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'Foreigners: 48hrs to f*** off'
It's been just four days, but things have turned ugly with a surge in reports of racist attacks following the UK decision to leave the EU.
It's been just four days, but things have turned ugly with a surge in reports of racist attacks following the UK decision to leave the EU.
COMMENT: Nearly everyone I went to school with in a very working class part of England voted for Leave. Everyone I went to university with voted to Remain.
COMMENT: Where Britain now goes, others will follow. For all those who want to see a better European future, that is an enticing prospect.
If Britain stands to suffer most from its foolish decision last week, the EU could be hurt just as badly if it cannot eject Britain quickly.
COMMENT: We witnessed history on Friday when 52 per cent of the voting population of Britain voted to leave the European Union.
After Thursday's Brexit vote, there has been a "dramatic" drop in credit card spending over last weekend.
Here are five markets to watch for a sign of where things are headed following the Brexit result.
Economists expect the victorious "leave" outcome to chop a cumulative 2.75 per cent off UK GDP.
New Zealand's sheepmeat exports and tourists from the UK may be the hardest hit from the Brexit.
I knew it would be close, but I didn't see that coming. I wasn't nearly as wrong-footed as financial markets, though.
On paper, Britain's vote to exit the European Union will change little in the short term. But in reality, a lot is already changing.
Foreign Minister Murray McCully says there could well be advantages for New Zealand in Britain's shock vote to quit the European Union.
COMMENT: Last week was one of those times when you sensed how thin the membrane is between the functioning intact life and its total destruction.
United Kingdom's break-up looks increasingly likely as country comes to terms with shock results of EU vote.
Like millions of people around the world, Italian immigrant Alejandro Majnoler was trying to make sense of a British exit from the European Union.
More countries will follow Britain out of the EU unless there is significant reform, according to a string of nations both inside and outside the EU.
COMMENT: I am convinced markets have over-reacted to the Brexit vote. There should have been a negative reaction. Markets were not expecting this outcome.
COMMENT: All those Facebook shares, Twitter hashtags and Snapchat videos couldn't save Britain's youth from being the big losers in the Brexit referendum.
COMMENT: If this was a romcom, Britain would be the hunky guy, NZ the clingy ex-girlfriend and Brexit the nadir - when friends finally stage an intervention.
After ten weeks of intense and often bitter rivalry between opposing camps, many reputations were made - and lost.
You've got to hand it to the Brits - they certainly know a thing or two about grim humour.
Kiwis are already cashing in on Brexit, with a currency exchange chain reporting record high numbers of people through their doors today.
What have we done? Brits frantically Google 'what is the EU?', hours after voting to leave it as Brexit remorse spreads.
Say hello to curvy bananas and crooked cucumbers - Leave voters are celebrating changing the course of history and breaking free from the EU laws and regulations.
David Cameron reportedly told members of his inner circle he would rather hand over control sooner than spend time negotiating Britain's tricky exit from the EU.
Eurosceptic parties across the continent are intensifying demands for their own referendums in the wake of the Brexit vote.
New Zealand First is pushing for Closer Commonwealth Economic Relations (CCER) between New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
The NZ dollar tumbled more than US3c, or 4.4 per cent, and swap rates dropped as the UK voted to leave the EU.