BREXIT - Is This Really Still Rumbling On? 😴
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New labels, no? “NOT FOR EU” etcsurrey_commuter said:
could you clarify what this will do to the sale of cheesetailwindhome said:Windsor Framework comes into effect today.
Stormont still down (>600 days now)0 -
Easy for Cathedral City but is it worthwhile for smaller producers/suppliersrick_chasey said:
New labels, no? “NOT FOR EU” etcsurrey_commuter said:
could you clarify what this will do to the sale of cheesetailwindhome said:Windsor Framework comes into effect today.
Stormont still down (>600 days now)0 -
So we get more cheese?rick_chasey said:
New labels, no? “NOT FOR EU” etcsurrey_commuter said:
could you clarify what this will do to the sale of cheesetailwindhome said:Windsor Framework comes into effect today.
Stormont still down (>600 days now)
BREXIT BONUS!
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your use of the word "we" is hitting the nail on the head as NI is no longer part of the UK customs unionmonkimark said:
So we get more cheese?rick_chasey said:
New labels, no? “NOT FOR EU” etcsurrey_commuter said:
could you clarify what this will do to the sale of cheesetailwindhome said:Windsor Framework comes into effect today.
Stormont still down (>600 days now)
BREXIT BONUS!0 -
It removes the restrictions based on the labelling Rick mentions and if the GB supplier decides its worth the hassle of the reduced procedures.rick_chasey said:
New labels, no? “NOT FOR EU” etcsurrey_commuter said:
could you clarify what this will do to the sale of cheesetailwindhome said:Windsor Framework comes into effect today.
Stormont still down (>600 days now)
So Tesco will be grand. Your local deli ordering small quantities from GB supplier will have less choice and higher costs.
“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
I think this misinterpretation of the 'not for EU' labelling isn't just going to stay within cranks on Twitter and represents a real unintended consequence for food retailers
“New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason!0 -
It seems that Wrecker Frost is just now learning the sort of things involved in free trade agreements. He's almost there.
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One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
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Predicting civil unrest with food shortages - has he not seen the history of UK rationing?briantrumpet said:One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
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I predict civil unrest from that graphic.rick_chasey said:
Predicting civil unrest with food shortages - has he not seen the history of UK rationing?briantrumpet said:One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
Is it really saying that a financial crisis will lead to insufficient food and civil unrest?0 -
In other news, the Microsoft Activision Blizzard deal, having been restructured, has been approved by the CMA.0
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All roads lead to civil unrest.surrey_commuter said:
I predict civil unrest from that graphic.rick_chasey said:
Predicting civil unrest with food shortages - has he not seen the history of UK rationing?briantrumpet said:One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
Is it really saying that a financial crisis will lead to insufficient food and civil unrest?- Genesis Croix de Fer
- Dolan Tuono0 -
It make you wonder if the author is hoping for a financial crisis to prove his theory or dreading one as it might prove him wrong.pangolin said:
All roads lead to civil unrest.surrey_commuter said:
I predict civil unrest from that graphic.rick_chasey said:
Predicting civil unrest with food shortages - has he not seen the history of UK rationing?briantrumpet said:One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
Is it really saying that a financial crisis will lead to insufficient food and civil unrest?
I won't sleep tonight fretting about the civil unrest that might follow a nuclear war0 -
Incomplete hypothesising. No mention there of Millwall FC supporters or, in current meejah terminology, ultras.surrey_commuter said:
I predict civil unrest from that graphic.rick_chasey said:
Predicting civil unrest with food shortages - has he not seen the history of UK rationing?briantrumpet said:One for those who think that having a resilient UK food production (aka 'farming') sector isn't important:
Is it really saying that a financial crisis will lead to insufficient food and civil unrest?0 -
🎼I predict a riot...🎼The above may be fact, or fiction, I may be serious, I may be jesting.
I am not sure. You have no chance.Veronese68 wrote:PB is the most sensible person on here.0 -
White Riot is my preference
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvG3is7Bm1w1 -
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Maybe they'll catch up with the public soon.
Well, maybe the Brexit benefit we've all been waiting for is lancing the pestulent boil that is Brexit... I'm sure there's some Greek myth ...
Haha, turns out there is, and it's not entirely inappropriate.
https://www.morebeyond.co.za/a-monster-that-devours-itself-a-capitalists-parable/Erisychton (Er-is-ya-thon), according to Ovid's tales from Greek mythology was a wealthy timber merchant and Thessalian King. He was a greedy man who thought only about profit. To him, nothing was sacred. The goddess Demeter had a sacred grove with a special tree beloved by the gods. Prayers of the faithful were tied to the tree branches and holy spirits would dance round its magnificent trunk. This meant nothing to Erisychton, all he cared about when he saw a tree was the volume of timber it would produce. Against all protests, he takes an ax to the sacred grove and he chops until the trees fell and the divine life that inhabited the grove had fled. So Demeter put a curse on Erisychton for his greed, from that day forward he would be consumed by an insatiable hunger. He began to eat all his stores; when that was finished he turned his wealth into food and consumed that as well. Driven by his insatiable hunger he ends up consuming his wife and children, and in the end, with nothing else left he consumes his own flesh.0 -
$68.7 billion for virtual reality, blimey.TheBigBean said:In other news, the Microsoft Activision Blizzard deal, having been restructured, has been approved by the CMA.
It's virtual insanity I tell thee.0 -
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It's for computer games.focuszing723 said:
$68.7 billion for virtual reality, blimey.TheBigBean said:In other news, the Microsoft Activision Blizzard deal, having been restructured, has been approved by the CMA.
It's virtual insanity I tell thee.
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Yeah, virtual reality. At least the progression towards it.rick_chasey said:
It's for computer games.focuszing723 said:
$68.7 billion for virtual reality, blimey.TheBigBean said:In other news, the Microsoft Activision Blizzard deal, having been restructured, has been approved by the CMA.
It's virtual insanity I tell thee.0 -
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I used to play computer games when I was younger, but don't touch them now. They just seem such a waste of time. I don't know how Musk manages it with how many plates he has spinning.0 -
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Hang on...0
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You should write your own dictionary0
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It could well have been me for various mistakes. CoD, call of duty? Not that I play it.0