spongebob59
Journeyman Pro
See post # 10695 for undemocratic.
The government is of course doing the right thing in trying to prepare the UK for No Deal, but leaving with No Deal is surely NOT the governments #1 priority - as was stated by Raab today. Negotiating a new deal should be.
It is not for me to extol the virtues and benefits of leaving
I'm very surprised that you actually realise that there are some virtues and benefits then ........
Actually, you are very much like my wife. She also only sees the negative in everything that doesn't agree with her views. Many thousands of posts ago I asked and repeatedly asked if you or anyone else could provide actual evidence of what the long term benefits to the UK staying in the EU were. Not one single reply to my question from "remainers" in several thousand posts. Says it all really. Just a lot of hot air and keyboard warriors who have nothing more constructive to do with their time.
I'd also like to know how the individual EU countries plan to cope without our money and our inability to afford their goods
I'd also like to know how the individual EU countries plan to cope without our money and our inability to afford their goods
I'm very surprised that you actually realise that there are some virtues and benefits then ........
Actually, you are very much like my wife. She also only sees the negative in everything that doesn't agree with her views. Many thousands of posts ago I asked and repeatedly asked if you or anyone else could provide actual evidence of what the long term benefits to the UK staying in the EU were. Not one single reply to my question from "remainers" in several thousand posts. Says it all really. Just a lot of hot air and keyboard warriors who have nothing more constructive to do with their time.
Define 'long term' and define 'evidence'? There's been plenty of economic reports on the harm Brexit will cause to our economy, our legal and economic frameworks have been developed from within the EU for 40 odd years and I am sure we should be devoting more of our time and resources in the Uk to sorting out our problems than all the work needed to untangle ourselves, plus no one knows exactly how it will impact the peace process in Ireland, but I suspect it won't make it any more secure for starters.
But I suspect whatever is said on both sides, the response will be that it is just conjecture and no one can point to anything that will definitely get better as a result of staying the same, i.e. staying in the EU, as it's in the future.
And they’re looking to add Albania and Montenegro to the 27. Wonder how much they’ll be contributing![]()
That you note it'll take a while to untangle ourselves from Brussels bureaucracy sums up all that is wrong with the whole gig... As I've said many times before about the only thing bureaucracy is proficient at is creating more... Got more than enough of our own lazy incompetent governance without needing to import any...
Just a quick question.. in the run up to BoJo’s ‘leave at any cost’, there have been some positive like the govt actually finding 2b for port chaos, stockpiling, US offering a quick deal etc.
Equally there has been some downsides - pound is nearly at its lowest since the vote, car industry investments are down, manufacturers data indicates that they have locked up capital due to stockpiling, economy looking a bit shaky - true it is not the economic Armageddon that Osborne promised.
Does anyone in the leave camp think - maybe, just maybe - it is not such a great economic idea or is everyone still thinking that ‘exit at any cost’ is the best way forward?
Just a quick question.. in the run up to BoJo’s ‘leave at any cost’, there have been some positive like the govt actually finding 2b for port chaos, stockpiling, US offering a quick deal etc.
Equally there has been some downsides - pound is nearly at its lowest since the vote, car industry investments are down, manufacturers data indicates that they have locked up capital due to stockpiling, economy looking a bit shaky - true it is not the economic Armageddon that Osborne promised.
Does anyone in the leave camp think - maybe, just maybe - it is not such a great economic idea or is everyone still thinking that ‘exit at any cost’ is the best way forward?
Just a quick question.. in the run up to BoJo’s ‘leave at any cost’, there have been some positive like the govt actually finding 2b for port chaos, stockpiling, US offering a quick deal etc.
Equally there has been some downsides - pound is nearly at its lowest since the vote, car industry investments are down, manufacturers data indicates that they have locked up capital due to stockpiling, economy looking a bit shaky - true it is not the economic Armageddon that Osborne promised.
Does anyone in the leave camp think - maybe, just maybe - it is not such a great economic idea or is everyone still thinking that ‘exit at any cost’ is the best way forward?
You mean get worse and get back to somewhere a bit worse than we are now?As the “Establishment†is dragged kicking and screaming towards the inevitable Brexit there is bound to be uncertainty in the economy, I expected it to get worse before it gets better...Once the proverbial nettle is grasped I then think our economy will improve and continue to outperform the rest of Europe.
Short term pain long term gain.ðŸ‘
You mean get worse and get back to somewhere a bit worse than we are now?
Great.
But on the upside, a few already very wealthy people will have more opportunities to become even wealthier. Plus with the pound collapsing, we'll be ripe for even more foreign investment so any last remaining parts of our infrastructure and industry that we currently own can be sold off. So you know, swings and roundabouts.