every confidence that the sector will thrive post-Brexit....
British manufacturers need to seek out the new trends and focus on areas of growth...
(and of course this line) We are already seeing that ‘Made in Britain’ is becoming more important to consumers.
 
Wow genuinely astonished how quickly you saw through that.

Who would've thought that Richard Jessup, sales director at Lectra would be a salesman?

Luckily there are no other PR puff pieces around though.
 
Wow genuinely astonished how quickly you saw through that.

Who would've thought that Richard Jessup, sales director at Lectra would be a salesman?

Luckily there are no other PR puff pieces around though.
Don't worry I'll keep you right.
 
richard-jessup-9eec9914 (1).jpg

This is the informed economist, soothsayer and sofa guru Richard Jessup, of Lectra.

Would you trust this man?

Ginger hair and a blue suit, and he's in charge of our furniture??
 
View attachment 157037

Ginger hair and a blue suit, and he's in charge of our furniture??

I would go out tonight,
but I haven't got a wig grey suit dicky-bow (Delete as applicable) to wearrrrrrrRRRRRRRRHHHH!

More Remaniac bigotry :mad:

Yup

gxuM60O.gif
 
Hair is fine but the tie makes men look dodgy.
Which reminds me, my uncle was in A & E at North Manchester Hospital the other night and saw Paul Scholes. Missed the chance to see where he stood on the people's vote. However one of the nurses said he was the best midfielder they'd had in (Scolesy that is, not our Les).
 
Why don't you post a picture of you for purposes of comparison

Erm...when I'm next interviewed by Furniture News on the likely impacts of Brexit on the UK furniture industry, backed up by my keen knowledge of integrated solutions to the upholstered furniture industry, covering design, product development and automated cutting, I'll be sure to illustrate it with a head and shoulders shot for you to wank over.
 
Erm...when I'm next interviewed by Furniture News on the likely impacts of Brexit on the UK furniture industry, backed up by my keen knowledge of integrated solutions to the upholstered furniture industry, covering design, product development and automated cutting, I'll be sure to illustrate it with a head and shoulders shot for you to wank over.
The only sexual purpose such an image might serve would be to dispel lascivious thoughts, not to promote them
 
pocketscience : Not necessarily all that 'smug', he's just stating his facts.

As in : teuchter lives in London**

**Like I used to, for 17 years until 2008.

Personally, I now have a vastly better understanding of leavemindedness since I left London for Swansea (52% Leave, 48% Remain ... with that, Swansea = the closest city anywhere to the actual 2016 result).
Like my partner, I remain Mr Heavily Remainist of 137 Remain Street :oops: :D, but also, I have a far better idea now of why so many voted Leave :(

When in pubs, and at work, etc., we even sometimes discuss socialism, TUs, employment rights, etc. etc.
I'm happy to chat leftie politics, and even Brexit ( :eek: :hmm: ), with sound people on all or any sides, so like redsquirrel (to his major credit :) ) acknowledges, class politics are far more important than Brexitism .... but for myself, I still think Brexit is utterly shit :hmm:
 
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pocketscience : Not necessarily all that 'smug', he's just stating his facts.

As in : teuchter lives in London**

**Like I used to, for 17 years until 2008.

Personally, I now have a vastly better understanding of leavemindedness since I left London for Swansea (52% Leave, 48% Remain ... with that, Swansea = the closest city anywhere to the actual 2016 result).
Like my partner, I remain Mr Heavily Remainist of 137 Remain Street :oops: :D, but also, I have a far better idea now of why so many voted Leave :(

When in pubs, and at work, etc., we even sometimes discuss socialism, TUs, employment rights, etc. etc.
I'm happy to chat leftie politics, and even Brexit ( :eek: :hmm: ), with sound people on all or any sides, so like redsquirrel (to his major credit :) ) acknowledges, class politics are far more important than Brexitism .... but for myself, I still think Brexit is utterly shit :hmm:
You're missing the point.
Teuchter implied that lexit's unique to a u75 bubble, but the reality is that it's actually him that's in a middle-class remain bubble outside of u75.
 
I was just looking for opinium or yougov data on Tuechter but its oddly absent, I guess we will just have to go on what he has said. How frustrating.
 
Sure; 1 out of every poster called Teuchter stated that "there's no doubt that they are sheltered from leave voters".
That's a whopping 100% of Teuchters who are in a remain bubble

Im from teuchter area in London. I don't have middle class job. Nearly all of the people I know - they do working class jobs , some are Council tenants are Remain. I was Remain as well.

In Lambeth EU was not the issue. Housing , gentrification and cost of living are. As are Tory austerity cuts to Councils hitting services.
 
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