The Merry Prankster
Pactum serva
Believe that and you will believe anything.
I may be misunderstanding you and if so I apologise, but are you saying that Brutish debt is the fault of the EU?
Believe that and you will believe anything.
And people have the gall to celebrate this result.
Believe that and you will believe anything.
I am not celebrating. Many of those who voted remain were, and now still are, harbingers of doom. The amount of hyperbole used by the remain camp was ridiculous and it may well have been for that very reason that people turned against them. I say financial institutions should give the UK a chance before running away. Those who voted remain did not know how the economy would react long term if they had won, and those of us who voted "out" never expected it to be a bed of roses either. But you seem to be saying that those who voted out should be vilified (hardly democracy). The democratic vote was "out" and maybe you should start to live with that instead of having a dig at those who had the courage to vote "out".
In which ways did the EU legislate, compel, enforce, demand, instruct, advise, suggest, imply, casually refer to or merely hint at an increased British debt burden? Was it included in the Single European Act? The Maastricht Treaty? Amsterdam? Treaty of Lisbon? If it wasn't in any of the formal treaties, perhaps it was a secret command that we were powerless to resist?
There has never been any suggestion in any agreement that the EU has any involvement with any British budget. Your implication that they have is yet another sad example of the degree of ignorance that informed the Referendum decision.
I am not celebrating. Many of those who voted remain were, and now still are, harbingers of doom. The amount of hyperbole used by the remain camp was ridiculous and it may well have been for that very reason that people turned against them. I say financial institutions should give the UK a chance before running away. Those who voted remain did not know how the economy would react long term if they had won, and those of us who voted "out" never expected it to be a bed of roses either. But you seem to be saying that those who voted out should be vilified (hardly democracy). The democratic vote was "out" and maybe you should start to live with that instead of having a dig at those who had the courage to vote "out".
The decision to run up that level of debt was made by successive British governments and was completely under our control and had nothing whatsoever to do with the EU; that's my point.
This is kind of the problem I have with leavers post the result. You say give the financial institutions a chance and it'll all be okay (without saying how). You and the other leavers don't suggest how the city of London will continue to function (bringing in something like 30% of our tax revenue when denied access to the single market.
This is kind of the problem I have with leavers post the result. You say give the financial institutions a chance and it'll all be okay (without saying how). You and the other leavers don't suggest how the city of London will continue to function (bringing in something like 30% of our tax revenue when denied access to the single market. Oh ho leavers say but we will have access despite the fact that everyone with any say in the matter says not without free movement of labour you won't. As that's about the only thing left out of the leavers promises, are they giving that up as well? In which case what was the point? Or are they sticking to it in which case the financial institutions will not be magically okay. Dealing with these questions needs realistic and achievable solutions. Where are they? All I hear is pie in the sky wishful thinking at the moment.
The democratic vote was "out" and maybe you should start to live with that instead of having a dig at those who had the courage to vote "out".
It is 'courage' ( or stupidity) if you decide to jump into the unknown without fear for your own safety.
It is not 'courage' to jump into the unknown and dragging people who don't want to jump to the unknown fate you want. That is utter selfishness.
Your ability to fail to understand the difference sums up many of those who voted to leave.
It was a democratic vote which was put to us by the elected government. All your moaning won't make any difference. We need to move on now
Thank you Harold Macmillan.
http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/uk_national_debt_chart.html
UK National debt to reach over £1.5 trillion (that's £1,500,000,000,000) by the end of the year.
Big fan of the never never are you?
It was a referendum not a general election...The solutions happen once we have the elected leaderIndeed we do, however not many Brexiters seem to have any solutions to what they wanted.
It was a democratic vote which was put to us by the elected government. All your moaning won't make any difference. We need to move on now
It was a democratic vote which was put to us by the elected government. All your moaning won't make any difference. We need to move on now
the problem here is a misunderstanding of what happens in the London and The City. it is trading in currency, derivatives, options, shares, eurobonds, commodities (metals, oil, wheat, cocoa etc), other than the shares on the local stock market, they can be traded anywere and are, its just the trading has coalesed around a few financial centres, with London being the dominant in this time zone. none of it has to move to EU post leaving except eurobonds clearing, where the trading can continue outside the EU (as it already does in US, Singapore). then thres fincancial products like insurance, or investment and hedge funds dealing in any of the previous, and many business services, consultancy, legal, finance etc which people come here for. some of these services are "exported" though really you come to London or they come to you, its not a physical product that customs can sieze or put a tariff on.
so the question is just how much of this business is going to be required to move, either through necessity from regulation or desire to be inside the single market? how much needs to be in the single market to work? none of the major markets need to be in the single market to enable trading, it may limit people from easily coming and going and moving money in and out (which is actually free movement of capital, never mentioned), and would impact some services offered to europeans. this is not the picture of wholesale loss of business some want to paint.
So you are proposing less choice and higher prices.
Why didn't the out campaign explain this in their campaign?
You're right, London is a financial powerhouse, the jewel in our crown and, with an economy the size of Sweden, we're heavily dependent on it's economy and success. You're also right to point out that Brexit will not result in immediate wholesale losses. The real danger though is a slow withdrawal of business, a gradual withering on the vine. Ignoring any element of tit-for-tat from European institutions, as companies make strategic decisions over the medium and long term, there will be fewer factors in London's favour and it will be a less attractive place to do business. Already, the impact of the Leave vote will no doubt be being carefully considered by the major players in the "merger" (acquisition) of the London Stock Exchange by Deutsche Boerse.
Here's another rather more fanciful consideration.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36526298
It was a referendum not a general election...The solutions happen once we have the elected leader