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The influence of the EU on Britain.

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  • I admit it I was fully aware of all the implications of remaining in the EU for the remainder of my lifetime.

    I counter balanced that with an assessment of the vast range of possible outcomes on leaving.

    Then I thought bugger I forgot about Ireland (and Gibraltar for that matter).

    I then I thought about cheeses and thought EU cheeses are inferior so I voted leave.

    I carry out the same detailed analysis at every General Election too substituting biscuits for cheese.
  • I admit it I was fully aware of all the implications of remaining in the EU for the remainder of my lifetime.

    I counter balanced that with an assessment of the vast range of possible outcomes on leaving.

    Then I thought bugger I forgot about Ireland (and Gibraltar for that matter).

    I then I thought about cheeses and thought EU cheeses are inferior so I voted leave.

    I carry out the same detailed analysis at every General Election too substituting biscuits for cheese.


    Would suggest that French cheese in general is on its own better than anything the UK produces other than Chedder or Stilton. Do we produce anything other than chedder and Stilton that isn’t an interpretation of French or Italian cheese ?

  • So you got it wrong then ?
    Reposting this to fix SHG's buggered quoting, just in case.
  • Sorry NI but 'committed' is not the same as passing legislation in parliament enshrining the referendum vote in law. Which they did not do, unless I missed it. No expert on EU law but doubt they could pursue A7 b4 we triggered A50.
    If the EU as a whole considers a member state to be acting contrary to shared European values, which is what the UK hanging around waiting to make up its mind about Article 50 would be (as the uncertainty would stymie much essential EU business), then the Article 7 process becomes inevitable.

    Article 7 is separate and relates to any circumstance where a member state is considered to be acting improperly, against the interests of the EU and its member states as a whole.

    Unlike the current Polish Government's actions against senior judges, the kind of approach suggested, of waiting until the Government finally knew what it wanted, particularly given the upcoming EU Parliamentary elections and the next round of budgetary negotiations, would have had serious negative consequences across the EU and required firm and fast action. (Not that I am downplaying the importance of the Polish situation, but it has limited impact by comparison).

    Of course the UK Government could have emulated the PiS and sought to get into bed with Victor Orban, but the cost of that may have been even less alluring than having to have a sleepover with Arlene last week, to say nothing if the price that would have to be paid.

    So, it is possible that the UK could have avoided the final, naughty step, Article 7 sanction, but much of the process could have been applied (and I gave my doubts that a deal with Orban would have been possible in any event).

    As an aside, I shudder to think what such a tactic, from the UK, would do to the chances of goodwill in the negotiations; without it, even a basic FTA would be horrendously difficult to achieve.
  • Mine has gone for ammo, tents, veg seeds and growing tunnels. Hopefully the weather will be good enough for us to grow peppers and aubergines.
    Don't worry mate, we will send you regular food parcels from Prague, and you can always pop out here when you are hungry. I'll pull the strings for your visa.

  • Don't worry mate, we will send you regular food parcels from Prague, and you can always pop out here when you are hungry. I'll pull the strings for your visa.

    Can it include some Pilsner Urquell?
  • McBobbin said:

    Can it include some Pilsner Urquell?
    Sure, but you will be liable for the duty.

    Seriously, get yourself to one of the places offering PU "from the tank", before next March. There's no way they will continue to bring it in by train after a No Deal Brexit.

  • Don't worry mate, we will send you regular food parcels from Prague, and you can always pop out here when you are hungry. I'll pull the strings for your visa.

    You know who your friends are when times get tough.

  • Would suggest that French cheese in general is on its own better than anything the UK produces other than Chedder or Stilton. Do we produce anything other than chedder and Stilton that isn’t an interpretation of French or Italian cheese ?

    Red Leicester? British cheese is the best, unfortunately all our dairy farmers will be out of business in a couple of years so you’d better put it on your “stockpile this stuff” list.
  • seth plum said:

    I agree with you, but we are now at the point where reality bites. perhaps those who voted against immigration will have to face the gaps created in our services, those who voted for border control can sit in the traffic jams, those who voted for free trade with the rest of the world can do those deals whilst paying the WTO tariffs as they currently exist, and so on...security, human rights, scientific co-operation, British nationals in the EU, this is the stuff of reality biting.
    So whatever the myriad reasons that caused people to vote brexit, whatever their main driver was, you can be sure there is a tailor made f*ck up in this process just for them.
    I have also called on brexiters to tell us the good bits, so they don't have to concentrate on digging any of us remainers out, they have an opportunity to paint a picture of the sunny uplands.
    In Rees Moggs's case that picture will be scifi for fifty years hence.
    And, of course, when the reality of changing whatever little bit of the EU they voted for/against was pointed out to them, they all cried "scaremongering". And when it was pointed out to them that the thing they had a problem with was actually entirely down to decisions made by the UK government, they all put their fingers in their ears and turned away. They own it alright, lock, stock and rusting, leaking barrel... *

    *I know that's a different kind of barrel :wink:
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  • I admit it I was fully aware of all the implications of remaining in the EU for the remainder of my lifetime.

    I counter balanced that with an assessment of the vast range of possible outcomes on leaving.

    Then I thought bugger I forgot about Ireland (and Gibraltar for that matter).

    I then I thought about cheeses and thought EU cheeses are inferior so I voted leave.

    I carry out the same detailed analysis at every General Election too substituting biscuits for cheese.

    Are you having a laugh in relation to cheeses? Ok there are some decent English cheeses but it is one of the EUs biggest strengths.
  • We probably hadn't seen all the Facebook targeted ads used by the criminal Brexit campaigns. This thread gives a take on how the targeting was done. 45% of Vote Leave's Facebook ads focused on immigration

    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1022753888359903233.html
  • For the most part I think this is true. Who in their right mind is going to admit even to themselves that they were duped and based their vote decision on lies and misinformation by crooks and charlatans and didn’t feel the need to look at the expert opinion which was readily available.

    You would have to be stupid wouldn’t you ?
  • If we patronise and belittle leavers enough, they might just come round to our point of view!
  • Huskaris said:

    If we patronise and belittle leavers enough, they might just come round to our point of view!

    You make a very good point here. I agree its something that's not helpful. I'm sure I have crossed that line many a time though - apologies.
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  • Stig said:

    You make a very good point here. I agree its something that's not helpful. I'm sure I have crossed that line many a time though - apologies.
    It’s crossed my mind too but I think not pointing out stupidity where it’s clearly stupid is just as counter productive.
  • Huskaris said:

    If we patronise and belittle leavers enough, they might just come round to our point of view!

    It's why the polling on leave/remain hasn't really changed since the referendum. You'd think people might change their minds seeing how the government are making such an arse of Brexit. People dig their heels in. They don't like being dismissed out of hand as stupid racists by whiny bad losers.
  • Missed It said:

    It's why the polling on leave/remain hasn't really changed since the referendum. You'd think people might change their minds seeing how the government are making such an arse of Brexit. People dig their heels in. They don't like being dismissed out of hand as stupid racists by whiny bad losers.
    Or being wrong

  • I found this interesting map, it doesn't offer any conclusions for why but shows that almost all EU countries felt more positive about the EU vote after the Brexit vote.

    https://brilliantmaps.com/public-image-eu/
  • edited July 2018

    Or being wrong

    That's the trouble though isn't it. So often the explanation of why leave voters might be wrong is just replaced by insults.
  • Missed It said:

    It's why the polling on leave/remain hasn't really changed since the referendum. You'd think people might change their minds seeing how the government are making such an arse of Brexit. People dig their heels in. They don't like being dismissed out of hand as stupid racists by whiny bad losers.
    I think an aspect of the debate that isn't highlighted often enough is that Brexiteers break down into two factions:

    The (I suspect) majority who think that immigrants are the cause of their economic problems and want a return to a mythical 'good old days' where Britain is isolated from foreign influence, the only cheese is Cheddar and everyone 'buys British'. It's a protectionist world view, and a dumb one.

    Then there are the free traders who think the EU puts up too many trade barriers with the rest of the world and we need to get out so that we can have fewer barriers with the US, China etc. and improve trade accordingly. This faction doesn't want to keep people out in principle (free trade involves free movement of labour too, if your labour is what you have to trade) and it wants to allow foreign goods in if they are cheaper/better than British ones.

    There is an idealogical contradiction between these factions that I think will eventually become apparent. To give a very specific example, when we are free to make a trade agreement with the USA, it will likely have to include opening our borders to chlorinated chickens (the financial tariffs on trade with the US are already negligible so there is nothing to be gained renegotiating those). That will decimate our own poultry industry and the rural demographic that voted leave will, I think, be up in arms.

    I have some sympathy with free-trade leavers, and might have voted leave if I thought their aspirations were politically achievable. I don't think they are however and I think remainers should be focussing more on this aspect of the debate, and the inherant tensions it creates in the Brexit camp, rather than attacking the racism implicit in the views of the protectionist Brexiteers.
  • Missed It said:

    That's the trouble though isn't it. So often the explanation of why leave voters might be wrong is just replaced by insults.
    By any measure you can name me it’s a fact that anyone who voted to leave is complicit in harming the economy and future of this country. That’s the opinion of every credible economist on a worldwide and business basis and includes our own government. Even the loony Jacob Rees-Mogg freely admits that any upturn after Brexit might not be felt for fifty years.

    I accept that some of those brexiters will now have changed their mind based on what has transpired since the vote but I can’t help feeling that those that won’t look at the evidence now available and won’t change their mind are exactly 100% worth being called stupid.

  • Stig said:

    I'll be amazed if anyone admits to it. It's the same with all advertising, no-one ever admits to be influenced by it, but if you think about it for more than a nano second you'll know that millions of people must be. Think of the fantastic amount of money that it must have taken to fund ITV for sixty years. That money has all come from purposeful advertising, not from corporate philanthropy. They spend money because it works for them. Think about the correlation between The Sun's editorial position and general election results; that isn't accidental, it's causal - but still every Sun reader will tell you that they make their own mind up. Yes they did, but on a limited spectra of drip fed information and misinformation that they choose to publish. Information that seems highly credible because it is reinforced by friends, neighbours, colleagues, barbers, taxi drivers and pub landlords who have all been drip fed the same old, same old. People are encouraged, influenced and cajoled all the time by the messages placed in front of them by others more powerful; sometimes they are completely duped. The only duping going on now though will be people duping themselves into believing that they weren't duped in June 2016, that they knew what Brexit really meant and what its consequences were. It's amazing how we have gotten into such a complete and utter mess when everyone that voted will tell you how they'd made their own mind up and that they understood the issues. Democracy, my arse!
    If advertising didn't work, why do companies spend so much money on it?
  • Huskaris said:

    If we patronise and belittle leavers enough, they might just come round to our point of view!

    I brexiters dance the finger jabbing dance of triumph enough, singing 'you lost get over it!' to remainers, I won't come round to their point of view, but accept the result and ask the brexiters how exactly are they going to progress their victory in practical terms, like the Irish Border for example.
This discussion has been closed.

Roland Out Forever!