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My evaluation of the USMNT players !!

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    #16
    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
    Sorry mate but I stopped reading when you said "wankers". If you're English then you better worry about Brexit and not soccer. Soccer is not your thing and my assessment was right on. We're pretty sick about all those Brits coming off as great soccer coaches when in reality they're the wankers. Keep learning and leave the opinions to those who know more than you !
    Brexit is the best thing to happen to the UK. EU formed in 1993 what has it done for the UK. Let unelected bureaucrats make rules and collect fees. The people have no representation.


    Hum, that sounds familiar. Just go back to 1764. The issue then The Revenue Act of 1764 made the constitutional issue of whether or not the King had the right to tax the thirteen colonies an issue. The start of the American Revolution.

    We all know how that ended.

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      #17
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      Brexit is the best thing to happen to the UK. EU formed in 1993 what has it done for the UK. Let unelected bureaucrats make rules and collect fees. The people have no representation.


      Hum, that sounds familiar. Just go back to 1764. The issue then The Revenue Act of 1764 made the constitutional issue of whether or not the King had the right to tax the thirteen colonies an issue. The start of the American Revolution.

      We all know how that ended.
      That's not what the world markets think !

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        #18
        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
        That's not what the world markets think !

        You might want to check that again. You, along with all of the other politically biased analysts, have been proven wrong yet again.

        From the Associated Press June 29, 2016:

        "LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s FTSE 100 erased all its post-Brexit losses on Wednesday fuelled by a late afternoon surge led by energy and financials shares.
        The index closed at its highest level since April, finishing 3.6 percent higher, at 6,360.06 points.

        The rise lifted it above last Thursday’s close of 6,338.10, posted before it slumped as much as 8.7 percent after Britain voted to leave the EU.

        The UK midcaps index which comprises more domestically focused companies is still nearly 8 percent below its close before the vote."

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