Oh, it does. Scotland’s “plan”, such as it is, is that Scotland will hold the referendum before the UK leaves the EU, and so Scotland’s EU membership is maintained - still the same argument they had in 2014.
Oh, it does. Scotland’s “plan”, such as it is, is that Scotland will hold the referendum before the UK leaves the EU, and so Scotland’s EU membership is maintained - still the same argument they had in 2014.
It definitely was - there was a lot of things in the mail that they really didn’t want me to know about, aside from the ranting. It was a bit of a messed up situation.
Good move I think. Renault was a championship winning team not so many years ago, and the only reason they’re so far back at the moment is that they had no money last year.
I guess that putting a quote from a TV show in a judgement is a bit of a marker for judges in the (sadly inevitable) future cases - “I didn’t take this complaint seriously, I suggest you don’t either”
This is true. In the UK the balance between TV news (which is incredibly heavily regulated to ensure it isn’t biased) and papers (which are allowed to do what they like more or less) is flipped around compared to the US (where the decent papers tried to be balanced, and you have FOX “News”).
Why? Brexit didn’t have anything to do with people baking cakes as far as I can tell.
We do moan about the BBC a lot. Then we go on holiday and realise that everyone else in the world pays a lot more for terrible TV that is 50% adverts, and when we come home we are really glad to be British for a little while.
I’m going to guess that the answer is “Someone’s Grandpa”.
It is a bit different in the UK. Cars are what’s called “written off” (from the olden days when such things were written in books) to describe the state of the vehicle. There are four categories - Category D is for “easily fixable but too expensive given the value of the car”, Category C is “Eeh, You can fix it but…
Left lane for left and straight on, and right lane for right in the Highway code.
It did indeed. He worked the Somerset and Dorset, which was one of the more picturesque and rural lines, given that it connected nowhere in particular with the back of beyond.
The first book was in 1945, when the whole British railway network was definitely coal-fired and a generation away from full dieselification; my grandad was an engineer on the local line up until it closed in 1963.
Let’s try this another way. What do you prefer, symphony orchestra or three piece punk band?
FPS isn’t resolution, and if a filmaker made a film called “The Colour of Wildflowers” in black and white it sounds like pretty much my ideal film.
But it also goes on to detail the steps the EU wants to take to harmonise vehicle taxation, as I alluded in my post. As for the standard, I wasn’t referring to a Standard, just that most countries tax solely by Co2 emissions, which automatically favours Diesel cars.
He makes a good point. If you dismiss games out of hand for not being at 60fps it’s like saying you’ll never watch any film that’s in black and white. If the game is good then you’ll be able to look past the frame rate.
Why, the EU website of course!
The standard for vehicle taxation in the rest of Europe means that everyone has to buy small diesel hatchbacks, and the UK has been under pressure to “regularise” our regime to move towards a more European system. So that’s one positive of Brexit...