26-07-2016, 19:53
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#1366
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Remoaner
Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 32,718
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by martyh
There where a lot of ignorant prats voting ,a few on here using the referendum as a protest vote to start with
It would be interesting to have an up to date poll to see how many would vote differently now things have settled down .Immediately after the vote the FTSE was nose diving and the media where predicting Armageddon ,now the public realise that nothing has actually changed and is not likely to for some time they might well poll differently to the one you link to .
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I think the reaction of the markets suggest they expect the Government to screw over the Leave voters. Either a Norway deal or some other fudge. The (sensible) decision not to invoke Article 50 creates an interest dilemma now of if we invoke it if the terms of any deal become clear.
Let's say no Norway option. It's 'hard Brexit'. Does May invoke Article 50?
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26-07-2016, 20:23
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#1367
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Inactive
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Right here!
Posts: 22,315
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stuart
Whether they travel east, west, north or south, we can't afford to lose them. As people keep saying, Europe isn't the only continent with countries in. Thanks to the worldwide comms networks, Banks don't necessarily need to have physical facilities where they trade, but they do need to have physical facilities in countries where they can get an adequate supply of capable staff. Remember, banks don't only need bankers.. They need staff from all different financial backgrounds. They also need top notch technical staff.
This is actually the problem a lot of tech startups are expecting. Britain is not producing enough people that are in the various computer fields. That problem is, IMO, mostly caused by a lack of adequate funding for university and college courses from the government.
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Correct and we won't be losing them to Paris or Frankfurt.
I'm more than aware that fat cats like Fred the Shred and high flying dealers aren't the bulk of the banking industry, they're just the easily lambasted tip of the iceberg. My late wife worked in the back office for a number of top City firms for a good many years and so did I in another incarnation.
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26-07-2016, 21:02
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#1368
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Join Date: Jun 2003
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Osem
Correct and we won't be losing them to Paris or Frankfurt.
I'm more than aware that fat cats like Fred the Shred and high flying dealers aren't the bulk of the banking industry, they're just the easily lambasted tip of the iceberg. My late wife worked in the back office for a number of top City firms for a good many years and so did I in another incarnation.
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I didn't mean to patronise. It's just that I think a lot of people think that banking is just multi millionaire bankers and counter staff. It's not. There are a lot of skilled people involved.
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26-07-2016, 21:03
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#1369
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Inactive
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Right here!
Posts: 22,315
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stuart
I didn't mean to patronise. It's just that I think a lot of people think that banking is just multi millionaire bankers and counter staff. It's not. There are a lot of skilled people involved.
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They do and there are.
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27-07-2016, 02:56
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#1370
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cf.mega pornstar
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 19,151
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by martyh
There where a lot of ignorant prats voting ,a few on here using the referendum as a protest vote to start with
It would be interesting to have an up to date poll to see how many would vote differently now things have settled down .Immediately after the vote the FTSE was nose diving and the media where predicting Armageddon ,now the public realise that nothing has actually changed and is not likely to for some time they might well poll differently to the one you link to .
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I think that's what has got my goat more than anything. I'm hardly a rabid remainer in fact my main reason for staying in was simply that it was to much effort and pain to leave, 10 years ago on the other hand and I was very much in leaves camp, then the damage hadn't all ready been done, anyway back to my goat having been got, I think this referendum campaign is possibly the worst display I've ever seen from our politicians, even worse than new labour new danger, it was the worse kind of lies, fear mongering and pure ignorance I've ever seen displayed. How anyone could be pleased or proud to have been part of either campaign is beyond me and sadly this could well be the politics of the future, I'd rather go back to punch and Judy.
You might be right about the poll, however if rbs follow through with their plans for charging negative interest on accounts it might even go up higher though especially if others follow suit
---------- Post added at 02:56 ---------- Previous post was at 02:53 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stuart
I didn't mean to patronise. It's just that I think a lot of people think that banking is just multi millionaire bankers and counter staff. It's not. There are a lot of skilled people involved.
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My other half for one worked for all the major city banks and institutions without making millions, sadly for me
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27-07-2016, 06:20
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#1371
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Guest
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
I fully agree with you The Daddy the entire campaign from both sides was absolutely pathetic threats on one side lies and misinformation on the other and both indulging in scare mongering giving those who were truly undecided very little to help them make an informed choice. I tried much as I could to avoid either campaign for the last two months of it and my belief from before any of it started determined my vote as I think it did for many. It was not a high point of our politics and if there is any plus to come out of it surely things can only improve because god help us all if they get worse.
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27-07-2016, 09:43
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#1372
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Deus Vult
Join Date: May 2010
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
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27-07-2016, 12:49
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#1373
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2016
Posts: 573
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ignitionnet
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couple of good points there. Not convinced with the Norwegian model though. They still have freedom of movement though they have the break and the whole point is to ditch FoM.
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27-07-2016, 19:19
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#1374
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Guest
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by techguyone
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All good news but the next 2 quarters will be the tell .Maybe May should build on that confidence and signal an end to austerity measures.
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27-07-2016, 20:44
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#1375
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The Dark Satanic Mills
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: floating in the ether
Posts: 12,980
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by martyh
All good news but the next 2 quarters will be the tell .Maybe May should build on that confidence and signal an end to austerity measures.
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I think you're right, maybe not as blunt as that, but she or Hammond should start drip feeding good news to keep things ticking.
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28-07-2016, 07:07
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#1376
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cf.mega pornstar
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 19,151
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pierre
I think you're right, maybe not as blunt as that, but she or Hammond should start drip feeding good news to keep things ticking.
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More good news...
https://www.theguardian.com/business...-growth-figure
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28-07-2016, 08:35
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#1377
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2016
Posts: 573
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by RizzyKing
We have a skilled manufacturing base and we can expand that but it will require the means in place to train the people to occupy the skills gaps where they appear and it shouldn't just be government funding it. There is plenty of life out there for us to establish and build trade with we have got used to being in the EU and in some ways over reliant on a market that hasn't always been in our best interests. More and more countries are approaching us for trade and that will continue.
That link to the independent means absolutely nothing hell on the day the result was announced the campaign against the vote started and despite all these claims of hordes of leave voters regretting their choice I haven't seen it the area around me or anywhere on the net. I'm not convinced plus while it's likely there are some leavers who would vote differently the same applies to some who voted remain so means nothing.
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I actually don't think we really need the single market. We can sell our services to other countries like Australia, New Zealand, Canada, India for example. Services are not the real problem nor is manufacturing, it's training our own to do same.
---------- Post added at 08:11 ---------- Previous post was at 08:09 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hugh
Oh, OK then...
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Other Countries like China make raw materials and it would probably work out cheaper in the long run to import from there than the EU as the materials would be cheaper anyway.
---------- Post added at 08:23 ---------- Previous post was at 08:11 ----------
TheDaddy said: You are funny, a million plus people regretting their vote means nothing and if you listened to the radio pre and post vote you'd know exactly how ignorant a lot of people were on the day, in your area or not.
These people expressing regret are nervous of what may or may not happen. I, for one, have no regrets of my vote to leave because myself and others saw what was coming in 1975 and voted out feel vindicated. We also knew a leave vote had it's potential problems because we have become far too dependent on the EU and were losing the ability to think for ourselves and make our own decisions. This is where the fear of a leave vote comes in. Can we survive untied from Mother EU's apron strings? Of course we can. Countries are queuing up to trade with the UK and any loses incurred by leaving the EU will easily be recouped by trading with these countries. We do NOT need the single market, we never needed it. We were doing well without it until the Unions tried to hold the country to ransom and we lost a lot of trade. Had that not happened, we would not have needed it.
I personally do not know anyone who regrets voting leave and they, like myself, say we should never have joined in the first place.
---------- Post added at 08:28 ---------- Previous post was at 08:23 ----------
So Lloyds are shedding another 3000 jobs and closing 200 branches and the nice thing about it is that it has nothing whatsoever to do with the vote to leave the EU. It leads me to believe that these Companies who threatened job losses should we vote to leave were going to shed jobs anyway and were looking for something to blame it on other than their own incompetence or the low, and possible lowering, of interest rates.
Why worry about our Services industry? Are the EU countries the only ones we can sell them to? I think not. I'm sure China and India for example would be only too happy to buy them.
---------- Post added at 08:31 ---------- Previous post was at 08:28 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by martyh
Calm down dear  ,i think this was posted a few pages back and it wasn't you that said there was no way back ,the EU said there was no way back once triggered ,you and everyone else was simply repeating what they said
---------- Post added at 16:27 ---------- Previous post was at 16:22 ----------
There where a lot of ignorant prats voting ,a few on here using the referendum as a protest vote to start with
It would be interesting to have an up to date poll to see how many would vote differently now things have settled down .Immediately after the vote the FTSE was nose diving and the media where predicting Armageddon ,now the public realise that nothing has actually changed and is not likely to for some time they might well poll differently to the one you link to .
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There is always a way back but it would be the biggest mistake we could ever make. We would have to accept the Euro, Schengen and full FoM to name but 3 things but there Is a way back.
---------- Post added at 08:35 ---------- Previous post was at 08:31 ----------
Originally Posted by martyh View Post
There where a lot of ignorant prats voting ,a few on here using the referendum as a protest vote to start with
It would be interesting to have an up to date poll to see how many would vote differently now things have settled down .Immediately after the vote the FTSE was nose diving and the media where predicting Armageddon ,now the public realise that nothing has actually changed and is not likely to for some time they might well poll differently to the one you link to .
A protest against what? Cameron? The Tory Government? You do that through the ballot box. I've never understood this statement of using the referendum as a protest vote. It's a hell of a risk to take especially if you believe we should remain in the EU, surely?
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28-07-2016, 09:24
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#1378
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Perfect Soldier
Join Date: Mar 2009
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Big Brian
It would be interesting to have an up to date poll to see how many would vote differently now things have settled down .Immediately after the vote the FTSE was nose diving and the media where predicting Armageddon ,now the public realise that nothing has actually changed and is not likely to for some time they might well poll differently.
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I think a lot more would vote leave. The ones who were cowed by project fear would realise that the nightmare scenario peddled by the remainers was mostly fiction and life would continue outside the rotting EU corpse.
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History is much like an endless waltz: The three beats of war, peace and revolution continue on forever.
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28-07-2016, 11:48
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#1379
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2016
Posts: 573
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by heero_yuy
I think a lot more would vote leave. The ones who were cowed by project fear would realise that the nightmare scenario peddled by the remainers was mostly fiction and life would continue outside the rotting EU corpse.
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Indeed. Experience has taught me we should never have been in but there you go, we were now we have to get ourselves out of the mess and we will.
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28-07-2016, 16:37
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#1380
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Guest
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by Big Brian
A protest against what? Cameron? The Tory Government? You do that through the ballot box. I've never understood this statement of using the referendum as a protest vote. It's a hell of a risk to take especially if you believe we should remain in the EU, surely?
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I know totally bizarre .There seems to be a general lack of understanding of how our election and voting system works which quite frankly is shameful
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