Is it PotG?
Thrifty non-licker
Why DO you have to resort to childish hand gestures or c-bomb expletives?I wonder what a brand new neurodiverse poster would make of it all
Why DO you have to resort to childish hand gestures or c-bomb expletives?I wonder what a brand new neurodiverse poster would make of it all
I'm guessing that if NSC didn't want that emoji used when appropriate it wouldn't be on the list of emojisWhy DO you have to resort to childish hand gestures or c-bomb expletives?
You’re really rude. Your post I quoted was about the difficulties involved with all the different EU legislation and regulations… my post was specifically relevant to that ..? I just said I thought it was interesting and it was only in the paper a couple of days ago so I thought I’d post it.I'm sure you're very pleased that you managed to cut and paste some stuff from the Times about the EU's decline in Industrial production, and wedge it in this thread, but I really can't figure out what that has to do with the ever increasing overheads of trading between the UK and EU. And you can quote and then knock down any theories you fancy.
Divergence, which is what has been happening from day 1 simply increases the costs of both the UK and the EU of doing business with their biggest trading partner and none of this consequential decreasing trade is being replaced by the much fabled 'free trade deals'.
If it was then it wouldn't have cost the UK economy £100B in the last year alone
How's that poll at the top of the page doing
You’re really rude. Your post I quoted was about the difficulties involved with all the different EU legislation and regulations… my post was specifically relevant to that ..? I just said I thought it was interesting and it was only in the paper a couple of days ago so I thought I’d post it.
Neither of your replies to me have reflected on the content of my post… if you think it is incorrect then explain why - it sounds like it’s simply someone you disagree with who wrote it so you have simply dismissed it out of hand. Imagine that !!I'm sorry if you thought it was rude, but your post had absolutely nothing to do with the daily increasing cost of divergence, the whole point of my post
The fact that the article you are quoting excerpts from was written by Iain Martin, the well know ex-editor of the Sunday Telegraph and self proclaimed Brexit supporter who believes that Nigel Farage should be given a peerage, is of course, neither here nor there
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iain_Martin
Well, when someone who has a years'-long track record of agitating for a particular agenda, on a professional basis, makes assertions, it is right to question them. In some cases it is best to dismiss them. It would take a naivety of newborn proportions to find such witterings 'interesting'.Neither of your replies to me have reflected on the content of my post… if you think it is incorrect then explain why - it sounds like it’s simply someone you disagree with who wrote it so you have simply dismissed it out of hand. Imagine that !!
Your 'not necessarily so' reply was to a post that explains why "Brexit didn't stop when the referendum took place or when Johnson 'Got it done' "Not necessarily so WZ - I thought this was interesting in The Times this week:
The theory, worked up by pro-European think tanks, is that if we voluntarily aligned with the EU on industrial rules or veterinary and agricultural standards, and agreed to adopt and observe many regulations from Brussels in key areas, trade would become easier and we’d get pulled up by the mighty bloc next door.
The theory doesn’t work so well when you look at the numbers. This month EU industrial production data is flashing a red alarm. It is down by 2.9 per cent in the euro area and by 2.5 per cent in the EU compared with May last year. This worrying development — industrial decline tends to increase political instability — may be down to the aftermath of the energy shock after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Unfortunately, it is about to be followed by the impact of President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, which subsidises US industry and technology with $360 billion. That great sucking sound is the disastrous de-industrialisation of the Continent getting under way as the US state aid bonanza sucks jobs and production out of an uncompetitive EU — and, if we are not careful, the UK too.
The EU leadership knows it has a serious problem, which is why Mario Draghi, a former prime minister of Italy, was drafted in to come up with a competitiveness plan. His delayed report, anticipated in September, is expected to recommend cutting through the ever-growing thicket of regulations that hinder growth.
Neither of your replies to me have reflected on the content of my post… if you think it is incorrect then explain why - it sounds like it’s simply someone you disagree with who wrote it so you have simply dismissed it out of hand. Imagine that !!
We no longer have politicians like this do we?