Brexit - whats the difference.....

Dude, you need to stop with the being vague. I can't work out your stance :p
I think my stance is....

I honestly think I need to resort to DELIBERATELY getting myself banned in order to enjoy a holiday from that nauseating prick.

Maybe Bryan will tell me to chill the fuck out and my cooler head will prevail.

Or he will give me the ban hammer and the "bye dickweed" treatment instead.

It's really frustrating when ONE forum member single-handedly spoils your forum experience.
 
I think my stance is....

I honestly think I need to resort to DELIBERATELY getting myself banned in order to enjoy a holiday from that nauseating prick.

Maybe Bryan will tell me to chill the fuck out and my cooler head will prevail.

Or he will give me the ban hammer and the "bye dickweed" treatment instead.

It's really frustrating when ONE forum member single-handedly spoils your forum experience.
I take it a move to the Isle of Moan isn't in your programme for 2023?
 
I think my stance is....

I honestly think I need to resort to DELIBERATELY getting myself banned in order to enjoy a holiday from that nauseating prick.

Maybe Bryan will tell me to chill the fuck out and my cooler head will prevail.

Or he will give me the ban hammer and the "bye dickweed" treatment instead.

It's really frustrating when ONE forum member single-handedly spoils your forum experience.
Spare a thought for me - had to do two Stop And Chats today. First one was at Tesco, where I went to purchase some pre-gym refreshments (crisps).....and where approaching the ONE counter that was serving and had Ms Chatty McChat forcing me into speaking with her, I think it was about Tesco Clubcards, and something about a message in a bottle 🤷‍♂️

Second forced Stop And Chat occurred at the gym........'s changing rooms. Walking in, I see one other fellow, stripped to the waist (awkward) and I try my utmost to give off "Don't speak to me" vibes. Then around 15 seconds later, he initiates a conversation, of sorts, involving his workout regimen and other uninteresting guff.

But what made it all the more surreal is that he looked like Toady from Neighbours, and as he was talking, all I could think of is the Neighbours theme tune.

But that's life for ya



1669298550412.png
 
I think my stance is....

I honestly think I need to resort to DELIBERATELY getting myself banned in order to enjoy a holiday from that nauseating prick.

Maybe Bryan will tell me to chill the fuck out and my cooler head will prevail.

Or he will give me the ban hammer and the "bye dickweed" treatment instead.

It's really frustrating when ONE forum member single-handedly spoils your forum experience.

Crikey and I thought us liberal lefties were supposed to be the snowflakes.

Anyway, pro tip, the forum has 'Ignore' functionality, perhaps you should consider using it before you get another fit of the vapours.

Here it is, I am using Mr Goaty purely for demonstration purposes, I would never ignore dear old goatwack.

1669300812239.png
 
I just wish this could be settled in an adult, civil way. Like say, with an arm-wrestle?

Or I hear all the rage is PPV boxing matches, like all the YouTubers out there. Stream it on CM, and all proceeds could go to the IMF 👌

Well why doesn't he just not read the thread, or use the Ignore button? It's not like I go trolling around the forums with this stuff, I keep the politics to the politics threads, but as someone who's been posting to this thread since Page 1, and with Brexit very much still not 'finished', what does he think I'll be posting about in here, the latest brand of shampoo I've been getting great results with? Or perhaps my Damascene conversion to the church of Leave and how on balance I've decided Brexit is a great idea after all?

And for the record, I'm not the one who just saw fit to call another CM member a 'fucking arsehole', an 'insufferable woketard' (although I might pinch that for my custom user title actually) and a 'nauseating prick'.

Take me and dunover, for example, whilst we clearly have very different political views and will express them robustly in the politics threads, elsewhere on the forums we're perfectly civil with each other and will happily chat about other things.
 
Well why doesn't he just not read the thread, or use the Ignore button? It's not like I go trolling around the forums with this stuff, I keep the politics to the politics threads, but as someone who's been posting to this thread since Page 1, and with Brexit very much still not 'finished', what does he think I'll be posting about in here, the latest brand of shampoo I've been getting great results with? Or perhaps my Damascene conversion to the church of Leave and how on balance I've decided Brexit is a great idea after all?

And for the record, I'm not the one who just saw fit to call another CM member a 'fucking arsehole', an 'insufferable woketard' (although I might pinch that for my custom user title actually) and a 'nauseating prick'.

Take me and dunover, for example, whilst we clearly have very different political views and will express them robustly in the politics threads, elsewhere on the forums we're perfectly civil with each other and will happily chat about other things.
Well, there's certainly no denying it was 'brusque', and it would be disingenuous for me to pretend it wasn't. I think by and large these discussions are handled as well as could be, but we've all lost our rag on occasion. God knows I wince at some of my 'Trump era' hot takes, and some of my 'choice' reactions to other posters. In fact, in some other threads too!

We're all 'in the moment', and with political threads we all get rubbed up wrong, especially in 'text-speak'. We think we know each other pretty well after all these years but ultimately haven't the first clue, and with differing temperaments afoot, personalities clash. I'd wager more people would put aside their differences if meeting over a pint, that is, if people bloody turned up for the Meistermeets!

By the same token, six years on, we're reminded in this ongoing Brexit bungle that everyone's to take a side, that there can be no neutrality or simply observing how things play out, and so it becomes an unwanted Remainer vs Brexiteer unwitting stand-off. Fact is, six years is a long time in politics, I believe my partner voted to Leave based on half-truths and the pledges (I think I couldn't vote, but the sentiment was there) and can now see that the chancers of that time couldn't see past their noses, never mind a decade into the future.

And as for unfettered immigration, that's highlighted just how far the UK's taken back control of its borders, as I'm sure anyone with half a brain would like help those in need, but not before knowing if their asylum is genuine. Yet as today's figures have proven, it's all a sham, as half a million have entered illegally in a year!

I don't make any bones about believing the politicians 'of the day' were ever truly in favour of enacting Brexit, and as we'll see soon enough, Sunak's already paving the way for re-entry. Perhaps the right choice? Who knows, but I'm not going to kid myself that the Mini sold to me is a Lamborghini, and Brexit, in its current guise, is looking rather like a dud :cool:
 
Well, there's certainly no denying it was 'brusque', and it would be disingenuous for me to pretend it wasn't. I think by and large these discussions are handled as well as could be, but we've all lost our rag on occasion. God knows I wince at some of my 'Trump era' hot takes, and some of my 'choice' reactions to other posters. In fact, in some other threads too!

We're all 'in the moment', and with political threads we all get rubbed up wrong, especially in 'text-speak'. We think we know each other pretty well after all these years but ultimately haven't the first clue, and with differing temperaments afoot, personalities clash. I'd wager more people would put aside their differences if meeting over a pint, that is, if people bloody turned up for the Meistermeets!

By the same token, six years on, we're reminded in this ongoing Brexit bungle that everyone's to take a side, that there can be no neutrality or simply observing how things play out, and so it becomes an unwanted Remainer vs Brexiteer unwitting stand-off. Fact is, six years is a long time in politics, I believe my partner voted to Leave based on half-truths and the pledges (I think I couldn't vote, but the sentiment was there) and can now see that the chancers of that time couldn't see past their noses, never mind a decade into the future.

And as for unfettered immigration, that's highlighted just how far the UK's taken back control of its borders, as I'm sure anyone with half a brain would like help those in need, but not before knowing if their asylum is genuine. Yet as today's figures have proven, it's all a sham, as half a million have entered illegally in a year!

I don't make any bones about believing the politicians 'of the day' were ever truly in favour of enacting Brexit, and as we'll see soon enough, Sunak's already paving the way for re-entry. Perhaps the right choice? Who knows, but I'm not going to kid myself that the Mini sold to me is a Lamborghini, and Brexit, in its current guise, is looking rather like a dud :cool:

Well this is the thing goaty, none of this stuff is personal for me, it's why I never do personal insults or abuse, I have no idea what people have going on in their lives and I don't want to add anything negative into the mix in that regard. Maybe my approach is somewhat 'bashing over the head' but I think that's what Brexit needs, it was sold as a fantasy and it's crashed and burned on contact with reality, and that reality has to be addressed.

It's also how I have to deal with things in my job, I work in IT and we deal entirely with facts and figures, provable outcomes, evidenced analyses and so on, if something fucks up and doesn't work properly, we have to be honest about why, and that includes being honest with ourselves and accepting if and when we've screwed something up and made a bad call - which absolutely happens sometimes.

I have nothing personal against mcgameboy, it certainly wasn't my intention to cause the apparent upset/anger it did for him with what I posted. The way I see Brexit being fixed is people telling their politicians that they want it to be fixed, because it doesn't look like our politicians are going to get there by themselves. The cowardice from both the Tories and Labour on this is shameful, and I am increasingly unimpressed with Starmer who should have the courage to tell the truth, rather than hiding behind his 'make Brexit work' nonsense.

Brexit makes me angry, and just once more for the record, I don't blame anyone who voted for it, I blame the liars, chancers and incompetents who pitched it and sold it off the back of a load of falsehoods, lies and incompetence. This thread has been running for three and a half years now, it's actually a pretty good chronicle of how Brexit has crumbled to dust, our focus now should be how we fix it going forward, and start to repair the damage it has done to the UK.

I stopped asking for anyone to name me a Brexit benefit they could point to quite some time ago, because we all know by now that there aren't any. Brexit is a busted flush, and it's time to stop pretending it still has any more cards up its sleeve left to play.
 
Apparently Starmer has told the CBI/business community that they need to wean themselves off cheap imported labour, rejoining the EU would cause an immediate reversal of this idea. So on that basis I can't see any concerted labour party move to get us 'back in' before 2030.

By then we will definitely have lots of proven real world data to assess the country's economic performance outside the EU club, rather than the premature efforts now to decide it.
 
Apparently Starmer has told the CBI/business community that they need to wean themselves off cheap imported labour, rejoining the EU would cause an immediate reversal of this idea. So on that basis I can't see any concerted labour party move to get us 'back in' before 2030.

By then we will definitely have lots of proven real world data to assess the country's economic performance outside the EU club, rather than the premature efforts now to decide it.

If you don't think the data is there already mack, I don't know what to tell you really, because the IMF, the OECD, the OBR, endless lists of British businesses and the entire British fishing industry are pretty sure about it already.

What do you think is going to change to make the situation any better? The big Brexit hope was a massive trade deal with the USA, but that's gone absolutely nowhere and the Yanks have made it 100% clear that they're not going to do a damn thing whilst the Northern Ireland Protocol is imperilled. And as for the trade deal with Australia/NZ, the Tories are desperately trying to distance themselves from that and blame it all on Truss (as she was foreign sec at the time) because it's such a terrible deal that actively hurts UK interests.

I literally have no idea what you're expecting to happen that can start to turn this ship around whilst the UK remains outside the Single Market and Customs Union, and quite frankly, neither do the Brexiteers as they form endless circular firing squads to blame anything and everything, and everyone (except themselves, of course), for why it's all gone so badly wrong.

I do agree with you on the Starmer/Labour issue. A year ago I could understand their position a little more, but as the wheels increasingly fall off the Brexit wagon, I'm sure a politician with some conviction, passion and charisma (three qualities that Starmer notably lacks), could start to make a convincing case for rolling back the Brexit calamity, but instead we get this awful 'Tory-lite' rhetoric and cowardly insistence that Labour will 'make Brexit work'.
 
If you don't think the data is there already mack, I don't know what to tell you really, because the IMF, the OECD, the OBR, endless lists of British businesses and the entire British fishing industry are pretty sure about it already.

What do you think is going to change to make the situation any better? The big Brexit hope was a massive trade deal with the USA, but that's gone absolutely nowhere and the Yanks have made it 100% clear that they're not going to do a damn thing whilst the Northern Ireland Protocol is imperilled. And as for the trade deal with Australia/NZ, the Tories are desperately trying to distance themselves from that and blame it all on Truss (as she was foreign sec at the time) because it's such a terrible deal that actively hurts UK interests.

I literally have no idea what you're expecting to happen that can start to turn this ship around whilst the UK remains outside the Single Market and Customs Union, and quite frankly, neither do the Brexiteers as they form endless circular firing squads to blame anything and everything, and everyone (except themselves, of course), for why it's all gone so badly wrong.

I do agree with you on the Starmer/Labour issue. A year ago I could understand their position a little more, but as the wheels increasingly fall off the Brexit wagon, I'm sure a politician with some conviction, passion and charisma (three qualities that Starmer notably lacks), could start to make a convincing case for rolling back the Brexit calamity, but instead we get this awful 'Tory-lite' rhetoric and cowardly insistence that Labour will 'make Brexit work'.

Well if exports of products and services are being impacted by new paperwork requirements/friction, in time these things can be improved and adjusted.

All these bodies you quote, OBR etc..never provide any case studies, so you'd look at one sector that was underperforming compared to previous levels of trade with the EU, and then examine the exact issues they face, not guessed conclusions. The whole of Europe is in a recession, so for that reason alone you have to unpick cause and effect.

Especially giving away sovereignty, you have to be absolutely sure there are no other solutions/causes, generalised conclusions which lack any explanatory detail are all you are seeing in these torygraph articles etc...

Edit: I haven't heard of any of the japanese car makers in the NE, for example, complain that the new arrangements are impacting their sales, it seems to be more the cottage industry/small firms that are given as examples. Could be a good idea, if they're not doing it already, for the govt to have a dept that provides assistance and help, which will also act as a feedback loop for the govt.
 
Last edited:
ANOTHER QUICK QUIZ - Who is the most patronising, condescending WANKER on this entire forum, due to the fact that he literally gets his rocks off
while "addressing" his fellow CM members like they are ALL still in fucking nursery school?

I'll give you a clue. It starts with Chopley and ends with IOM.

Fucking arsehole. Go kneel at the feet of a woman with a penis and pledge everlasting allegiance to it, you insufferable woketard.

Do you EVER look in the mirror and tell yourself "I'm really going to try hard NOT to be a total fucking bellend on the CM forum today?"

Because if you do, you fail. EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
This has to be post of the year 😂😂😂😂😂😂
 
No, it's not really that unrelated. Sturgeon clings on to some forlorn hope of reversing a generational vote by shoehorning the topic in at every opportunity......as do Remainers with Brexit. Except that Sturgeon's more realistic with her expectations 🤷‍♂️
Not now she isn't - she is a busted flush as are her supporters. The SNP are a one trick pony, wasting tax payer funds going to the Supreme Court, knowing full well the decision would not go their way. Now they are being denied democracy!

Do not make me laugh! They had a democratic vote only 8 years ago. Compare that to the EU referendums in the UK. Prior to 2016, the last one was in 1974 just before I was born. Slightly longer than 8 years!

The SNP are toast, as their trump card and ace up their sleeve being the Tory government will be out of power in two years time. If current polls are to be believed, Labour are heading for a landslide of Tony Blair epic proportions.

The SNP cannot even handle the powers devolved to the Scottish Govt, but continue to garner support because the Tory government is pretty much universally despised North of the Border. They are able to get away with their many failings by blaming the tories, whilst beating the well worn drum for independence.

All they do is mismanage Scotland - Ferries. NHS, Education, drug problem....... As they have only one goal and one goal only.
 
This has to be post of the year 😂😂😂😂😂😂

Yeah but I'm still right. You can shout at the clouds as much as you want to, it won't stop Brexit being a big fat pile of distended monkey bollocks.

Actually, I take that back, it's unfair on big fat piles of distended monkey bollocks.
 
Well if exports of products and services are being impacted by new paperwork requirements/friction, in time these things can be improved and adjusted.

All these bodies you quote, OBR etc..never provide any case studies, so you'd look at one sector that was underperforming compared to previous levels of trade with the EU, and then examine the exact issues they face, not guessed conclusions. The whole of Europe is in a recession, so for that reason alone you have to unpick cause and effect.

Especially giving away sovereignty, you have to be absolutely sure there are no other solutions/causes, generalised conclusions which lack any explanatory detail are all you are seeing in these torygraph articles etc...

Edit: I haven't heard of any of the japanese car makers in the NE, for example, complain that the new arrangements are impacting their sales, it seems to be more the cottage industry/small firms that are given as examples. Could be a good idea, if they're not doing it already, for the govt to have a dept that provides assistance and help, which will also act as a feedback loop for the govt.

For me though mack, these are just the same bland platitudes we're hearing from politicians now when it comes to Brexit (and yes, I absolutely include the shameful cowardice of Labour when it comes to this), vague waves in the direction of 'well this could happen and we can do more of this and that thing over there is still alright', it's meaningless, it doesn't address a single aspect of the ongoing damage that Brexit is causing in any material fashion.

Here's six minutes of an interview Jeremy Hunt had with Beth Rigby the other day, you can see how much he really doesn't want to talk about Brexit when it comes to the economy, but when he has to, he's got nothing, because there is nothing, until he finally says he won't answer any more questions about Brexit and its economic impact.

There is an elephant in the room when it comes to the economy, pretending that the elephant isn't there won't make it stop existing.

 
For me though mack, these are just the same bland platitudes we're hearing from politicians now when it comes to Brexit (and yes, I absolutely include the shameful cowardice of Labour when it comes to this), vague waves in the direction of 'well this could happen and we can do more of this and that thing over there is still alright', it's meaningless, it doesn't address a single aspect of the ongoing damage that Brexit is causing in any material fashion.

Here's six minutes of an interview Jeremy Hunt had with Beth Rigby the other day, you can see how much he really doesn't want to talk about Brexit when it comes to the economy, but when he has to, he's got nothing, because there is nothing, until he finally says he won't answer any more questions about Brexit and its economic impact.

There is an elephant in the room when it comes to the economy, pretending that the elephant isn't there won't make it stop existing.



It would be idiotic to say something is failing but then not go into any detail, and just say it's brexit. Give me some examples of large firms that normally export to europe [eu] that now face new material obstacles, and their business is being impeded. Surely if leaving the EU is so devastating to GDP and the economy, then many examples shouldn't be hard to find?

That's the obvious thing lacking from these newspaper opinion pieces, no actual meat and bones. Because if there were there would be the possibility of adjustment and remedy, but that would be too complex, so just say it's brexit and after 2 years, where lots of other major events were/are happening, don't bother with any details just get back in asap.
 
It would be idiotic to say something is failing but then not go into any detail, and just say it's brexit. Give me some examples of large firms that normally export to europe [eu] that now face new material obstacles, and their business is being impeded. Surely if leaving the EU is so devastating to GDP and the economy, then many examples shouldn't be hard to find?

That's the obvious thing lacking from these newspaper opinion pieces, no actual meat and bones. Because if there were there would be the possibility of adjustment and remedy, but that would be too complex, so just say it's brexit and after 2 years, where lots of other major events were/are happening, don't bother with any details just get back in asap.

I've linked this list before mack, so here it is again, currently it has 839 Brexit downsides and 23 upsides. Every single one has citations to the evidence.

You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.
 
For me though mack, these are just the same bland platitudes we're hearing from politicians now when it comes to Brexit (and yes, I absolutely include the shameful cowardice of Labour when it comes to this), vague waves in the direction of 'well this could happen and we can do more of this and that thing over there is still alright', it's meaningless, it doesn't address a single aspect of the ongoing damage that Brexit is causing in any material fashion.

Here's six minutes of an interview Jeremy Hunt had with Beth Rigby the other day, you can see how much he really doesn't want to talk about Brexit when it comes to the economy, but when he has to, he's got nothing, because there is nothing, until he finally says he won't answer any more questions about Brexit and its economic impact.

There is an elephant in the room when it comes to the economy, pretending that the elephant isn't there won't make it stop existing.



I'm aware this video is edited down to just show the Brexit stuff, so here's the full interview, which I've just watched.

The full interview is even more illuminating, because you get a proper feel for how much Hunt just doesn't want to talk about Brexit and its economic impact, eventually having a bit of a strop because he doesn't like having to try and keep avoiding the questions.

On a wider note, when he's describing all the things that are crap and need fixing, and as Beth Rigby points out, they've been in charge for twelve years now, so he's literally just explaining all the ways in which the Tories have failed the UK.

 
I've linked this list before mack, so here it is again, currently it has 839 Brexit downsides and 23 upsides. Every single one has citations to the evidence.

You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.

They're not exactly detailed examples, also lots of 'mays' and 'mights'.

It will require MPs to look at these paperwork requirements, to see if they're unreasonable and badly set out, confusing etc...if they were exporting elsewhere outside of the EU they'd also have to complete paperwork, but that is never cited as an obtacle to world wide trade is it?

Delicatessens: A Greek deli, The Isle of Olive in Hackney, said to be the best in London, is to close after 11 years. The owners blame a multitude of reasons but say “certainly Brexit is sitting right there at the top“. With reams of paperwork and with many small artisan producers across Greece refusing to export to the UK, it became difficult to source unique products and sell at reasonable prices.
 
It would be idiotic to say something is failing but then not go into any detail, and just say it's brexit. Give me some examples of large firms that normally export to europe [eu] that now face new material obstacles, and their business is being impeded. Surely if leaving the EU is so devastating to GDP and the economy, then many examples shouldn't be hard to find?

That's the obvious thing lacking from these newspaper opinion pieces, no actual meat and bones. Because if there were there would be the possibility of adjustment and remedy, but that would be too complex, so just say it's brexit and after 2 years, where lots of other major events were/are happening, don't bother with any details just get back in asap.

Also mack, why are you only after examples of 'large firms'? The SME sector in the UK is huge, generating vast amounts of economic activity, employing massive numbers of people and contributing piles of cash in taxes to the UK Treasury.

You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.


It's well known that many larger companies have to an extent managed to 'brute force' Brexit, simply taking on the extra costs and bureaucracy, passing them onto consumers, and maintaining a front of things largely being the same as before, witness dunover and his ecstasy at putting one over on Remainers by being able to..... do his Christmas shopping last year. (I swear I'm not even making that up.)

You're literally framing your question as, 'Prove to me that Brexit has started any fires, but explicitly ignore that fire it started over there'.
1669463477318.png
 
Also mack, why are you only after examples of 'large firms'? The SME sector in the UK is huge, generating vast amounts of economic activity, employing massive numbers of people and contributing piles of cash in taxes to the UK Treasury.

You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.


It's well known that many larger companies have to an extent managed to 'brute force' Brexit, simply taking on the extra costs and bureaucracy, passing them onto consumers, and maintaining a front of things largely being the same as before, witness dunover and his ecstasy at putting one over on Remainers by being able to..... do his Christmas shopping last year. (I swear I'm not even making that up.)

You're literally framing your question as, 'Prove to me that Brexit has started any fires, but explicitly ignore that fire it started over there'.
View attachment 176349

Well because you can then isolate the issues and concentrate the help where it is needed, rather than give the impression to bert and sue, watching the news or reading the paper, that it's all doom and gloom top to bottom because of brexit.

We can make things better, the paperwork and procedures may need altering for SMEs, if you do all that and there are still insurmountable problems, then you can show the public and have that conversation [rejoin the EU] discussing the benefits and drawbacks.

Many remainers won't admit any drawbacks or negative effects [a bit like sturgeon and her independence obsession].

I do think the EU form/model and the way they carry on is doomed to be unpopular, and it's whether the public can be frightened enough into believing there is no other option, we must get back in. If you had a different setup and some flexibility/common sense regarding labour movement, then it could be a lot more popular.

Then again if the president of the EU was to be publicly voted in, they'd wield a lot more power and have authority vested in them to do so, national parliaments and leaders would be reticent to go that way, having a democratically elected president in brussels with hundreds of millions of votes behind them.
 
More excellent analysis from Chris Grey, and he's right as well, Brexit is ceasing to be a taboo subject.

You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.


A few excerpts, but the whole article is well worth reading.

1669475040528.png

-----------------------------------------------

1669475123051.png

-----------------------------------------------


1669475374447.png

-----------------------------------------------


1669475505629.png
 
Well because you can then isolate the issues and concentrate the help where it is needed, rather than give the impression to bert and sue, watching the news or reading the paper, that it's all doom and gloom top to bottom because of brexit.

We can make things better, the paperwork and procedures may need altering for SMEs, if you do all that and there are still insurmountable problems, then you can show the public and have that conversation [rejoin the EU] discussing the benefits and drawbacks.

Many remainers won't admit any drawbacks or negative effects [a bit like sturgeon and her independence obsession].

I do think the EU form/model and the way they carry on is doomed to be unpopular, and it's whether the public can be frightened enough into believing there is no other option, we must get back in. If you had a different setup and some flexibility/common sense regarding labour movement, then it could be a lot more popular.

Then again if the president of the EU was to be publicly voted in, they'd wield a lot more power and have authority vested in them to do so, national parliaments and leaders would be reticent to go that way, having a democratically elected president in brussels with hundreds of millions of votes behind them.

The thing that strikes me about your post mack, is that you're talking entirely about fixing problems that Brexit has created. As per the article from Chris Grey I linked above, who has been producing superb Brexit commentary for years now, all that's left now is to deny that Brexit has created problems, or say that the problems it's created can be fixed. There is no pretence it's made anything better, or that it will make anything better, ever.

I don't know if you watched Beth Rigby's interview with Jeremy Hunt, but holy shit that guy didn't want to talk about the economic impact of Brexit. Hunt does at least seem to be a functional human being (which is more than could be said for some of Johnson's front bench, or indeed Johnson himself), and you can see how much he wants to get away from the subject, because he knows he's talking utter horseshit when he insists that there are indeed (completely unspecified!) 'Brexit Opportunities' and that we'll be the next Silicon Valley. We can't even stop our own food rotting in the fields, where are we going to get the people from to do that?

So for example, when you talk about altering the paperwork for UK SMEs to make things better in the post-Brexit landscape, this is paperwork that literally didn't exist until Brexit conjured it into existence!

There's no need to 'frighten' the population of the UK into deciding that Brexit was a mistake and we'd be better off back in the EU, they're reaching that conclusion themselves, in increasing numbers, every single day, and in a majority that isn't going to disappear.
 
The thing that strikes me about your post mack, is that you're talking entirely about fixing problems that Brexit has created. As per the article from Chris Grey I linked above, who has been producing superb Brexit commentary for years now, all that's left now is to deny that Brexit has created problems, or say that the problems it's created can be fixed. There is no pretence it's made anything better, or that it will make anything better, ever.

I don't know if you watched Beth Rigby's interview with Jeremy Hunt, but holy shit that guy didn't want to talk about the economic impact of Brexit. Hunt does at least seem to be a functional human being (which is more than could be said for some of Johnson's front bench, or indeed Johnson himself), and you can see how much he wants to get away from the subject, because he knows he's talking utter horseshit when he insists that there are indeed (completely unspecified!) 'Brexit Opportunities' and that we'll be the next Silicon Valley. We can't even stop our own food rotting in the fields, where are we going to get the people from to do that?

So for example, when you talk about altering the paperwork for UK SMEs to make things better in the post-Brexit landscape, this is paperwork that literally didn't exist until Brexit conjured it into existence!

There's no need to 'frighten' the population of the UK into deciding that Brexit was a mistake and we'd be better off back in the EU, they're reaching that conclusion themselves, in increasing numbers, every single day, and in a majority that isn't going to disappear.

I'm sure there was paperwork required previously with EU trade, and computers have changed things so an SME is still in a much better position now than they would be in the 80/90s pre internet, relying on faxes etc...

We were in the EU system for nearly 40 years, one that changed and evolved during that time as well, and the costs of those changes at times passed onto customers.
 
You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.


Oh dear what a non surprise. The neoliberal people in thrall to corporations and WEF all see eye to eye.


One Whitehall source said: ‘Jeremy has long been a huge admirer of Tony Blair. You could see it in the Chatham House conversation. It was a real love-in.

‘When Blair was critical of Brexit, there was no push back from Jeremy.’ (Hunt is a Remainer.)

1669499163721.png
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Meister Ratings

Back
Top