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Re: Britain outside the EU
I can’t rule out that the UK will rejoin the EU in twenty years. They won’t have us because of all the funds they’ll need to send us! All we need is a competent government that is investment led on new technologies etc. Sunak needs to solve the crisis caused by Truss and then whatever government needs to have an economic strategy. A tall order. |
Re: Britain outside the EU
Who knows what anyone will be doing in 20 years, the EU may not even exist.
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---------- Post added at 14:48 ---------- Previous post was at 14:39 ---------- Quote:
The current lot aren't interested in investment led on new technologies, they're preparing for a probable spell in the wilderness. I don't hold out much hope for the alternatives. The implementation of Brexit can probably be best described as King Arthur vs The Black Knight |
Re: Britain outside the EU
I came across this analysis on Reddit and thought it does a really good job of capturing the reality of our recent experience:
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Re: Britain outside the EU
A good analysis, up to a point. Sadly however the author clearly comes from the left-leaning school that thinks chanting Tory! Tory! Tory! is a handy way of summoning a bogeyman, a suitably ill-defined thing that is generally agreed to be not very nice and therefore a suitable target to blame for whatever.
However, there are two obvious weaknesses, the first being that the infrastructure required to deliver state services has long lead-times and really ought to have been in the planning years before it was needed, or at the very least right from when the need became apparent. And that wasn’t at the point of the financial crash, it was when free movement was first extended to Eastern Europe and the *Labour* government then in charge took an active decision not to invoke any of the temporary limitations allowable under EU law. The second obvious weakness is to blame failure in domestic government policy while taking it as given that uncontrolled migration across a bloc with wildly different living standards is itself an unimpeachably good thing. The author hasn’t made that case and shouldn’t assume it to be so. |
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The trade-offs are becoming clearer now the fog of Covid has lifted but this issue is one for the next government and not the embers of the current one given the divisive influence of the ERG on the current government. Quote:
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Re: Britain outside the EU
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I think the economic realities of a UK outside the EU are starting to bite.
https://www.cableforum.uk/board/atta...6&d=1675167569 |
Re: Britain outside the EU
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Not just trade, also growth
https://www.cableforum.uk/board/atta...8&d=1675167734 See full story at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-64450882 |
Re: Britain outside the EU
Was listening to Barnier on the Andrew Marr show earlier and he said Guy Verhofstadt said without Brexit he didn't think Russia would have invaded Ukraine last year, interesting that everything we were warned about is coming true and none of the things we were promised are coming to fruition and no one is being held accountable for their promises
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With particular regard to Ukraine, it takes a special sort of strategic idiocy (which to be fair Verhostadt appears to have in spades) to still be obsessed with the idea that 2022 was the inflection point in this crisis. Putin invaded Crimea and the Donbas in 2014. That in turn was preceded by similar adventurism in Georgia, with similar justifications, in 2008. Meanwhile the West gave every indication that it no longer had any interest in intervention in other people’s wars by refusing to back rebels against the Assad regime in Syria in 2011. The Western response has been tardy in the extreme but for Putin this is a continuity of planning that has been ongoing for a long time. Yes, Russia’s geopolitical strategy is to divide western democracies because it calculated it was stronger, in its will to succeed and in its military ability to do so, than any of them acting alone. But Putin is informed by a vision of a renewed imperial Russia and has been playing an exceedingly long game. Ukraine is the jewel in the crown because many of Russia’s cultural and religious origins are actually in Kyiv, not St Petersburg and certainly not Moscow. It was always going to end here (and in fact, if Russia is not resoundingly beaten in Ukraine and kept under sanction for a very long time, it *will* flare up again). In the 18th century, Russia invaded Crimea repeatedly and took 80 years to finally secure it and forcibly incorporate it into its empire. That’s the portion of Russian history that informs Putin’s motives and his timescales. The invasion of *more of* Ukraine in 2022 has absolutely, literally feck-all to do with Brexit and you oughtn’t to make yourself sound as much a chump as Verhostadt does on a daily basis by claiming otherwise. |
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