Quote:
Originally Posted by Pierre
That’s a bit rich from someone who openly admits they can’t be bothered to back up their arguments with citations and links?
But. Just for arguments sake
https://openeurope.org.uk/intelligen...u-regulations/
You seem to bang on an a hell of a lot about the empire, are you a secret imperialist?
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I’d love you to source where I “openly admit” your claim in the first sentence.
I’m quite interested in your link though. Essentially, there are costs adhering to standards and regulations - these aren’t uniquely an EU feature. I’ve quoted one paragraph:
EU regulation can come with benefits, particularly if it helps facilitate trade across the single market. It would also be wrong to assume that, if the UK were to leave the EU, the costs described above would disappear overnight. The reality is that the UK would be likely to keep a good number of these laws in part or in full, such as rules on anti-discrimination, some health and safety rules, food safety standards, and so forth. At the same time, the UK would no longer benefit from many of the EU rules that give British business access to European markets – such as ‘passporting rules’ for financial firms.
So again can anyone tell me a business suggestion that isn’t viable today but will be viable on 30th March?
---------- Post added at 19:34 ---------- Previous post was at 19:32 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr K
50,000 nursing vacancies.... We need immigration, and whether intended or not, the whole Brexit shambles is making other countries more attractive to the people we need.
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Why aren’t our 3 million unemployed queuing up for these jobs? After all, every EU national in a job is literally grabbing it from the hands of a Brit desperate to do it.