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Re: Britain outside the EU
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Re: Britain outside the EU
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As for breaking manifesto promises - some have been delayed and some have to be temporarily abandoned because of Covid. You must see that. If you want to see an example of an eco-loon, look no further than Caroline Lucas or The Greta. Boris is simply getting on with a task that is better tackled now to avoid a more disruptive scrabble at the last minute. The world is focussed on 2050 to go carbon neutral and some like China still haven’t worked out how to commit to that date. Oh, and Boris’s wife and his wallpaper? Hardly our concern, is it? |
Re: Britain outside the EU
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Also, I don't think you quite understand how to use a calendar to work out the passage of time as we left the EU over 12 months ago not 3 ;). Could explain you stance and the moving goalposts on the demise of TV as we know it. |
Re: Britain outside the EU
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There's a reason why our small exporters and importers would want to trade with the EU rather than the wider world: 1) Shorter distances mean cheaper shipping, 2) Shorter distance involve smaller carbon footprints and 3) JIT delivery is more predictable over shorter distances. Replacing EU trade with worldwide trade automatically builds in those additional drawbacks and costs. Add in the increased red tape and fees at borders, then one can see why small businesses are failing and throwing in the towel daily, especially given that the checks built into transactions with the EU are more complex than anywhere else in the world. Restoring a customs union of some kind would avert all of that. Many of us would like to start now building a movement to rejoin the EU because we have lost so many individual and freedoms by leaving and we are aware of the disadvantages for trade and European cooperation. We are not a few fanatics. We are real patriots, wanting the best for our country and people. We reject the rabid and xenophobic nationalism that underpinned the Leave campaign, trying to wrest an imaginary independence from Johnny foreigner in Brussels, little realising that all trade deals and treaties require some loss of sovereignty, especially when there are much bigger fish in the sea. https://www.facebook.com/groups/587442468465687/ |
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What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, etc. |
Re: Britain outside the EU
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The economist scenarios for different models of Brexit took into account the opportunities and drawbacks of Brexit. That is what economists do. They take all the factors and give us best and worst case scenarios to base our decisions on. It was the Leave press that misrepresented them and characterised them as part of Project Fear. Infact, they were project reality. The possible deal with Trump's regime was nowhere near completion. As junior partners, and therefore rule takers, we would have struggled to maintain the sorts of standards we had developed with our EU partners as equal members. Trump and now Biden, know our desperation. The bargain the US will drive will be a hard one which we are in no position to resist if we want to replace the volume of trade we are steadily losing from the EU. For the USA also read India, China, Brazil, Russia and the PTO. We will end up dumbing down some of our hard-won product standards to match those of our larger partners. Note that our farmers are already very unhappy with the competition they will be getting as a result of that piddling Australian deal. You ain't seen nothing yet. TRade deals involving many, carbon-emitting miles, will be replacing the sound arrangements we had with our close neighbours. The timing of this massive commitment to greater carbon emissions could not be more ironic. I am glad you acknowledged that it will take years to negotiate all those wonderful trade deals and arrangement and to benefit from all those opportunities. What is the government doing to enable the transition and soften the pain over these decades whilst we discover the sunny uplands. Little from what I can see. They haven't even bothered to replace the sums parts of our country got from the EU's regional development fund. We have saved all those billions in donations to the EU budget, but the government aren't using anything like the amount we have saved to uplevel Cornwall, the NE or the NW or rescue struggling farmers. It looks like Mogg's 50 years estimate is about right. I haven't heard a single notable Remainer declare that we should be feeling the benefits of Brexit already. You made that accusation, so you could shoot it down. If the Remainers and Mogg thought that the benefits would take decades, they are hardly going to be looking for them yet. What they are looking for is some sort of road map of how those benefits are going to be realised and an indication of what those benefits really are. The small fry trade deals with Japan and Australia are hardly an indication of the promised land. The Japan deal is far inferior to the one the EU signed with Japan, shortly after us. (Guess who was the bigger partner?) Remainers are also looking for a plan to deal with and mitigate the current explosion in red tape caused by Brexit. There is no plan because the negotiations were so rushed that Johnson didn't expect these disadvantages. He rushed negotiations through to avoid Parliamentary scrutiny, but in doing so missed out on the parliamentary expertise that would have told him to plan for an red tape explosion or negotiate a deal that included frictionless trade. So much for the sovereignty of Parliament. So much for wresting democracy from Brussels. You mentioned a 'bonfire of regulations'. We both know that to keep it simple we have rolled over most of the relevant EU regulations to do with trade, food production standards, manufacturing standards, services, health and safety, environmental protection human rights etc Sensible move. Tell me. Given that we helped establish these regulations and often initiated them, in the days before our political pendulum swung to the extreme right, what regulations are going to be thrown on the bonfire. We were on the winning side 97% of the time when these regulations were tailor-made in Brussels for each country by the multi-national team of civil servants who work there, and then voted on by our MEPs. What regulations do we now think we had got so wrong then? I know we have swung well to the right since 2010, but I still struggle to see what rules from my above list of categories we can suddenly ditch. The environment, manufacture standards, health and safety and food standards are important. Often we gold plated EU rules to make them even tougher here. Dare I mention Manx kippers? . |
Re: Britain outside the EU
Also worth mentioning that the EU has successfully negotiated the removal of Trump's aluminium and steel tariffs whilst the UK has not.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us-eu-...ay-2021-10-30/ Plus the fact that the EU is seeking deals with the likes of India too. The proof of the pudding will be in the eating. |
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On the first point, what I’m trying to say is that the forecasts are unable to predict future income, whereas losses from pulling out of the EU are known. So the credit side of the balance sheet is unknown. |
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Brilliant. :D:D |
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1. Where is the electricity to power millions of electric cars? 2. Who can afford electric cars & when will they be an affordable price? 3. What about terraced housing streets? 4. Ditto heat pumps? And the radiator changes that will needed? 5. Importing gas when we can produce it ourselves? 6. Re-wilding (prolly a Carrie idea) when we should produce our own food? Anyone who defends Boris' programme is a fool as well. Quote:
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---------- Post added at 18:54 ---------- Previous post was at 18:43 ---------- Quote:
You also missed the irony of a talkRadio poll returning the result it did. |
Re: Britain outside the EU
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:rolleyes: |
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---------- Post added at 19:17 ---------- Previous post was at 18:58 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Britain outside the EU
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