Originally posted by GB9
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[Merged]Brexit stuff
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No Brexit today! Here's some...
"We'll get back to you once we've decided what you voted for" - David Davis“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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Ah poor DD, finally starting to understand just how difficult and complicated all this really is.Originally posted by darmstadt View PostNo Brexit today! Here's some...
"We'll get back to you once we've decided what you voted for" - David Davis
Brexit talks may be most complicated negotiation ever, says minister | Politics | The Guardian
I find this quite interesting..
In the face of warnings from countries such as the US and Japan about the impact on their companies investing in the UK, Davis said he would be going to businessmen to ask scientific questions, such as: “Can you please quantify this for me? Can you quantify the effect of a non-tariff barrier versus a tariff barrier? Which of this matters? Everyone will say their issues matter the most and I need to get some numbers on it.”...
So DD is admitting he does not actually have a clue what would be impact on UK business if we loose tariff free trade with the EU, yet the Brexiters were quite happy to say WTO based trading would be absolutely fine.
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If we end up with tariffs on things, like CPU's, we can just build our own, the British way!
Megaprocessor
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You talk as if it is some sort privilege for the UK to be permitted to trade with other countries. Does it occur to you that trade works both ways and that the UK is a net importer rather than exporter. It is a bit like "tax as a punishment" the prism you look at Brexit is as if the UK needs to be punished as if simply to prove people like you right.Originally posted by sirja View PostAh poor DD, finally starting to understand just how difficult and complicated all this really is.
Brexit talks may be most complicated negotiation ever, says minister | Politics | The Guardian
I find this quite interesting..
In the face of warnings from countries such as the US and Japan about the impact on their companies investing in the UK, Davis said he would be going to businessmen to ask scientific questions, such as: “Can you please quantify this for me? Can you quantify the effect of a non-tariff barrier versus a tariff barrier? Which of this matters? Everyone will say their issues matter the most and I need to get some numbers on it.”...
So DD is admitting he does not actually have a clue what would be impact on UK business if we loose tariff free trade with the EU, yet the Brexiters were quite happy to say WTO based trading would be absolutely fine.
Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyoneComment
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I've been waiting for months for it to penetrate your thick skull that the UK is a net EXPORTER of services which is 80% of our economy. At some point it may get through, but I wont be holding my breath.Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostYou talk as if it is some sort privilege for the UK to be permitted to trade with other countries. Does it occur to you that trade works both ways and that the UK is a net importer rather than exporter. It is a bit like "tax as a punishment" the prism you look at Brexit is as if the UK needs to be punished as if simply to prove people like you right.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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I think he's had enough of people saying it will be really bad but not actually stating why. What he wants is some hard facts e.g. if there is a 6% tariff on our goods to the EU then we will lose x orders and xy jobs will go. All we have to date are a few clueless tin hat muppets saying the sky will fall in and being proved wrong.Originally posted by sirja View PostAh poor DD, finally starting to understand just how difficult and complicated all this really is.
Brexit talks may be most complicated negotiation ever, says minister | Politics | The Guardian
I find this quite interesting..
In the face of warnings from countries such as the US and Japan about the impact on their companies investing in the UK, Davis said he would be going to businessmen to ask scientific questions, such as: “Can you please quantify this for me? Can you quantify the effect of a non-tariff barrier versus a tariff barrier? Which of this matters? Everyone will say their issues matter the most and I need to get some numbers on it.”...
So DD is admitting he does not actually have a clue what would be impact on UK business if we loose tariff free trade with the EU, yet the Brexiters were quite happy to say WTO based trading would be absolutely fine.
It would be nice if the Remnants could come up with something meaningful for once. And truthful, although that's where they struggle.Comment
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Once again you spout the usual Brexiter nonsense. Where have I said anything about the UK needing to be punished? The problem with so many of your Brexit lunatics is that your are totally blind to FACTS. I deal in facts not emotions. The FACT is it will be extremely complicated for the UK to extracted itself from the EU and stand on it's own as an independent trading nation again. Of course it will do it, it has to as that's what the people have voted for, but it's going to be a LOT more painful and complicated than the simplistic nonsense people like you and the other Brexit brainless fringe have been spouting.Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostYou talk as if it is some sort privilege for the UK to be permitted to trade with other countries. Does it occur to you that trade works both ways and that the UK is a net importer rather than exporter. It is a bit like "tax as a punishment" the prism you look at Brexit is as if the UK needs to be punished as if simply to prove people like you right.
How can you not be at least just a bit worried, when a senior Brexiter like DD, is only now asking business what would be the effects of loosing non-tariff trade? Like really dude? You never thought to ask that of business before the vote.
I leave you with this little extract from Richard North. You and your fellow 'Patriots' really should check out his website. He's about the only person talking any sense at the moment, but somehow I get the feeling that fact based write ups are not really your thing.
...If there is one thing on which more clued-up observers agree – as distinct from that strange new "lunatic fringe" alliance between too many senior Tories and Jeremy Corbyn – it is that, on leaving the EU, we must nevertheless remain in the Single Market.
In fact, leaving it would be far more disastrous than is generally realised, because one of the countless technicalities to which the lunatic fringe are oblivious is that in recent years there has been a revolution in the way international trade is organised.
Since the major disruption to trade caused by 9/11, a wholly new system has been emerging, under the auspices of the World Customs Organisation, designed both to improve security and to facilitate global trade.
To prevent crippling delays, cross-border traders sign up to become "Authorised Economic Operators" (AEOs). This enables them among other things to file all their necessary documentation electronically in advance. It also allows for "mutual recognition" between customs authorities, so that goods can simply be waved through at their destinations, instead of causing 20-mile tailbacks while they are inspected.
But Britain is only part of this global system by virtue of its membership of the EU, which as in all other trade matters, signed the agreements on our behalf. This was why that report from the Japanese foreign ministry warned that we cannot afford to drop out of the single market. ...Comment
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Import our way to prosperity, yeah baby!Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostYou talk as if it is some sort privilege for the UK to be permitted to trade with other countries. Does it occur to you that trade works both ways and that the UK is a net importer rather than exporter. It is a bit like "tax as a punishment" the prism you look at Brexit is as if the UK needs to be punished as if simply to prove people like you right.
"Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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I suspect that the trade in goods is the least of our worries.
Trade will continue after tariffs, especially if the minimum wage is abolished and companies can lower wages to compensate (not what Brexiters voted for but hey ho, that's reality).
Or there'll be a reduction of trade and corresponding rise in unemployment.
But of course trade in goods won't cease completely.
It's services (especially financial) and inward investment, in particular, where the game-changing risk lies.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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