Now that a stalwart of PC financial news group, CNN Money, has laid the bad news on us, London financial market in a panic after Brexit turns out the light and closed the door on UK EU membership, we're all suppose to quiver and shake and act contrite as if we're going to miss Big Brother.
Dutch finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, a key euro official, said losing full access to the rest of Europe would be the "price" Britain would pay for Brexit. Speaking to Dutch TV station RTL on Friday, Dijsselbloem said rival financial centers like Amsterdam and Frankfurt would benefit.The governor of the Bank of France also questioned London's future as the financial capital of Europe.
This is post-financial earthquake aftershock tremors, thinly veiled threats designed to strike fear and angst. Here's another quote: "Leaving the union may disrupt this link, with some high-profile EU officials already calling the so-called "passporting rights" of U.K. banks into question." Another big lie is set up under the straw man stratagem. You wave in front of the sinners what they supposedly had but now through their foolishness lost. "Britain has already lost an influential voice in Brussels, after Britain's EU commissioner Jonathan Hill resigned over the weekend. He was in charge of the financial services portfolio within the commission, which proposes European laws and enforces them. Latvian commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis will now take over the crucial post."
This is typical MSM journalism to inject guilt, like sellers' remorse in the stock market. To hear the shills tell it the EU was a paragon of goodness dressed all in pure white robes. Here's another CNN hatchet job: money.cnn.com/2016/06/24/investing/brexit-uk-companies/index. The ink is hardly dry on the papers and the sky is falling. Notice how this next piece is worded.
British Airways owner IAG (ICAGY) almost immediately issued a profit warning. The company said it anticipates minimal long-term impact, but it issued a profit warning because of a difficult trading environment and current market volatility.
Low cost airline EasyJet (ESYJY) was slammed. The stock fell over 14% Friday. CEO Carolyn McCall said the company doing everything it can to ensure "the U.K. remains part of the single EU aviation market" so planes can still fly freely around Europe.So here's a question: how freely were planes flying around Europe before the advent of the EU? These people want you to think you to think a return to prehistoric times is certain without the Brussels bureaucrat stooges.
And that's half true. Keep following them them and that's where we'll all wind up.
This is post-financial earthquake aftershock tremors, thinly veiled threats designed to strike fear and angst. Here's another quote: "Leaving the union may disrupt this link, with some high-profile EU officials already calling the so-called "passporting rights" of U.K. banks into question." Another big lie is set up under the straw man stratagem. You wave in front of the sinners what they supposedly had but now through their foolishness lost. "Britain has already lost an influential voice in Brussels, after Britain's EU commissioner Jonathan Hill resigned over the weekend. He was in charge of the financial services portfolio within the commission, which proposes European laws and enforces them. Latvian commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis will now take over the crucial post."
This is typical MSM journalism to inject guilt, like sellers' remorse in the stock market. To hear the shills tell it the EU was a paragon of goodness dressed all in pure white robes. Here's another CNN hatchet job: money.cnn.com/2016/06/24/investing/brexit-uk-companies/index. The ink is hardly dry on the papers and the sky is falling. Notice how this next piece is worded.
British Airways owner IAG (ICAGY) almost immediately issued a profit warning. The company said it anticipates minimal long-term impact, but it issued a profit warning because of a difficult trading environment and current market volatility.
Low cost airline EasyJet (ESYJY) was slammed. The stock fell over 14% Friday. CEO Carolyn McCall said the company doing everything it can to ensure "the U.K. remains part of the single EU aviation market" so planes can still fly freely around Europe.So here's a question: how freely were planes flying around Europe before the advent of the EU? These people want you to think you to think a return to prehistoric times is certain without the Brussels bureaucrat stooges.
And that's half true. Keep following them them and that's where we'll all wind up.
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