Today I Heard My First . . . . .
ChatterBank2 mins ago
I flicked on the tv tonight & it was 'Question Time', this week from Caernarfon. The discussion was Welsh parliamentary independence. The remark from a Southern English journalist (from The Sun me thinks) was something like, "I'm all for it coz then the affluent people in the South of England no longer have to foot the bill for Wales and then people like me would be a lot better off!" I just was wondering how England foots the bill for Wales? If he's alluding to high unemployment in Wales (thus lots of tax U.K. money going on benefits) for there are pockets of high unemployment all over the U.K. England included. Was he just talking rubbish or does he have a point? God bless.
No best answer has yet been selected by Seabedsurfer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hmm - If you hadn't suggested the Sun I'dv'e said it was a clever analogy to the EU.
I can't remember who the comedian was but there was a stand up routine which kind of went:
"Fight for my country of course I would - well not Scotland and Wales of course or all them up North but yes of course I'd fight for the South apart from all them outside London but not South of the River naturally. But yes I'd fight for north London - apart from Ealing and Harrow and the like but I'd fight for Acton , well My flat anyway! "
At the end of the day it's where your allegences lie - do you feel British or only English? - Most of us don't feel European but then many Americans didn't feel American 150 years ago after the civil war.
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