Originally posted by Yorkie62
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Reply to: The Official EU results thread
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Previously on "The Official EU results thread"
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Originally posted by TwoWolves View PostI think it's high time that people started to admit that all difficult decisions are divisive, that's the nature of life. We should relish the debate and try and argue more constructively.
Seriously, I agre with you. What would Maggie do?
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostI am not sure anything will heal the divide in the country.
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Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostSo the EU will be happy with a flood of chlorinated chickens flowing over the Irish border and into the EU. I expected the rest of the world to be queuing up to have a trade deal with the UK given the open border between the UK and the EU post Brexit.
Several countries already have trade deals in place with the EU:
Negotiations and agreements - Trade - European Commission
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostAnother well thought out contribution from our anti-Semitic turd across the water.
Perhaps a few days in your safe space might help you.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostTo call Yorkie a liar is to imply that his falsehoods are deliberate. It's at least as likely that his cognitive abilities are too weak to establish in his mind what is true and what is false.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostAbsolutely nothing, in my eyes.
Freedom of movement of people, goods and services continues.
Brain the size of a planet and I still have to communicate with morons
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostSo you immediately change your tune from "You said it" to "You are implying"
I neither said it nor implied it.
If you support a hard Brexit, with a solution to the Irish border, that's something.
If you support a hard Brexit, with no solution to the Irish border, that's something else.
Do you spot the difference?
You can't provide a suggestion even? Not an inkling from that massive brain of yours? You don't need to have an agreement to come up with a solution. In most grown up discussions, several solutions get proposed and then one is chosen, or several are combined into one, based on agreement that it is the preferred solution.
Again, repeating a lie does not make it true. Stop repeating the lie.
Correct. From the time of the Belfast Agreement until Brexit, an agreement has been in place. Following the Brexit referendum, there is an uncertainty about what the UK's decision to leave the EU means, and since it is the UK's decision, part of the expectation would be that the UK would come up with suggestions, or are you happy for the EU to dictate to the UK what it should do?
Incorrect. The two sides are the UK and Ireland. Not the UK and EU.
Anyone can provide a solution. Whether that solution is viable is a different question. To be unable to event contemplate thinking about a solution shows your true colours.
Again with your repeating of lies.
Stop making up lies.
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Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostYou said it yourself in post #111Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostYou are implying that one must lead to the other.
I neither said it nor implied it.
If you support a hard Brexit, with a solution to the Irish border, that's something.
If you support a hard Brexit, with no solution to the Irish border, that's something else.
Do you spot the difference?
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostI cannot provide a solution to the Irish border. In doing so I would have to get agreement with the EU and UK that it is acceptable.
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View Postyou seem to think that YOU are by dictating a hard brexit means a no solution to the border.
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostON any and every border that exists between two trading nations (or entities) BOTH sides of that border must come to an agreement as to what works and what doesn't, what tariffs exist and what is tariff free.
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostThere are 2 sides on the Irish border, the UK (parliament) and the EU.
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostOnly these two entities can provide that solution. For anyone else to claim they can suggest otherwise is spouting b*ll*cks,
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View Postand that includes claims that a hard brexit will lead to no border solution.
Stop making up lies.
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostSo you do accept the 2016 result then.
However I believe Westminster has stopped Brexit. ~500 MPs voted to trigger A50. 29th March the UK should have left.
For that reason, I now trust Brussels rather than Westminster.
The Brexiteers have screwed up Brexit and are now trying to pass the blame. That's why in the end it will fail, not because of remoaners, but because of their own incompetence and intra-factional fighting.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostPlease provide the quote where I said "a hard brexit had NO solution to the Irish border."
Please provide evidence that I have changed my mind. I've even quoted myself, since you are well known for not understanding how to quote people (did you ever check your personal transcript of what Andrew Marr said compared to the reality of what he actually said?)
So you've changed your mind, eh? You want there to be an agreement that will satisfy the UK's desire to leave the EU and the related requirements around borders - something that 17.4 million people in the UK voted for, but while you voted for it, you're wanting someone else to come up with ideas.
Originally posted by WTFH View PostIf you support a hard Brexit, with no solution to the Irish border, ...
ON any and every border that exists between two trading nations (or entities) BOTH sides of that border must come to an agreement as to what works and what doesn't, what tariffs exist and what is tariff free. There are 2 sides on the Irish border, the UK (parliament) and the EU. Both of these two trading entities must agree on what the Irish border will look like in the future. Only these two entities can provide that solution. For anyone else to claim they can suggest otherwise is spouting b*ll*cks, and that includes claims that a hard brexit will lead to no border solution.
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