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[Politics] Brexit

If there was a second Brexit referendum how would you vote?


  • Total voters
    1,100


rogersix

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2014
8,203
i agree with this in principle but given the mess the UK economy is in, this is another set back in the long list of set backs and will prove costly, especially as it’s a a sector the UK is reliant on; it’s not just “fat cat bankers” who will be impacted. You can’t just casually brush this off with a flippant comment.
fukum
 






rogersix

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2014
8,203
History repeating itself Randy, many voters regretted their decision to stay in the European Community a few years after the 1975 referendum when difficult times hit the country.

Funny to think if social media had been around back then ... I wonder if any eurosceptics would be bothered/sad enough, to spend a vast amount of time berating pro EC voters for being gullible morons believing in European Community sunny uplands. 😁

:lolol: given the chance, you would've voted truss!!!
 




Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,274
Genuine question for any Brexiteers out there - At what point is Brexit going to deliver ANY tangible economic benefits to the UK?

We haven't concluded one trade deal that leaves in in a better place than we were but are now faced with additional red tape, delays and import / export duties.

We don't have the labour force to cover existing vacancies let alone take up additional jobs created by growth.

We can't control our borders, yet according to Migration Watch immigration numbers are at record levels, but are primarily students, family and resettlement cases.
 




vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
Genuine question for any Brexiteers out there - At what point is Brexit going to deliver ANY tangible economic benefits to the UK?

We haven't concluded one trade deal that leaves in in a better place than we were but are now faced with additional red tape, delays and import / export duties.

We don't have the labour force to cover existing vacancies let alone take up additional jobs created by growth.

We can't control our borders, yet according to Migration Watch immigration numbers are at record levels, but are primarily students, family and resettlement cases.
You won't get any sort of sensible reply. We are at the stage where genuine questions are being asked about Brexit now, even on/in mainstream media but, we still have a long way to go before there is an actual acceptance of the scale of the disaster.
 


Wokeworrier

Active member
Aug 7, 2021
334
West sussex/travelling
Genuine question for any Brexiteers out there - At what point is Brexit going to deliver ANY tangible economic benefits to the UK?

We haven't concluded one trade deal that leaves in in a better place than we were but are now faced with additional red tape, delays and import / export duties.

We don't have the labour force to cover existing vacancies let alone take up additional jobs created by growth.

We can't control our borders, yet according to Migration Watch immigration numbers are at record levels, but are primarily students, family and resettlement cases.

Firstly, it's probably worth pointing out that if a person only ever cared about economics or was happy with an endless supply of cheap labour suppressing wages for people they couldn't give a toss about, or wasn't overly bothered with an external power making laws and regulations that they could never really change then I can understand why that person would be still banging on about Brexit several years later.


Secondly, of all the trade deals signed with countries around the world outside the EU, when the UK outsourced the negotiations to the EU (a powerful tade block?) how many have been renegotiated in a negative way reflecting our new supposedly diminished status?

Finally, people voting to control illegall immigration were unlikely to get what they want as illegal immigration is by definition incredibly difficult to restrict and control, see UK or EU external border, whereas people voting to reduce EU immigration preferring all people regardless of nationality race or religion to be subject to the same rules would be mainly happy?
 


Randy McNob

> > > > > > Cardiff > > > > >
Jun 13, 2020
4,725
Firstly, it's probably worth pointing out that if a person only ever cared about economics or was happy with an endless supply of cheap labour suppressing wages for people they couldn't give a toss about, or wasn't overly bothered with an external power making laws and regulations that they could never really change then I can understand why that person would be still banging on about Brexit several years later.
It was not an external power, it was a union we were part of, with laws and regulations we helped make and decide. Stop lying

Secondly, of all the trade deals signed with countries around the world outside the EU, when the UK outsourced the negotiations to the EU (a powerful tade block?) how many have been renegotiated in a negative way reflecting our new supposedly diminished status?

Finally, people voting to control illegall immigration were unlikely to get what they want as illegal immigration is by definition incredibly difficult to restrict and control, see UK or EU external border, whereas people voting to reduce EU immigration preferring all people regardless of nationality race or religion to be subject to the same rules would be mainly happy?
Leaving the EU meant moving the EU boundary to Calais and leaving joint agreements and shared arrangements on refugees, low and behold the current problems emerged since then
 






Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Firstly, it's probably worth pointing out that if a person only ever cared about economics or was happy with an endless supply of cheap labour suppressing wages for people they couldn't give a toss about, or wasn't overly bothered with an external power making laws and regulations that they could never really change then I can understand why that person would be still banging on about Brexit several years later.


Secondly, of all the trade deals signed with countries around the world outside the EU, when the UK outsourced the negotiations to the EU (a powerful tade block?) how many have been renegotiated in a negative way reflecting our new supposedly diminished status?

Finally, people voting to control illegall immigration were unlikely to get what they want as illegal immigration is by definition incredibly difficult to restrict and control, see UK or EU external border, whereas people voting to reduce EU immigration preferring all people regardless of nationality race or religion to be subject to the same rules would be mainly happy?
We had 750 trade deals with countries around the world whilst in the EU. Since we left just 71 have been signed, with an additional 35 copy and paste from what we had before.
The Australian deal has left our farmers in a real mess thanks to Liz Truss.

 

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macbeth

Dismembered
Jan 3, 2018
4,177
six feet beneath the moon
You won't get any sort of sensible reply. We are at the stage where genuine questions are being asked about Brexit now, even on/in mainstream media but, we still have a long way to go before there is an actual acceptance of the scale of the disaster.
it's the seven stages of greif really. we're only just at denial.
 




WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,786
Firstly, it's probably worth pointing out that if a person only ever cared about economics or was happy with an endless supply of cheap labour suppressing wages for people they couldn't give a toss about, or wasn't overly bothered with an external power making laws and regulations that they could never really change then I can understand why that person would be still banging on about Brexit several years later.


Secondly, of all the trade deals signed with countries around the world outside the EU, when the UK outsourced the negotiations to the EU (a powerful tade block?) how many have been renegotiated in a negative way reflecting our new supposedly diminished status?

Finally, people voting to control illegall immigration were unlikely to get what they want as illegal immigration is by definition incredibly difficult to restrict and control, see UK or EU external border, whereas people voting to reduce EU immigration preferring all people regardless of nationality race or religion to be subject to the same rules would be mainly happy?
So your case for the defence of Brexit is an article from nearly a year ago quoting some minor subsidiary (HQ'd in Ireland) of an American recruitment agency saying 'fastest wage rises in sectors most reliant on EU workers', followed by your normal factually incorrect waffle about what you think :facepalm:

And still absolutely no benefits.

You obviously put far more thought into this post than you did to the Brexit vote :lolol:

Meanwhile, still not actually out from the EU's rules and regulations for two whole years, Project Fear continues apace :shootself
 
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Lever

Well-known member
Feb 6, 2019
5,447
So your case for the defence of Brexit is an article from nearly a year ago quoting some minor subsidiary (HQ'd in Ireland) of an American recruitment agency saying 'fastest wage rises in sectors most reliant on EU workers', followed by your normal factually incorrect waffle about what you think :facepalm:

And still absolutely no benefits.

You obviously put far more thought into this post than you did to the Brexit vote :lolol:

Meanwhile, still not actually out from the EU's rules and regulations for two whole years, Project Fear continues apace :shootself
I still believe that for Brexiters Brexit is an emotional/faith issue rather than a rational one and it is impossible to convince them with logic about matters of faith....
 




WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,786
I still believe that for Brexiters Brexit is an emotional/faith issue rather than a rational one and it is impossible to convince them with logic about matters of faith....

I would agree, except for the fact that I'm not aware of any of the many faiths around the world that start with 'shoot yourself in both feet' :lolol:

At least not any faith that has lasted more than the 20 months we've been out of the EU :shrug:
 
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Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,219
Faversham

To be fair, a greater percentage traditionally supports 'bring back hanging'.

I don't like referenda/public opinion polls. Stands to reason that the majority of the public are drones, because dull work needs to be done. Would you ask the bloke down the road to check your health, your car, your financial planning? No.

And yet 'call me Dave' asked the bloke down the road (and me) if we should stay in the EU. How the f*** would he know? I didn't know. That why we have politicians - to make executive decisions on our behalf and, if they are crap, we boot them out.

Anyway... smell the freedom. It smells so free. I am free now. Free to be me. Free to do the things I always wanted to do but was unable to do, because of you, EU. I am independent. Richer. Have more options. More local fish. I can travel anywhere now. Buy things. And that.
 








WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,786
Rishi Sunak’s government reportedly ‘considering Swiss-style relationship with EU’

Senior figures in Rishi Sunak’s government are reportedly planning to move Britain into a Swiss-style relationship with the European Union. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt signalled last week that Mr Sunak’s administration intends to break ranks with Boris Johnson’s approach by removing the majority of trade barriers with the bloc.

Now, according to The Sunday Times, senior government sources have suggested that pursuing frictionless trade means moving towards a Swiss-style agreement with the EU.


https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/eu-brexit-swiss-deal-rishi-sunak-b2228861.html

From 'project fear', to 'project reality', to project 'quick reverse it', to project 'vassal state' and all in under 2 years :facepalm:

And it would still be the most positive thing that's happened since the referendum. You really couldn't make it up could you :lolol:
 
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