Brexit = Smackup, Bremain = Smackdown

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BBC has declared UK projected to leave the EU

Edit: ITV and Sky news as well
 
you're on !
1 type rounded fifty.
:)[/quote]


Done :)

This is one bet I hope I lose![/quote]




you going to lose! It's rigged!




"Video appears to show a Brexit vote counter rubbing out a vote and adding a new one.

Vote Leave supporters complained earlier today about how the use of pencils at voting booths could lead to vote fraud."

[youtube]
 
LOL. The dude on BBC looks like he is about to cry.

He is absolutely in disbelief. A visual example of just how out of touch some of these clowns are.....
 
Its legally possible.

But the gov't would have to have big balls to ignore the public..
 
Ag-man said:
Its legally possible.

But the gov't would have to have big balls to ignore the public..

Bigger than Thatcher vs Miners and Northern England?

London is Burning.

God save the Queen, the fascist regime.
 
Overnight circuit breakers on S&P futures are 5% looks like they have just been hit and trading has been halted
 
JulieW said:
Ag-man said:
Its legally possible.

But the gov't would have to have big balls to ignore the public..

Bigger than Thatcher vs Miners and Northern England?

London is Burning.

God save the Queen, the fascist regime.
I am not sure if I agree with you (looking for an excuse to :) ) are you saying they are fascist if they ignore the vote? if so I agree!!!
for once
 
The panicked mood prompted wild swings in Asian stock markets. Japan's Nikkei plummeted 7.6%. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong dropped 4.7%.
Investors turned to safe haven assets like the Japanese yen, which soared against the dollar. Gold jumped around 6%.
Markets in the U.K. will open Friday at 8 a.m. local time / 3 a.m. ET. London stock futures are trading around 7% down. U.S. stock futures are also lower.
British bank stocks traded in Hong Kong were hit especially hard -- HSBC fell more than 11%, and Standard Chartered nosedived more than 12%.
"The markets have been betting on remain in the past few days, and when the first results came in, that has reversed," said Vicky Pryce, an economist and former U.K. government official.

Cnn
 
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