BREXIT - Is This Really Still Rumbling On? 😴
Comments
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Stevo 666 wrote:darkhairedlord wrote:PBlakeney wrote:rjsterry wrote:Given Rick's post on German preparations for a no deal exit, I think it's more likely that the EU have given us up as a lost cause.
The troubled relative who keeps threatening to self-harm if he doesn't get what he wants.
We are increasingly becoming the guest who is overstaying their welcome.
You are the accountant, you should be able to fix something.0 -
Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Robert88 wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:darkhairedlord wrote:PBlakeney wrote:rjsterry wrote:Given Rick's post on German preparations for a no deal exit, I think it's more likely that the EU have given us up as a lost cause.
The troubled relative who keeps threatening to self-harm if he doesn't get what he wants.
We are increasingly becoming the guest who is overstaying their welcome.
You are the accountant, you should be able to fix something."I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop
I believe Germany is a member of the EU.“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
TailWindHome wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop
I believe Germany is a member of the EU."I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:I thought it was the EU that was meant to to be negotiating with us?
now that we've replaced these with extremist divisive fanatic lying incompetents, i'd assume the eu negotiators have noted this and made the rational decision that there's no point talking to proven liars, may as well sit back and watch the fun
there's upside for them, as the gbp crumbles, there'll be uk assets worth snapping up for eu/other buyersmy bike - faster than god's and twice as shiny0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop
I believe Germany is a member of the EU.
Write to the Telegraph and complain about their sloppy journalism0 -
Apparently Johnson is off to Berlin and Paris to try to make some sort of breakthrough. Maybe he's read the Telegraph.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Surrey Commuter wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop
I believe Germany is a member of the EU.
Write to the Telegraph and complain about their sloppy journalism"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
sungod wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:I thought it was the EU that was meant to to be negotiating with us?
now that we've replaced these with extremist divisive fanatic lying incompetents, i'd assume the eu negotiators have noted this and made the rational decision that there's no point talking to proven liars, may as well sit back and watch the fun
there's upside for them, as the gbp crumbles, there'll be uk assets worth snapping up for eu/other buyers
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:Surrey Commuter wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Telegraph Politics
@TelePolitics
· 4h
The leaked paper is the first evidence that Germany may be preparing to let Britain walk away with No Deal rather than back down to Boris Johnson’s demand to drop the Irish backstop
I believe Germany is a member of the EU.
Write to the Telegraph and complain about their sloppy journalism
I can confirm that I do not work for the Telegraph.“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
Corbyn claiming that when a Govt collapses we turn to the leader of the opposition.
Is this true?
Has the leader of the opposition ever become PM without winning a GE first (and therefore no longer being leader of the opposition)?“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
TailWindHome wrote:Corbyn claiming that when a Govt collapses we turn to the leader of the opposition.
Is this true?
Has the leader of the opposition ever become PM without winning a GE first (and therefore no longer being leader of the opposition)?
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/16/sadiq-khan-lib-dems-jo-swinson-corbyn-only-viable-pm-stop-no-deal-brexit"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:TailWindHome wrote:Corbyn claiming that when a Govt collapses we turn to the leader of the opposition.
Is this true?
Has the leader of the opposition ever become PM without winning a GE first (and therefore no longer being leader of the opposition)?
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/16/sadiq-khan-lib-dems-jo-swinson-corbyn-only-viable-pm-stop-no-deal-brexit
A cynic might suggest that Corbyn knows the other parties will not support him as caretaker PM, is in reality quite happy to let Johnson hang himself on his promises one way or the other, and just wants to score some points against a party that is likely to take seats off him at the next GE.1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
What we need is a new
Apparently this went viral in 1968 when the UK was in deep sh1t. The poet laureate even wrote a poem ending:
To work then, islanders, as men and women
Members one of another, looking beyond
Mean rules and rivalries towards the dream you could
Make real, of glory, common wealth, and home.
Inspiring, no? A year later we joined the EU.0 -
Robert88 wrote:Inspiring, no? A year later we joined the EU."I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0
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Stevo 666 wrote:Robert88 wrote:Inspiring, no? A year later we joined the EU.
Yes strictly speaking but it was like pushing on a closed door. We started our attempt to join much earlier and it was in 1969 that the bloc decided to allow our application and it was made. Of course it was a bad decision (by the other countries) because frankly the UK was not ready to be part of Europe and only applied out of desperation. Our export markets were either shrinking or turning their backs on us and it seemed wise to seek to trade with the rest of the continent.
For quite a while the UK was able to live on borrowed time while denying its former greatness had turned into something over which its government had no control; the 'empire' had become capital instead of territory. Now capital has taken the process a step further by 'winning' the vote to remove any influence from Brussels. It now has to fight the battle to subjugate Brussels or lose the market it had before. In that battle it may have the support of the USA although that in itself is a very mixed blessing. Before we joined the EU (or whatever) the USA was already taking over British companies in a way that at its worst was simple asset-stripping. In a sense we have put ourselves between a rock and a hard place: do we court China or Washington as we aren't clever enough to play them off against each other as countries used to do with the USSR and the USA.0 -
Robert88 wrote:Before we joined the EU (or whatever) the USA was already taking over British companies in a way that at its worst was simple asset-stripping. In a sense we have put ourselves between a rock and a hard place: do we court China or Washington as we aren't clever enough to play them off against each other as countries used to do with the USSR and the USA.
Also, how did membership of the EU protect us from these US 'asset strippers'?"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Hey taxman, thought you were going on holiday?0
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Stevo 666 wrote:Thanks for your balanced assessment sg
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment
the demand for 'balance' was used to browbeat the bbc into giving disproportionate airtime to people who then used it to lie
i'm a product of the cold war era, in my world you don't give 'balance' to the bad guys, you eliminate themmy bike - faster than god's and twice as shiny0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:sungod wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:I thought it was the EU that was meant to to be negotiating with us?
now that we've replaced these with extremist divisive fanatic lying incompetents, i'd assume the eu negotiators have noted this and made the rational decision that there's no point talking to proven liars, may as well sit back and watch the fun
there's upside for them, as the gbp crumbles, there'll be uk assets worth snapping up for eu/other buyers
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment
Why would anyone want to currently invest in the UK? We are tearing up trade treaties with our largest trading partner.
We are moving to into a vacuum where we have no current processes, trade agreements or mechanisms to export.
This will hit UK companies turn over and profits and in turn dividends paid to shareholders.
So if you mean “investment” in terms of buying devalued shares then you’re right but as for GDP growth, CapEx or increased revenues for HMRC then I wouldn’t hold your breath.“Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and feed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to cycle and he will realize fishing is stupid and boring”
Desmond Tutu0 -
Slowmart wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:sungod wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:I thought it was the EU that was meant to to be negotiating with us?
now that we've replaced these with extremist divisive fanatic lying incompetents, i'd assume the eu negotiators have noted this and made the rational decision that there's no point talking to proven liars, may as well sit back and watch the fun
there's upside for them, as the gbp crumbles, there'll be uk assets worth snapping up for eu/other buyers
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment
Why would anyone want to currently invest in the UK? We are tearing up trade treaties with our largest trading partner.
We are moving to into a vacuum where we have no current processes, trade agreements or mechanisms to export.
This will hit UK companies turn over and profits and in turn dividends paid to shareholders.
So if you mean “investment” in terms of buying devalued shares then you’re right but as for GDP growth, CapEx or increased revenues for HMRC then I wouldn’t hold your breath.
As for the other stuff, ask SG - he said it"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
sungod wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:Thanks for your balanced assessment sg
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment
the demand for 'balance' was used to browbeat the bbc into giving disproportionate airtime to people who then used it to lie
i'm a product of the cold war era, in my world you don't give 'balance' to the bad guys, you eliminate them
As for being a product of the cold war, that's not a very liberal attitude. I suppose its the old liberal adage of diversity in everything, except for opinions"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:Slowmart wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:sungod wrote:Stevo 666 wrote:I thought it was the EU that was meant to to be negotiating with us?
now that we've replaced these with extremist divisive fanatic lying incompetents, i'd assume the eu negotiators have noted this and made the rational decision that there's no point talking to proven liars, may as well sit back and watch the fun
there's upside for them, as the gbp crumbles, there'll be uk assets worth snapping up for eu/other buyers
On the plus side you think it might improve inbound investment
Why would anyone want to currently invest in the UK? We are tearing up trade treaties with our largest trading partner.
We are moving to into a vacuum where we have no current processes, trade agreements or mechanisms to export.
This will hit UK companies turn over and profits and in turn dividends paid to shareholders.
So if you mean “investment” in terms of buying devalued shares then you’re right but as for GDP growth, CapEx or increased revenues for HMRC then I wouldn’t hold your breath.
As for the other stuff, ask SG - he said it
Are you Boris or Rees Mogg in disguise.
What trade agreements are in place for the transition of leaving the EU?
What mechanisms have been agreed between the EU & UK to ensure frictionless borders?
So let’s get specific on what fall pack positions are in place for leaving the EU and continuity of trade?
There’s not a single agreement that’s been agreed, hence a vacuum, at this point the positions will be created retrospectively, untried and untested. Unless we keep the existing mechanisms in which case I’d what’s the point of leaving?“Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and feed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to cycle and he will realize fishing is stupid and boring”
Desmond Tutu0 -
I explained this to you in the 'Boris as PM thread'. You didn't put any counter arguments forward at the time so I assume youve just forgotten what I told you? Here's a quick reminder:
"Slowmart wrote:
The mechanisms for exporting and importing goods just won’t be there
I replied:
That is simply not correct.
The mechanisms there - how do you think we import goods from and export goods to non-EU countries currently? There will likely be more paperwork/admin, and extra tariffs on certain classes of goods but to suggest that trade of goods will somehow just stop is wrong."
It is part of the Brexit plannig I am involved in for my Group. We expect some additional admin costs and possible moderate delays at the border in the early days, but nothing fundamental or existential."I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Taxman dunt do supply chain... #obvs0
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orraloon wrote:Taxman dunt do supply chain... #obvs
Out of interest, what else do you do apart from gardening?"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]0 -
Stevo 666 wrote:I explained this to you in the 'Boris as PM thread'. You didn't put any counter arguments forward at the time so I assume youve just forgotten what I told you? Here's a quick reminder:
"Slowmart wrote:
The mechanisms for exporting and importing goods just won’t be there
I replied:
That is simply not correct.
The mechanisms there - how do you think we import goods from and export goods to non-EU countries currently? There will likely be more paperwork/admin, and extra tariffs on certain classes of goods but to suggest that trade of goods will somehow just stop is wrong."
It is part of the Brexit plannig I am involved in for my Group. We expect some additional admin costs and possible moderate delays at the border in the early days, but nothing fundamental or existential.
Whilst existing mechanisms exists what makes you think they will be utilised with the EU in the event of no deal?
And let’s take each of your points one by one.
Some additional admin costs? Which will be passes onto and paid for by the consumer in higher prices
Moderate delays? What’s moderate and you need to qualify that timeframe, the class of goods and the impact on the economy and individuals., which no one can , so how can you state it’s not fundamental if you can’t assess or measure the impact?
Early days, mmmmmm do you know the average timeframe to negotiate a trade agreement? It won’t be days or months.
You’ve not mentioned tariffs or your planning in the event of no deal?
Add Boris and his dim witted Cabinet and you really think they can agree, build, execute and embed new trade agreements with the EU or any other sovereign state. And while negotiations drag on Boris will be desperate to bend over for anyone offering anything.“Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and feed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to cycle and he will realize fishing is stupid and boring”
Desmond Tutu0