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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 20:23:54 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 20:23:54 GMT
Who needs a four-wheel drive when you have caterpillar tracks and a gun turret?
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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 20:33:32 GMT
sf likes this
Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 20:33:32 GMT
Way off topic unless we decide that we need to overthrow the government*, but as I had no idea of the fuel capacity of a tank I decided that this was now something I needed to know. It turns out that a typical tank can carry around 1500 to 1600 litres of fuel, so the fuel alone weighs more than my car. That's impressive.
* Who says we're not looking for solutions?
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Post by n1david on Sept 22, 2018 21:15:54 GMT
It’s going to happen. How about looking for solutions instead of inspecting your hurt butts? You know what? I can’t look for solutions. I don’t have the knowledge and I don’t have the influence. I voted to remain and, when the vote was to Leave, I waited to see what the plan was. I’m still waiting. I’d quite like some of the people who got us into this position to “look for solutions”. Otherwise those of us who said there wouldn’t be any easy solutions might feel that they have been proven right. But actually, I take no enjoyment from that. Because I really hoped that there was a plan, somewhere, that avoided a no deal exit. Maybe Monkey is right and “it will all be ok”. But I’d like to hear that from experts involved in trade and business - or, frankly, a politician right now and I’m not hearing it. If you’d like to suggest how I, a mere voter, can “look for solutions” in a way that can influence May and Barnier I’d love to know.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 22:02:58 GMT
Good grief. Just listen to yourselves. I hate the term “butthurt” because it’s cheap and ridiculous, is used by people on line trying to appear younger than they are and shows zero imagination but wow, the epitome of it is demonstrated above. I voted remain but if I’d been in a room with you lot I might not have. It’s going to happen. How about looking for solutions instead of inspecting your hurt butts? Seeing as you seem to be so confident it will all be fine despite the contrary being abundantly clear from the news every day, why don't you offer suggestions for the solutions you're demanding the rest of us come up with?
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Post by sf on Sept 22, 2018 23:15:57 GMT
How about looking for solutions instead of inspecting your hurt butts? There's a solution on the table that solves the Ireland/Gibraltar border issues, will preserve nearly all aspects of our current trade relationships, and that will stop us losing most of the rights/privileges/opportunities that will get flushed down the toilet if we adhere to May's red lines: Norway-plus-customs-union. May isn't pursuing it because it doesn't pander sufficiently to the delusions of her racist/foaming-at-the-mouth back-benchers. Beyond that, it is not my job to find solutions to this mess. The people who campaigned for the Leave side sold the electorate a deliberately nebulous vision that was long on (empty) promises and short - very short - on specific detail, and that was a calculated, cynical choice on their part: since Brexit is essentially about bringing about a regulatory bonfire that will remove at a single stroke most of the rights and protections enshrined in EU law, it would not have served the Leave campaign to define their vision of post-Brexit Britain clearly. What we're seeing now is the inevitable consequence of a campaign whose promises - aside from the £350 million on the side of a bus - were sufficiently vague that they allowed discontented voters to project all their individual (and largely justifiable) grievances onto the same (misplaced) target. "Brexit means Brexit", and the Brexit the nation was sold is undeliverable, because the Leave campaign never articulated a coherent overall vision of what Brexit would look like. That's why we've ended up where we are now. Since the referendum, instead of coming up with some kind of concrete plan that will offer a constructive way forward and begin to heal the divisions generated by an outcome in which the distance between the leave and remain votes was within the statistical margin of error, the government has consistently chosen the most damaging, muddled, bull-headed way forward possible, frequently insulting the half of the electorate that didn't fall for the Leave campaign's lies. That line about "citizens of nowhere" deserved to end May's career, and if there's any justice it will haunt her for the rest of her life; to those of us who have lived overseas for any length of time, whether in Europe or further afield, it was a kick in the teeth. We've heard a lot of rhetoric about red lines and bullying and intransigent bureaucrats in Brussels (as if the rules under which the EU operates were somehow passively imposed on the UK, rather than something we helped to write), but the government's negotiating position - if such it may be called - has still, more than two years down the road, yet to enter the orbit of anything even slightly resembling reality. The tone of the national conversation is ugly, divisive, and frequently alarmingly racist, and instead of holding the government to account, which is their job, the front bench of our largest party of opposition has been more or less entirely supine. We've seen a series of revelations about dark money, potential foreign interference, the kind of cheating that in a general election would lead to an immediate rerun (I live in a constituency where that actually happened after the 2010 general election), but electoral law in this country is weak when it comes to dealing with both referendums and technological interference, and the collective response of the government and the opposition to wholesale electoral fraud has been a resounding 'meh'. We still, in theory, live in a democracy, and 'democracy' is not a once-in-a-lifetime event that took place on June 23rd 2016. Those of us who are thoroughly appalled at the ongoing wholesale desecration of principles we value are entitled to make as much noise in protest as we can. I can't speak for anybody else, but I most certainly will, and I won't stop at the end of next March if we leave the EU either (and yes, I do mean "if"). There's too much at stake. If that means I'm "inspecting my butt hurts" in your view, I'll live. In a democracy, we do not have to take this lying down.
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Brexit
Sept 22, 2018 23:28:02 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2018 23:28:02 GMT
Re: Solutions.
Not that the government is interested, but.....
Extend and fudge. The likelihood of civil unrest through either a hard brexit or a cancellation leaves little option than to kick it down the road six months, then whilst claiming progress, for another year, then implementation of part of something that makes no real difference but can claim to be a staging post. Then, when enough people have died, got fed up or can no longer be bothered, say we’ll stick with where we are.
The other, more catastrophic in the short term, solution.
Make people suffer.
It’s the only thing that changes minds in most cases. So let it happen, endure chaos and rancour, then pick up the pieces and it won’t happen again for at least a few decades.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 9:38:18 GMT
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Post by kathryn on Sept 23, 2018 9:38:18 GMT
You won’t get the surge in public support to change things unless people actually feel the pain. And it would have to be something simple, and directly attributable to Brexit. Something like people being told that their summer holiday is cancelled because planes can’t fly.
All the subtle, complicated, long-term knock-on effects of economic changes will be accepted with a shrug, or ignored, or hand-waved away.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 13:56:57 GMT
Post by lynette on Sept 23, 2018 13:56:57 GMT
So guys, in order to reverse a decision you don’t like you would be happy to see people die and miss their holidays and that would 'learn' them, eh? I think we should try to find a solution which perhaps not everyone will like to avoid this. And we do have a democratic parliamentary representational form of government which allows for change.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 14:24:34 GMT
Nobody (well, very few) actively want the chaos option but, given that we are at a complete impasse, it is quite likely going to happen through the failure of anything else.
To me, fudge and delay is the only answer which avoids it. Incremental shifts, just enough to kick the can a bit further ahead without breaking anything. I think (though impossible to tell) that May has been toying with that but her gangster-like demand for respect suggests maybe not.
Sadly there are forces in play that want the chaos, whether that be disaster capitalists like JRM, right wing or left wing agitators looking for a revolution or just plain old anarchists. Amazingly we’ve ended up with a number of them close to the centre of power at just this moment. A perfect confluence of disaster but such is history.
Why might chaos ensue? Because the centre is in trouble and the fringes do not want compromise. Those who do not compromise only ever learn through suffering. Ireland, most recently on these shores, took decades to emerge from that. Again, history teaches us this.
We need, sadly, to be regularly reminded of that history.
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Post by sf on Sept 23, 2018 15:31:10 GMT
I think we should try to find a solution which perhaps not everyone will like to avoid this. There is already - as I said somewhere else - a solution on the table that would avoid most of the most destructive consequences of leaving the EU (there is no scenario ending with the UK outside the EU that will not diminish and damage us to some extent). As far as I can tell, that scenario - Norway plus customs union - is the ONLY way we can leave the EU without damaging the Northern Ireland peace process and imposing border checks of some kind between the UK and Ireland and between Gibraltar and Spain. Mrs. May has rejected that solution, and there is literally nothing else on the table that is workable. You tell me where we go next.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 15:36:04 GMT
I think the GOVERNMENT should be finding a solution, gang, it is after all their job to govern the country in the best interests of its citizens. We can vote for our best candidates, write letters to politicians and newspapers, go on marches, peacefully protest in whatever way we know how, but this "we" is disingenuous. It is not my job to do all the negotiating and planning necessary, nor would I have any authority whatsoever if I did want to take matters into my own hands. Honestly, one person thinks we just sit here and whine without entertaining the possibility that there's a lot of stuff we do away from the board that they don't see, another person thinks we should be stepping away from the board and sorting out the mess ourselves, can you all at least get on the same page as to whether we're completely powerless or all-powerful before telling us we're wrong to be having discussions on a discussion board?
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 15:53:53 GMT
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Post by kathryn on Sept 23, 2018 15:53:53 GMT
So guys, in order to reverse a decision you don’t like you would be happy to see people die and miss their holidays and that would 'learn' them, eh? I think we should try to find a solution which perhaps not everyone will like to avoid this. And we do have a democratic parliamentary representational form of government which allows for change. No, I wouldn’t be happy in the slightest. It’s just my prediction of what it would take to bring about a reversal of the decision to leave. You would hope the politicians would be motivated to avoid that sort of pain. I don’t think there will be a second referendum, and even if there was I’m not convinced the result would be different. My understanding is that the withdrawal agreement is 90% done - most of the wrangling is about the future relationship now, with Northern Ireland the real political sticking point.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 16:36:28 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 16:36:28 GMT
The clock is ticking down and Party Conferences taken up two more weeks - the leaders of all parties are under pressure. The Democratic Unionists are shoring up a Conservative minority government so they have to be kept onside over the Irish Border Deal,
But if no deal is likely it will be as bad for the EU as it is for us and maybe the UK holding firm would make the EU blink first and get back around the table if there was a stalemate.
A general election would be the worse thing to happen too as it would put negotiations on hold for another month or so and if there was no majority government that could take up more crucial time.
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Post by sf on Sept 23, 2018 16:59:05 GMT
I don’t think there will be a second referendum, and even if there was I’m not convinced the result would be different. I'm not convinced there will be one either, and like you I'm not sure the result would be different. It would likely be even more dirty and divisive than the first one, and our electoral laws do not appear to be up to the task of ensuring a referendum is fought fairly. I also think campaigning for a vote on the outcome is absolutely worthwhile. Those pro-Europe/pro-"people's vote" demonstrations send a valuable message, not just to our own politicians but to the rest of Europe as well. We've spent the last two years having the phrase "will of the people" rammed down our throats, the "will of the people" in this case representing only very slightly over half of the people who voted and just 37% of the overall electorate, which on this occasion specifically excluded (at least) hundreds of thousands of people - UK citizens who have been living elsewhere in the EU for more than 15 years - who will be more immediately affected by the outcome than most of the people who voted for it. For those of us on the losing side of the argument, there is value in reinforcing as loudly as we can that this is not being done in our name. There is also value in reinforcing the fact that democracy is not an event, and that dissent has not (yet) been outlawed. The government's language since the referendum has often taken a sharp turn towards the authoritarian; it is absolutely essential, as far as I am concerned, that those of us who aren't happy to fall into line shout back.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2018 17:10:12 GMT
But if no deal is likely it will be as bad for the EU as it is for us and maybe the UK holding firm would make the EU blink first and get back around the table if there was a stalemate. That isn't true, the only part of the EU that will be similarly affected will be Ireland. The rest can absorb any blow and any problems that they do have can then be blamed on us. In fact this is a perfect opportunity for many European governments as they will have a common enemy that is too weak to fight back in any meaningful manner.
The EU does not need us, when are people finally going to understand this? It's madness to think that they are in as weak as a position as we are, sheer bloody minded insanity.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 17:14:13 GMT
Post by sf on Sept 23, 2018 17:14:13 GMT
But if no deal is likely it will be as bad for the EU as it is for us No. It's not a desirable outcome for either side, it would do significant damage to both sides, but there are several important areas - like the regulation/approval/delivery of medications - where the consequences would be felt on our side only. We would be removing ourselves from those frameworks without a backup, but the EU27 would still be part of them.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 18:20:12 GMT
Post by anthony40 on Sept 23, 2018 18:20:12 GMT
Everyone is entitled to their opinion (of course) however, I am London based and as I type this, I have only met one person who voted to leave.
So, now that it's happening, I'm just waiting for the announcement for EU Nations to apply for the Settled Status, which I believe, is happening next month.
Despite being Australian, I hold dual passports and legally am an EU National, so....
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 18:41:15 GMT
Post by BurlyBeaR on Sept 23, 2018 18:41:15 GMT
The problem is that so much time, energy and belief has been invested into it being a complete disaster that some people are going to look and feel a bit daft if it isn’t. I actually wonder if those people are so entrenched that they want it to fail, just so they can say “told you so”. As for me asking you to find solutions, no I know you’re not responsible for that and the government is. Slightly surprised that I have to explain that but there you go. I was just trying to move the conversation forward from ”we’re all going to DIE” which isn’t very productive. Good grief. Just listen to yourselves. I hate the term “butthurt” because it’s cheap and ridiculous, is used by people on line trying to appear younger than they are and shows zero imagination but wow, the epitome of it is demonstrated above. I voted remain but if I’d been in a room with you lot I might not have. It’s going to happen. How about looking for solutions instead of inspecting your hurt butts? Seeing as you seem to be so confident it will all be fine despite the contrary being abundantly clear from the news every day, why don't you offer suggestions for the solutions you're demanding the rest of us come up with? I never said that. Please do not misquote me.
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Post by sf on Sept 23, 2018 18:55:17 GMT
I actually wonder if those people are so entrenched that they want it to fail, just so they can say “told you so”. I don't want it to fail. Or rather, I don't want the country to fail. If Brexit fails - if (unlikely but far from impossible) it collapses and ends up not happening, or happening in such a watered-down form that it's indistinguishable from the status quo - I will dance on its grave. If it goes ahead according to any of May's red lines, the economy will probably eventually somewhat recover, but it isn't simply about trade and the economy: I want to avoid significant rights - rights that I value - getting flushed down the toilet on the back of a parade of lies and dog-whistle racism.
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Post by vdcni on Sept 23, 2018 18:59:17 GMT
Yeah calling everyone butthurt is such a productive way of 'moving the conversation on'.
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Brexit
Sept 23, 2018 19:09:03 GMT
Post by BurlyBeaR on Sept 23, 2018 19:09:03 GMT
Yeah calling everyone butthurt is such a productive way of 'moving the conversation on'. Yep, point taken. It was an impulsive comment based on the previous few “were all going to DIE” posts. I hope that most people involved in this discussion are fairly robust and that it didn’t distress anyone unduly.
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Post by kathryn on Sept 23, 2018 21:46:04 GMT
Well, as long as no-one on here is a diabetic reliant on insulin. The continued supply of such short shelf-life medications is a real life or death concern. We all hope that government incompetence won’t lead to shortages; lest we forget, there are documented cases of diabetics reliant on benefits dying after being moved on to universal credit because of the monumental f***-up that was.
Such concerns may well seem over dramatic to some. I know many people on here are just convinced that it can't possibly get that bad. But it’s not unprecedented for governments to f*** things up that badly and this lot have not exactly inspired confidence in their ability.
This week they have told us that the entirely predictable EU position on the Chequers deal was a total surprise that they don’t understand and need explaining to them. WTAF. You have to hope that they’re lying because if not they are staggeringly out of their depth.
Yes, I am feeling particularly depressed about the whole thing at the moment.
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Brexit
Sept 24, 2018 15:31:55 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 24, 2018 15:31:55 GMT
I think the EU does need Britain as it was a big contributor plus if other countries see the UK gets a decent deal on leaving they might decide to look at doing so.
But we would not be like say US leaving Nato where Trump could say "we'll button down the hatches and don't come running when Putin gets aggressive".
Being very cynical the guy to really blame on this is David Cameron he called the referendum and nobody really thought leave would win. But people hate being told what to do, the polls said Trump wouldn't win and he did and they thought Corbyn would be wiped out at last election but he wasn't and did better than previous two Labour Leaders. Often the ruling class of both parties are tucked away in Westminster hearing what they want to hear and don't get out on the street and talk to the average person of whatever age/race/political persuasion etc.
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Post by n1david on Sept 24, 2018 17:45:29 GMT
The diabetes thing is a red herring - we manufacture the stuff here too. And yes, I have an extremely strong vested interest in that bit. So this information from Diabetes UK (who, I guess, also have a vested interested in this) is incorrect? www.diabetes.org.uk/about_us/news/insulin-brexit - published 31 July 2018.
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Brexit
Sept 25, 2018 8:42:01 GMT
Post by vdcni on Sept 25, 2018 8:42:01 GMT
Yes having to stockpile drugs to cope with manufactured uncertainty isn't an issue at all is it, madness.
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