Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
Cavey, a few weeks ago, close to blasphemy in the form of admitting that maybe the Conservative Party got something wrong:
Cavey wrote:
Fuck. Fuuuuuuuuk. This really is almost too much to bear: fuckwits win by 2%, everything is unraveling before my eyes. At this rate, scrabbling back up that slippery bank these last 6 years will have been for nowt.
Well, I hate to be bitter, but I hope people are proud of themselves in the coming weeks, months and years. Cretins.
Farage speech was unlistenable
Fortunately, Cavey is rediscovering his blind faith. The Conservative Party is the party of fiscal responsibility! Therefore everything it does must be fiscally responsible!
Cavey wrote:
Look. All I said was the FTSE100 and 250 were steaming ahead today, which according to any sane definition, they have done, but Mimi's "hurrah!" post actually showed the wrong graph and data, which we've now sorted out, yeah? That's really all that needs to be said.
However, you're quite right, the FTSE100 is at pre-brexit levels (in fact the best it has been pretty much for a year, as I've said), and as you'll recall, I did specifically cite the FTSE100 in my original post. Again all as I've said earlier.
In terms of the FTSE250, I can't be arsed pissing around with more graphs, use Google if you want to check, but basically this closed 600 points *higher* than it was in only February this year, and it's never been above its 16000+ close levels today at pretty much any time before 2015.
The Conservative Party can do no wrong! And so we must be wrong; and so we arrive here:
Cavey wrote:
I still say the jury's still out, though. We'll have to wait and see on that score.
And so we creep along steadily towards the inevitable Cavey of the future who will somehow find a way to preclaim the Brexit referendum as Cameron's masterpiece. What an amazing journey, truly we are blessed to bear witness to it.
Please tell me you're not as thick as someone I could mention (but won't, and never will).
I have admitted Brexit was, and is, a grave error, and blamed the Tories squarely and absolutely for it, despite Corbyn's woeful performances for Remain. I would never duck such a charge.
I've repeated that only today, in this very thread. I have not, even a little teensy little bit, retracted from this position. What I HAVE said, though, is that the jury is still out in terms of what is actually going to happen (e.g. how bad it's going to be), and have expressed (to my mind perfectly legitimate) surprise that "the markets" haven't reacted a damn sight more badly than they have post-Brexit anouncement. There is NO contradiction, shifting of position nor hypocrisy here; if Brexit even works out well for us (which I don't think it will btw, merely not as badly as feared, but I am an optimist), that STILL won't change the fact that (a) I was against it and (b) Am ashamed at the Tories' risking - then losing - this most crucial argument.
But still, you just titanically miss the point just like you always do, and throw stones at me, too, Doc, I've broad shoulders. After all, who else are you going to do it to? The Brexit/Tories issue is completely besides the point that I was making, of course (i.e. MY predictions about Corbyn were if anything under-egged) - but egos are bruised, pride is hurt, huh.
You'll forgive me, then, if I permit myself a little gloating and
schadenfreude at Labour's woes, for I am only human, sorry. Cheers!
_________________
Beware of gavia articulata oculos...
Dr Lave wrote:
Of course, he's normally wrong but
interestingly wrong