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EU Brexit thread

#701 User is offline   Aberlour10 

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Posted 2017-April-03, 15:02

Bad blood starts to flow around Gibraltar.
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#702 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-April-04, 07:56

The EU has no say in sovereignty. I say that if that question is raised the UK should simply walk away from the negotiations and put up massive protectionist tariffs against EU goods such as cars. This is not the way friends and allies should deal with each other. It is not dissimilar from the UK demanding a veto on trade deals with Calais, Normandy or Malta!
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Happy New Year everyone!
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#703 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2017-April-04, 08:10

View PostZelandakh, on 2017-April-04, 07:56, said:

The EU has no say in sovereignty. I say that if that question is raised the UK should simply walk away from the negotiations and put up massive protectionist tariffs against EU goods such as cars. This is not the way friends and allies should deal with each other. It is not dissimilar from the UK demanding a veto on trade deals with Calais, Normandy or Malta!


I presume Spain will return Ceuta and Melilla to Morocco if they get their hands on Gibraltar - oh no I thought not.
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#704 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2017-May-09, 07:58

So much for the much-trumpeted domino effect!

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"Genius has its own limitations, however stupidity has no such boundaries!"
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"

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#705 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-May-09, 08:07

View PostMrAce, on 2017-May-09, 07:58, said:

So much for the much-trumpeted domino effect!

Posted Image

Perhaps the PIGS have to be "standing" before they can fall? ;)
(This theory didn't apply to communism in the 60s so why should it now...)
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#706 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-May-09, 08:24

View PostAl_U_Card, on 2017-May-09, 08:07, said:

Perhaps the PIGS have to be "standing" before they can fall? ;)

Britain was standing. Now it is down in the mud with the rest of the swine.
(-: Zel :-)

Happy New Year everyone!
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#707 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-May-09, 09:08

View PostZelandakh, on 2017-May-09, 08:24, said:

Britain was standing. Now it is down in the mud with the rest of the swine.

Not sure how defending national sovereignty lowers a country relative to becoming a small part of a whole that "enables" a bureaucracy that can sweep aside national concerns without the active participation of those affected...
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#708 User is offline   Aberlour10 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 08:00

A couple of months have gone, I dont follow the devekopment in detail, so the question on the british members... does the goverment have a plan what to do at all? it seems for me they change their mind very often, but maybe I am wrong...
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#709 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 08:38

View PostAberlour10, on 2017-October-10, 08:00, said:

A couple of months have gone, I dont follow the devekopment in detail, so the question on the british members... does the goverment have a plan what to do at all? it seems for me they change their mind very often, but maybe I am wrong...


I don't understand exactly how this is proceeding. Apparently the EU side have said "We're not going to discuss anything you want to discuss until you concede these points we want" and have not budged an inch, so May is now openly talking about just leaving with no deal. People actually in the EU member states need to have the "Now let me explain" talk with Barnier and Juncker who are much more interested in what's good for Brussels than what's good for the member states of the EU.

There needs to be a deal, no deal is bad for everybody, but the EU negociators are backing Britain into a corner, and as most people other than them realise, that is the most likely way to cause us to stick two fingers up rather than to cave in.
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#710 User is offline   fromageGB 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 09:27

Surely the answer is to leave on the original date, no extension, and start building customs posts / areas and staffing them and HMRC HQ. Normal international trading arrangements apply until countries / trading blocks create a mutual trade agreement (except of course a 300% tariff on Boeing aircraft). That will certainly cause a change of EU strategy, as an agreement is in their interests as well as ours.

Their current plan is to refuse to enter discussions until UK changes its mind about leaving. Problem solved, and a salutary lesson for other people thinking of abandoning the sinking ship.

So UK should announce that we are leaving, be seen to be getting prepared (why it has taken us 2 years to get nowhere beats me, as well as Corbyn) and then we have a decent chance of being treated seriously.
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#711 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 09:51

"Give us everything we want, and then we'll think about whether to give you anything you want" doesn't seem to me to be how most negotiations are carried out, and with good reason. It is also unlikely to be something the UK gov't can afford to be seen to go along with, given how badly it worked out for David Cameron - who was essentially committed to supporting continued EU membership before he tried to renegotiate terms and therefore ended up with nothing.

So it does look like the chances of the UK leaving without a deal are increasing.
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#712 User is offline   shyams 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 13:17

View PostAberlour10, on 2017-October-10, 08:00, said:

A couple of months have gone, I dont follow the devekopment in detail, so the question on the british members... does the goverment have a plan what to do at all? it seems for me they change their mind very often, but maybe I am wrong...

No one in power has any idea; they don't have a plan, and worst of all they are deluded into believing that the EU will eventually come with a begging bowl asking the UK to continue to trade freely with the EU -- simply because the UK exports more to the EU than it imports from the EU.

Guess what?! Perhaps the EU will stop bothering with British exports. If that happens, no one knows what sort of "Plan B" exists. In short, we're in deep doodoo and we're busy trying to determine whether it is real doodoo or simply brown-coloured mud that coincidentally smells like doodoo.
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#713 User is offline   The_Badger 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 14:52

The problem with the EU is that they realise once the cash cow of Great Britain has left then there will not be any country to replace us. That's why they are making it so difficult for us to leave.

Most leftfield rational socialists like myself, including Jeremy Corbyn, who was vehemently against the EU before becoming Labour leader, could see the EU for what it was: jobs for the boys, hand in glove with big corporations and investment banks and bankers, backhanders and envelopes under the table par for the course.

I liked the idea of a Common Market, liked the idea of being more integral with Europe, but I do not like what the EU has become. A political, oligarchical hierarchy of senior politicians who think they know best for its citizens, when actually the citizens know what's best for them.

Most of the people who work within the EU are just thinkers, accountants, civil servants, analysts, lawyers, political and economic types who have never actually done anything in the field of actually working in corporate business and making things happen through real entrepreneurial enterprise. That's why the EU is stuffed silly with red tape and bureaucracy.

The EU were never going to make it easy for Great Britain to leave. Teresa May's handling of the issue has been atrocious. That's why we are still at an impasse over a year after the vote.
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#714 User is offline   Aberlour10 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 15:11

Thanks for your opinions.

PS: If the Brits would know the plan for the future of the EU presented by french president lately....the number of leaving votes would be significant higher IMO



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#715 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-October-10, 20:04

I just wanted to say that I think I get a better feel for what's happening with Brexit by reading this than I do from typical US media.
It seems as if dysfunction is not just here in the US.
Best wishes on some sort of solution.
We pay our leaders in cash and in power, expecting them to get something useful settled. I would like them to earn their keep, and it sounds as if the same sentiment appears in this matter.
Ken
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#716 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-October-11, 06:47

View PostThe_Badger, on 2017-October-10, 14:52, said:

A political, oligarchical hierarchy of senior politicians who think they know best for its citizens, when actually the citizens know what's best for them.

When I read this sentence, I thought: "I absolutely agree!! Exactly what I think about the English political elite!!"
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#717 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2017-October-11, 10:44

View Postcherdano, on 2017-October-11, 06:47, said:

When I read this sentence, I thought: "I absolutely agree!! Exactly what I think about the English political elite!!"


The vast majority of the political elite is/was pro-remain. The people have been much more Eurosceptic for a long time.
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#718 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-October-11, 14:36

Does amalgamation ever lead to better representation? Here, the trend has been for small towns and villages to amalgamate into metropolitan areas with local councils but with an executive or regional council (one ring to rule them all...). The end result is more administrators, less efficiency and economic stagnation.
Each layer of political bureaucracy adds to the lethargy. Economies of scale are lost because small scale administrations are kept as well as the creation of new levels of foolishness. Replace 10 city councils with 1 mega-council? HAH!
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#719 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2017-October-11, 21:08

I am getting tired of my echo chamber. Some typical posts in my facebook feed (paraphrased):

- Immigration is stabilizing! Brexit is failing on its own terms!
- Immigration is drying up! Brexit leads to shortage of skilled labour!

OK, if there is no scenario (not even a hypothetical one) in which Brexit could not have been a disaster, what's the news value of Brexit being a disaster? It's just a tautology.

- Corbyn is stubonly stuck in his 1970's ideology!
- May just did her umpteenth u-turn!

Morton's fork, anyone?

- The stock exchange has lost trillions! Even the Toublerone has become smaller! Brexit is already ruining us!

If anything, it should be s surprise so little impact Brexit has had so far, given the political mess it has created. And measuring the economy's performance using the stock exchange is flawed. By that measure, the Trump presidency would be a bless to USA.

- The general election showed that people are fed up with Brexit! And opinion Polls now show the same! 51% are now against Brexit!

The GE was actually lost by LibDem and SNP. And the opinion polls just fluctuate around 50/50 and don't consistently show any difference since before the referendum, other than that a lot of (previous) remainers now believe the referendum result should be respected.

- The issue was way too complicated for ordinary voters to form an opinion about!
- We were conned!

OK. Since I grew up in Denmark where we had referenda all the time, I have heard this before. You will always hear the argument that this and that topic is not suitable for a referendum. And of cause it's true. People are stupid, Murdoch controls their mind etc etc. The fallacy of the argument is that since I am pro EU and therefore perceive leavers to be less competent than remainers, I will automatically deem whichever political body (be it the press, the public, parlament, courts) who is more pro-EU to be the most competent.

But actually, I don't think that the EU issue is more complicated than so many other political issues. Some people just don't like Eastern European immigrants, don't like the metric system, don't care about roaming charges. Yes I know that the referendum was not about the metric system but it was about making an effort to isolate the UK from continental cultural and political influence. We can disagree (needless to say I think that foreign cultural influence is by and large a plus) but I haven't seen evidence that leavers were particularly ill-informed. Yes, it's true that Europoll found that the British score somewhere between the Turkish and the Albanians on the know-your-European-institutions quiz, but I am not convinced that that scale is relevant for the Brexit decision.

There are some plus sides of referenda. Google reported that UK internet users actually starting asking questions about EU prior to the referendum. And even if it's true that voters are stupid, it's not a very democratic attitude that stupidity disqualifies them from making their voice heard.

Yeah, of course I agree that Brexit was a stupid decision. I am just fed up with silly arguments from my echo chamber.
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#720 User is offline   fromageGB 

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Posted 2017-October-12, 06:21

View Posthelene_t, on 2017-October-11, 21:08, said:

Yes I know that the referendum was not about the metric system but it was about making an effort to isolate the UK from continental cultural and political influence.

No, you have it completely wrong. We like the cultural influence, and we do not mind political influence, but we object, strongly, to political control.
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