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Previously on "The ship is sinking. The rats are leaving..."
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostThese arguments are academic now. Article 50 has been delayed and the choice is Brino or more Brino. Theresa May read the riot act to the Brexiteers on Sunday. She is not stepping down, and there will not be a "real Brexit".
One can only congratulate the EU for a job well done. From an incredibly weak position they have managed against all odds to get what is essentially a brilliant deal for the EU.
Even if you are against the EU this achievement needs to be acknowledged.
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These arguments are academic now. Article 50 has been delayed and the choice is Brino or more Brino. Theresa May read the riot act to the Brexiteers on Sunday. She is not stepping down, and there will not be a "real Brexit".
One can only congratulate the EU for a job well done. From an incredibly weak position they have managed against all odds to get what is essentially a brilliant deal for the EU.
Even if you are against the EU this achievement needs to be acknowledged.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostYes. The unity of the EU soon crumbled.
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Originally posted by RetSet View PostJean-Claude Juncker 'doubts EU will remain united during Brexit talks', as he says he will not seek second term
Jean-Claude Juncker 'doubts EU will remain united during Brexit talks', as he says he will not seek second term
The reason I voted out is because I consider the EU is a failing project and we're better off in the lifeboats than staying on the ship as it turns turtle...
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostNot so sure. People vote blue or red. The mainstream parties differ little. People will not vote for what the believe because defeat is known. So instead vote down the party you don't want has become the norm. In this type of democracy change is very much at the back of the queue. A good reason, in part, why major infrastructure projects never get off the ground, so to speak.
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Britain a nation of swing voters as age of tribal politics comes to an end | The Independent
Almost one in four people switched their allegiance between the 2010 and 2015 elections – the highest proportion on record and three times as many as 50 years ago – according to fresh research from the British Election Study (BES).
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The ship is sinking. The rats are leaving...
Originally posted by scooterscot View PostSo what if it isn't?
The EU is only 40 years old. Lets fix it. Lets not run away. By comparison the UK is 300 years old, what's our excuse? Back in the day before 1832 only landlords who reached a certain waste size were allowed to vote. And then it took an age and a half before woman had the same right. Are we inpatient, resentful, or perhaps hate it when others succeed where we have failed?
If Germany and France et al give up their privileged extras and have totally the same deal as the rest then maybe, maybe there is hope for the EU project.
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/www.cit...?client=safariLast edited by PurpleGorilla; 12 February 2017, 15:44.
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostExactly, the UK is a leading contributor. But that contribution will go up in smoke with Mayhem in charge. The integration of EU traffic control is an EU initiative with many members.
Used to work in Swanwick and West Drayton back in the day and again in 05/06 was it... then hoping over to the continent in pursuit of 'single European sky project'. The money that has already been poured into that endeavour... It is one project I recall that is dependent upon free movement more than others. I don't see how it can continue in a meaningful manner without FoM. It needs efficiency to work.
So a Tier 1 migrant visa is unable to solve the issue working between MDCs with good education & criminal records yet we can get 100s of thousands of Indians with degrees off the back of a Cereal packet from a country renowned for corruption in public office in key positions throughout the UK? A visa waiver system like the USA for employees that travel less.
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Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View PostI thought long and hard whether the EU would/could change with the UK on the inside. After Cameron's failed renegotiation combined with weak handling of the migrant crisis and debt crisis - all of which had great opportunities for reform - I came to the conclusion that the EU is incapable of reforming.
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostHe's a presumptuous little bugger isn't he. His snout is deeper in the trough than most, such that even his fellow troughers (MEPs) probably wouldn't have wanted him back for a second term anyway.
(Cue the remoaner trolls...)
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Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View PostThere is plenty wrong with our government, and democracy in the UK. But it is OUR democracy and OUR government. They are accountable. The EU is not!
The EU is only 40 years old. Lets fix it. Lets not run away. By comparison the UK is 300 years old, what's our excuse? Back in the day before 1832 only landlords who reached a certain waste size were allowed to vote. And then it took an age and a half before woman had the same right. Are we inpatient, resentful, or perhaps hate it when others succeed where we have failed?
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostNot so sure. People vote blue or red. The mainstream parties differ little. People will not vote for what the believe because defeat is known. So instead vote down the party you don't want has become the norm. In this type of democracy change is very much at the back of the queue. A good reason, in part, why major infrastructure projects never get off the ground, so to speak.
Since Scotland denounced labour a number of major infrastructure projects have got underway with the budget they're afforded.
In the time HS2 has been discussed a new Boarders railway has been built as well as a new bridge crossing the Firth of Forth. Scottish transport projects will cost £7.5bn over 30 years - BBC News
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Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View PostYes, but we can hold our ministers to account through a general election.
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Since Scotland denounced labour a number of major infrastructure projects have got underway with the budget they're afforded.
In the time HS2 has been discussed a new Boarders railway has been built as well as a new bridge crossing the Firth of Forth. Scottish transport projects will cost £7.5bn over 30 years - BBC News
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