Brexit benefits - l...
 

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Brexit benefits - lets start a list

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Thinking about it can you even get beer in a pint size can/bottle

Yes.


 
Posted : 05/05/2024 5:02 pm
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Thinking about it can you even get beer in a pint size can/bottle

You've been able to get Stella and Fosters in pint cans for years. Think Newcastle Brown is a pint bottle


 
Posted : 05/05/2024 5:44 pm
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I would buy 500ml bottles of wine tbh, always seem to struggle to get through a 750ml these days

Er, I mean 568ml, of course


 
Posted : 05/05/2024 5:49 pm
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Why would any ‘winery’ essentially re-tool thier production line just for UK to make a different sized bottle?

They won't but UK bottling plants can import the cheapest, roughest wine and put it in the smaller bottles and charge more for rubbish. Also makes a mockery of our drive to Net Zero more weight of glass to be moved around the country for the same volume of wine as currently.


 
Posted : 05/05/2024 9:30 pm
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Half price chocolate hob nobs in coles


 
Posted : 05/05/2024 11:04 pm
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OMG, I have just tried to reclaim £700 of VAT and customs duty incorrectly charged on an import. You fill in a form on the HMRC website and... POST it to HMRC. What the actual?? Who in their right mind designs these things? Non-tariff trade barrier loving morons. '**** business' Boris said. Obviously as an imperative.


 
Posted : 06/05/2024 10:53 am
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"We've always done it this way."


 
Posted : 06/05/2024 11:00 am
 Bear
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Pretty certain wine is imported in big bins and bottled locally as cheaper to transport, so we could use pint bottles in the UK, bloody well hope not though......


 
Posted : 06/05/2024 11:04 am
leffeboy and leffeboy reacted
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I would buy 500ml bottles of wine tbh, always seem to struggle to get through a 750ml these days

Lightweight.


 
Posted : 06/05/2024 11:13 am
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I’m enjoying a schadenfreude situation. We have one mate who voted for this shambles. Up to now he’s been quite muted, until that is he’s tried to buy something large from the eu.

It amazing how irked he became when he was informed by the seller that he might have to pay import duty, would have to pay VAT and a service charge imposed by the courier. Then when we pointed out that it wasn’t the invoice amount that determined the level of duty but the price of the first search result in the UK for a similar item he became livid.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 6:45 am
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TBH given that one of the biggest draws to Brexit was giving extra money to the NHS I’m surprised that more unhappiness isn’t occurring around the state of it.

When Jack swapped his cow for magic beans at least he got a result.

I’m not sure what type of fairy tale Brexit is turning into.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 7:39 am
Clover and Clover reacted
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Thinking about it it’s the pied piper 🙁


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 7:41 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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@hot_fiat

but the price of the first search result in the UK for a similar item he became livid.

Genuine question, is that really what customs do? Just Google a similar item rather than check invoice amount?

Thanks!


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 8:52 am
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If they expect an artificially low declared value, they must do some kind of comparison with real world values. How would you go about that without using a tool like Google? Normally though, the value declared would be used for the basis of both VAT & duty calcs.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 8:59 am
Poopscoop and Poopscoop reacted
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^^ Cheers for the clarification. I thought he meant that's what they did by default, rather than only if they think there is some skulduggery going on.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 9:13 am
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So you scour the internet for the best price, negotiate hard and get a great price just for HMRC to say - Should have bought it from Boris.com and twice the price so we will tax you as if you did. Great. I wonder if they use the same approach when reviewing Self Assessments?


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 1:24 pm
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If you've sourced at half price, you'll be fine. £1K+ items regularly coming through with sub £135 costs declared have to be dealt with somehow.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 1:28 pm
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Ok, I guess that does make sense. Let's hope they do apply the logic or at least let you appeal in a reasonable manner


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 1:45 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
 mert
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Oooooooooh, oooooooooooohhh, I've got a benefit!!!

Another whining muppet on one of the immigrants in sweden pages has (finally) been banned from reentering the country after spending years and years saying he doesn't have to fill in all the forms that that migration people said he had to fill in after brexit.

Went home at easter, wasn't allowed back in. Not allowed back in for a number of years now.

That's the third or fourth to fall.

All the more amusing as they seemed to spend an inordinate amount of time whining about how bad Sweden was/is and how the UK would be much better. Until they can't get back in.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 1:56 pm
oldnpastit, oldnick, Clover and 7 people reacted
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TBH given that one of the biggest draws to Brexit was giving extra money to the NHS I’m surprised that more unhappiness isn’t occurring around the state of it.

You underestimate - or rather perhaps, overestimate - the brexit brain.

The Great Bus Lie was one of the first to fall, it was literally the morning after the referendumb when Garage (IIRC) was on TV admitting that it wasn't true.  Then the brexit brains quickly rallied, the bus didn't read "we'll send the money to the NHS," it said "let's give it to the NHS".  There were no promises made, it was just a suggestion, the brexies knew this all along of course and how could the rest of us been so stupid?

You've got to hand it to them really, for all their faults they're slipperier than a greased otter.  Wearing slippers.  We think we're the smart ones but Leave.EU outmanoeuvred us at every turn.


 
Posted : 13/05/2024 2:09 pm
Clover, Del, Clover and 1 people reacted
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Benefit incoming - pigs will probably have an enhanced diet for a few months as border check IT systems fall over (what a surprise) and perishable food items sit in trailers.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/may/15/brexit-border-it-outages-delay-import-of-perishable-items-to-uk-by-up-to-20-hours


 
Posted : 15/05/2024 7:57 am
matt_outandabout, kelvin, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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^^^  does that also apply to EU citizens?


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 7:15 pm
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The LBC piece says nonEU only.


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 7:26 pm
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You are in the clear Alpin.......

"The EES applies to you if you are a non-EU national travelling for a short stay to a European country using the EES who either:

possesses a short-stay visa; or
does not need a visa to stay for a maximum of 90 days in any 180-day period.
Your travel document data and personal data will be collected, as well as your entry and exit dates, and will be registered electronically in the system. This procedure will facilitate your border crossing.

If you overstay the period allowed in the European countries using the EES, the system will identify you and record this information."


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 7:43 pm
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It's no different to scanning your passport and looking at the facial recognition screen when arriving back into the UK by air though? Unless I'm missing something?

https://metro.co.uk/2024/05/16/new-ees-etias-travel-rules-schengen-zone-explained-20797436/


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 8:10 pm
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You are in the clear Alpin…

Trees bien


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 9:55 pm
 kilo
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Unless I’m missing something?

Fingerprint required as well. Airports might be “easy” but I’d imagine any car ferry point of access is going to be a nightmare.


 
Posted : 21/05/2024 10:24 pm
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In the light of the election announcement if the expected wipeout happens, the benefit will be the removal of the Tory party as a significant part of the political landscape.


 
Posted : 25/05/2024 12:46 pm
edd and edd reacted
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Only to be replaced by Reform


 
Posted : 25/05/2024 12:53 pm
gecko76 and gecko76 reacted
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Reform will suffer the same fate if they continue down the path of Europhobia. I expect it to kill labour too as it's the gordian knot of British politics.


 
Posted : 25/05/2024 10:25 pm
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Sandwich
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In the light of the election announcement if the expected wipeout happens, the benefit will be the removal of the Tory party as a significant part of the political landscape.

As sure as the sun will rise tomorrow, there will always be a party that panders to greed and individualism as opposed to what is better for society as a whole. The name changes but there will always be a "Tory" party of some sort unfortunately.


 
Posted : 26/05/2024 4:06 am
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It's not even greed and individualism, for many it's being too ignorant to vote in ones own interests and spite. I've noted a trend in those around me:

Well-educated but modest income: centre left/socialist.

Educated well to do: centre right

Old money: right

Poorly educated, ignorant of how the world works, I'm all right Jack,  cops, miserable old ****s, xenophobic/racist, haterz, authoritarian... : Hard right (or hard left, amounts to the same thing).

I'd love to see the correlation between being hard right ( or hard left) and voting Brexit - which brings us back on topic.


 
Posted : 26/05/2024 6:48 am
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I’ve got £176 of  import duty that was incorrectly applied to my import back. Is that a benefit? I only had to spend an hour researching what to do, filling in the form online then printing it out and posting it to HMRC… hopefully the other £500 of incorrectly charged VAT will reappear when I do my VAT return.


 
Posted : 26/05/2024 7:29 am
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I’ve found a brexit benefit

Puffins

Since we left we’ve banned sand eel fishing, now those pesky Danish fishermen are challenging our right to do that with the EU’s support.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjew0eplpwpo.amp


 
Posted : 26/05/2024 9:20 am
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Yay. More issues to export and missing out on huge growth of online sales in the EU.
https://amp.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jun/05/uk-clothing-sales-eu-crash-brexit-red-tape-deters-exporters


 
Posted : 05/06/2024 8:57 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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*rolls eyes*

https://twitter.com/brexit_sham/status/1798484327686430975

(TBF, they would still have to show ID in Schengen).


 
Posted : 07/06/2024 2:45 pm
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Seems it's hard to find anyone who sees a tangible benefit:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cv22y0jvd4do.amp


 
Posted : 26/06/2024 7:20 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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British Chambers of Commerce on much needed closer ties...

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jun/26/uk-post-brexit-deal-bcc-eu


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 7:30 am
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From that article:

The comments from Haviland come as the BCC makes improving relations with the EU one of its key requests for the next government,

So the BBC now sees itself as a political lobby organisation whereas its royal charter is for media services.


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 7:46 am
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I'm really torn now.

Brexit is now clearly shown to be utterly sh*t for the UK. There's enough years and evidence of this.

Brexit is done. There's no return from here, certainly not a Brejoin which didn't cost even more.


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 7:49 am
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Ed, the BCC isn’t the BBC. Have another read of the article.

Matt, long slow boring expensive hard graft. Companies are doing it. The government need to get on with it.


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 7:51 am
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I fail to see why rejoining wouldn't very quickly pay for itself and then pay much more, matt.

Edit:

Ed, the BCC isn’t the BBC.

Ta, Kelvin. I did reread in part but not far enough back or with enough attention.


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 7:55 am
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Don't know if it has been mentioned but the best Brexit benefit seems to be the current demise of the tory party, seems the tory bad boys got their way with Brexit to placate them and then they still decided to cause havoc from the back benches resulting in the shambles they are in now (not worth Brexit but every cloud and all that).


 
Posted : 27/06/2024 9:29 am
Dickyboy, Del, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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Dyson continue to reduce their footprint in Britain (after James Dyson called for Brexit in the name of British manufacturing)...

FT : Dyson to cut a quarter of UK workforce


 
Posted : 09/07/2024 1:20 pm
joshvegas and joshvegas reacted
 kilo
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Dyson recently bought a €30m + estate in Ireland, obviously backing Britain post-brexit

And an update on a previously identified  benefit

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/09/uk-officials-fear-october-port-chaos-unless-eu-again-delays-biometric-plan


 
Posted : 09/07/2024 1:29 pm
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Another great Brexit benefit.

British pensioners to keep winter fuel allowance – if they live in EU

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/british-pensioners-to-keep-winter-fuel-allowance-if-they-live-in-eu/ar-AA1pwX2O

Expats living in the European Union plus Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Switzerland are guaranteed the allowance by the Brexit withdrawal agreement.


 
Posted : 28/08/2024 7:39 am
pondo, PhilO, Elbows and 3 people reacted
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Ah well the UKCA mark takes another  hit.

We have listened to the findings from the Independent Review of the Construction Products Testing Regime. This was clear that there is currently insufficient testing and certification capacity in the UK alone to provide the volume of conformity assessment that would be required were CE recognition to end.

https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-statements/detail/2024-09-02/hcws62


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 8:00 am
blokeuptheroad, matt_outandabout, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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I sometimes wonder what the few Brexiteers who were on the forum now think of the current sh!t show? Given how deluded some of them were I imagine that they think it’s going just swimmingly…..


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 10:04 am
supernova, pondo, matt_outandabout and 3 people reacted
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Two of my friends that voted leave recanted withing weeks

My cousin and aunt still think brexit is great.  They also think Johnson should not have been deposed, that Rees Mogg is a great statesman.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 10:18 am
supernova, matt_outandabout, hairyscary and 5 people reacted
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Well you can't argue with stupid, but it seems we have at least to engage with them.

It's been good to see Starmer's recent trips to Europe to maybe start ? who knows what. But I'll take a positive from that action.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 10:31 am
hightensionline, supernova, pondo and 13 people reacted
 bfw
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Without having to read the previous 24 pages, is there a list of plus points to Brexit?


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 4:10 pm
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Yes.

Mostly, it involves the EU27 getting shut of a whiny damp little archipelago with delusions of adequacy.

For us though, not so much.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 4:23 pm
hightensionline, peteza, supernova and 21 people reacted
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Without having to read the previous 24 pages, is there a list of plus points to Brexit?

I've dipped in and out of this thread without contribution before, but from what I've picked up so far - nope. Nobody's found anything of substance. A grand total of **** All, in essence.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 4:46 pm
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It’s been good to see Starmer’s recent trips to Europe to maybe start ? who knows what. But I’ll take a positive from that action.

A tiny positive. The EU has rules against other countries sneaking around trying to do side-deals with its members.

Starmer still poops his pants when anyone suggests he could lose support in more Brexity constituencies and sections of society.

In spite of all the evidence we're still in the territory of trying to save 'face' on behalf of people who voted for stupidity. Meh.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 4:46 pm
supernova, dudeofdoom, dudeofdoom and 1 people reacted
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I imagine that they think it’s going just swimmingly…..

Largely no, but the blame for that lies squarely at the feet of remainers, and those not fully committed to the cul… sorry, cause.

Apparently.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 4:50 pm
supernova, matt_outandabout, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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I sometimes wonder what the few Brexiteers who were on the forum now think of the current sh!t show? Given how deluded some of them were I imagine that they think it’s going just swimmingly…..

Doesn’t matter what they think as who pays any attention to ****ing dickheads anymore,


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 5:16 pm
supernova, pondo, anono and 7 people reacted
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It’s been good to see Starmer’s recent trips to Europe to maybe start ? who knows what. But I’ll take a positive from that action.

Warm words and gaslighting.  You may notice every time he has done this someone from the other country points out that side deals are illegal and that the withdrawal agreement will not be renegotiated.

Yes its good to show some goodwill and to create a warmer atmosphere.  What this will not do is make any material difference at all


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 6:37 pm
supernova, dudeofdoom, matt_outandabout and 3 people reacted
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Not every aspect of Franco-British relations is covered in the withdrawal agreement. I hope they discussed Ukraine, Europe's eastern border, cooperation on security, cyber security and anything else that can make a material diference.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 7:20 pm
johnhe, matt_outandabout, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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I was thinking of the huge economic losses from brexit to the UK.  Yes there might be a bit of room on those things and certainly warm words are welcome.  But frictionless trade would be a huge boon to the UK
We still have not implemented the checks on incoming goods we should have done a long time ago - we are in breach of the withdrawal agreement in several areas


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 7:48 pm
mattyfez, bluerob, FB-ATB and 7 people reacted
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Well, pretending that condemning Russia and helping Ukraine is a thawing of Brexit-driven tensions and not simply one thing all of us can agree on...

It's like saying the UK and EU are aligned on the desirability of the sun rising tomorrow. Wow!

Germany, RoI, whoever...

They have nothing to lose by saying "great" in response to any overtures from the UK. But it's actually "great, but... see all these other partners I already have one overarching agreement with...?"

Elephant. Room.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 7:58 pm
tjagain and tjagain reacted
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So the clear consensus is Brexit is sh1te. We all know that.

So the challenge is how to address this.....and pushing for growth is important (but not like Liz Truss thought). Suspect the UK has structural and cultural issues that are holding us back and we are under-performing vs our nation peers. This analysis is interesting, and clearly not just brexit....

But probably the quickest easiest way to push for growth is to rejoin the EU, and no d1cking around w side deals, just do it......pretending we can create the necessary economic change without rejoining is whistling

https://twitter.com/sam_bidwell/status/1832062722412015803

Tho just realising that this is from the Adam Smith Institute - does that devalue? tho they are not posting any solution.


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 9:53 pm
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Hi - I know I started this thread but I kind of lost interest after the first couple fo hundred replies failed to find and actual benefits.

Have I missed any since?


 
Posted : 08/09/2024 10:57 pm
pondo, cloudnine, nickingsley and 5 people reacted
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No, I don’t think so WCA. However, don’t forget, like all these things that we little people think are shit and are inconvenienced by, someone will have made a lot of money out of it.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 7:06 am
welshfarmer, silvine, matt_outandabout and 5 people reacted
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There are no benefits to the ordinary 99% of us who don't have enough cash to make lucrative one-way bets against our own economy - or to benefit from weakening legislation.

We should join ASAP. No referendum, no vote, unilaterally. Get it over and done with and move on.

But, due to the face-saving I mentioned above, politically - no one with any clout has the balls to do it.

So we're left in a position like the bunch of mates who've known each other since childhood. They still go out occasionally but it is getting less and less because a couple of them get pissed and act like idiots despite being in their 50s. No one actually tells the pissheads because, well they're mates plus no one wants to rock the boat...


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 7:51 am
supernova and supernova reacted
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Tho just realising that this is from the Adam Smith Institute – does that devalue? tho they are not posting any solution.

The chart misses out both the effects of the financial crash and COVID-19 with the predicted curve, so a bit worthless to be honest.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 7:54 am
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Hi – I know I started this thread but I kind of lost interest after the first couple fo hundred replies failed to find and actual benefits.

Have I missed any since?

No.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 8:44 am
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In spite of all the evidence we’re still in the territory of trying to save ‘face’ on behalf of people who voted for stupidity.

Unfortunately, 'face' is the life-blood of a democratic government. It shouldn't be, but it is. Any government that loses face loses power.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 10:09 am
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Any government that loses face loses power.

I would argue that the government loses face by having to pander to stupidity.

But, meh. We are where we are. Unless a government calls Brexit out for what it was/is, we're stuck with it.

I agree that we don't want to lose years of parliamentary time on this whilst there's loads of other structural things to fix.

But that's why I would just unilaterally announce that we are joining the EU, say that it is primarily an administrative problem now, let the civil servants deal with the nuts and bolts and only defer to the government for key yes/no questions.

<shrugs>


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 10:32 am
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So to save face the government condemns the UK to further economic woes and decline?

I agree that we don’t want to lose years of parliamentary time on this whilst there’s loads of other structural things to fix.

Until we rejoin then the fixes are beyond us


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 10:38 am
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So to save face the government condemns the UK to further economic woes and decline?

Yes. Starmer hasn't got the minerals for this, I'm afraid.

Until we rejoin then the fixes are beyond us

Not all of them. And there's plenty where a fix outside of the EU is still a step in the right direction.

This is precisely why I'd just start the joining process now, unilaterally, and outsource most of the work to the civil service.

<shrugs>


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 10:52 am
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I would argue that the government loses face by having to pander to stupidity.

It'll gain more votes from those who are stupid than it will lose from those who aren't. Because there are vastly more stupid people than intelligent ones.

Until we rejoin then the fixes are beyond us

No, they're not. Sure, there are many advantages to being in, but we can still fix things whilst we are out. The political climate and lack of political education in the UK is a MUCH bigger problem than being out of the EU.

Plus, rejoining is just not happening any time soon, so you need to get used to it. The fallout from the vote cost us years of frozen government which arguably led to the deadlock we are in now. Not being out - but the political crisis that it caused. Rejoining would cause another one, wether you like that idea or not.

"It's a simple fact" as you would say, TJ.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:01 am
bruk and bruk reacted
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Posted this link upthread, but I was looking at the whole twitter thread, not just the first tweet (but didn't make that clear), looking at comparison to similar economies, showing how far the UK has slipped in performance, and we have all slipped in standard of living etc.

And the point being if we want to raise living standards, and tax revenue to fix the broken country we are all living in, the only way has to be to rejoin

https://twitter.com/sam_bidwell/status/1832062722412015803


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:03 am
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Molgrips

Rejoin could be done in a year with political will

Where are we going to get the trade from to replace what is lost due to brexit?
How do we get the lost growth back?

Open your eyes man and stop letting yourself be gaslit


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:09 am
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Open your eyes man and stop letting yourself be gaslit

That's a bit unnecessarily confrontational.

I agree with you except the notion that nothing can be improved without (re)join. Some bits can. Nowhere near as much as could be sorted by a simple (re)join, but some.

But let's face it - Brexit was a mortal shock to anyone who assumed the UK electorate was intelligent, logical, open-minded etc. Decent politicians have been reeling ever since.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:16 am
geeh, Del, matt_outandabout and 7 people reacted
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Rejoin could be done in a year with political will

The amount of time it would take to rejoin seems to be increasing exponentially according to many on here.

By this time next year I fully expect the STW consensus to be that it will not be possible to rejoin the EU this century.

In two years it will not be possible to rejoin before the end of the millennia.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:18 am
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I can't remember if this has been covered before in this thread

https://twitter.com/TerraOrBust/status/1792984037063082283

He says that they are 'fully evidenced and demonstrably true' which is probably correct in that these things have happened and he has provided references. Many of them are debatably 'benefits' - the ability to create more plastic pollution without penalty for instance would not be considered beneficial by a majority of the UK public, I think. He also appears to be saying that the removal of trade barriers is a benefit when those barriers only appeared because we lost the protection of the EU agreements. There is also no attempt to weigh the value of the 'benefits' against the cost of the disbenefits. So on first glance it doesn't look very persuasive.

[edit] I see a previous list by the same author was discussed on page 20 [/edit]


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:30 am
Posts: 44146
Full Member
 

That’s a bit unnecessarily confrontational.

apologies.  I get so frustrated with this when folk repeat the gaslighting from labour as if its fact when its obvious nonsense

Nowhere near as much as could be sorted by a simple (re)join, but some.

I guess so but its like trying to climb a tree with one hand behind your back and your shoelaces tied together

I am also guessing some of you have not seen the devastation brexit has caused


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:40 am
Posts: 4022
Free Member
 

Well I just learnt from that list that apparently adding VAT to private school fees would not have been possible under EU law. Interesting if true.


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:47 am
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

Rejoin could be done in a year with political will

Even if you could rustle up a majority in a referendum to go back in, which I doubt you could. There's still a democratic deficit in asking folks to vote again on something that is already 'settled' and so recently. The EU themselves would be rightly wary unless both political parties are fully behind it (they're not) and an overwhelming majority of the public are clamouring for it. (again; they're not)


 
Posted : 09/09/2024 11:55 am
Page 12 / 19

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