If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Methinks the lady doth protest too much.
Brexit won, Remain lost, we have left the EU. Why do people not get this?
If you REALLY want to, try to justify rejoining, but-
A) the price will be steep.
B) there may not be too much support for paying that price
C they might just say "Non" anyway
Me, I'm bored, as I suspect others are, with rehashing all the old arguments.
Brexit won, Remain lost, we have left the EU. Why do people not get this?
If you REALLY want to, try to justify rejoining, but-
A) the price will be steep.
B) there may not be too much support for paying that price
C they might just say "Non" anyway
Me, I'm bored, as I suspect others are, with rehashing all the old arguments.
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- mangocrazy
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
If it was a one-off cost for leaving, maybe we could make our peace. But it wasn't - it's the gift that keeps on giving, costing the British economy more every day. Do you enjoy throwing money away every day?
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- Mr Moofo
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Low paid jobs being filled by migrant workers were underpinning the UK economy - field in Lincs, Amazon, the hospitality trade. Folks were much happier when underpaid labour was keeping there Costas cheap
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Good luck with the 'British public supporting farmers' theme. A very large proportion are too busy struggling to pay their rent for the small box they live in, energy bills and rising food bills to give too much thought to farmer Giles not making enough profit while living in his £2 million farmhouse*.
The British public had the chance to support farmers back in 2016, but chose not to. Or maybe they thought that higher overheads and lower subsidies were a recipe for success?
The British public had the chance to support farmers back in 2016, but chose not to. Or maybe they thought that higher overheads and lower subsidies were a recipe for success?
*Personally I think it's appalling the way farmers have been treated in the UK, but unlike many, I'm not struggling to make ends meet.So-called ‘direct payments’ from the EU based on land area made up 60% of farm net income before Brexit but have been slashed by at least 35%, with more cuts to follow.
- Horse
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Many of those things were developing before Brexit. The driver shortage was across all of Europe, removing drivers just improved the situation elsewhere. There's a finite number of drivers.
Similarly with hospitality, there was already a shortage of staff. With Covid, many returned to their original countries and haven't come back.
UK holidays? Big covid effect there, people not travelling. With prices ramped up by UK providers, that's likely to level out again.
There may well be plenty more jobs available. But are there enough suitable people to fill them all?
I don't remember 'prices will rise' being put forward as a plus point for Brexit.
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- DefTrap
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
"Brexit will be great for coffee shop workers and the odd artic driver". They should have written that on a bus. It's a golden age for the economy.
- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
The UK has been living on borrowed time for years, propped up by cheap imported labour. Originally it was from the empire, then from the EU. It was never going to last, the Polish plumbers were long gone back to Poland as the Polish economy improved, the last crop of Lithuanians and Latvians were just waiting for their economies to improve too. The only imported labour that are committed t staying are the criminal gangs who see the UK as a happy hunting ground with rich pickings and lax law enforcement. Brexit just crystalized the issue.
We need a reset. We need to become a high wage, high tech, high achievement economy, with low levels of unemployment and even lower levels of the unemployable. The UK benefit system is not just broken, it is arse about face. Unemployment benefits should be time limited, disability benefits should be phased out almost entirely, most 'disabled' people are perfectly capable of work, we just need to fit the work to what they CAN do, rather than focus on what they can't do. Sickness benefits need radical overhaul too, some tough love is needed. Schools need a similar shake up, far too many kids from poor families see little point in education, so they finish up as poor adults and then have poor kids.
Will this be easy, no.
Will this be quick, no.
Will this be painful, yes.
Will this happen, dunno, but Brexit provides an opportunity. Let's not waste it.
We need a reset. We need to become a high wage, high tech, high achievement economy, with low levels of unemployment and even lower levels of the unemployable. The UK benefit system is not just broken, it is arse about face. Unemployment benefits should be time limited, disability benefits should be phased out almost entirely, most 'disabled' people are perfectly capable of work, we just need to fit the work to what they CAN do, rather than focus on what they can't do. Sickness benefits need radical overhaul too, some tough love is needed. Schools need a similar shake up, far too many kids from poor families see little point in education, so they finish up as poor adults and then have poor kids.
Will this be easy, no.
Will this be quick, no.
Will this be painful, yes.
Will this happen, dunno, but Brexit provides an opportunity. Let's not waste it.
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Yeah but the thing about high wages is that it pushes the cost up of supporting that, so the product becomes more expensive, then inflation rises to account for it, then those who wanted the higher wages all of a sudden aren't liking that everything is more expensive as a result of thier services becoming more expensive.....a vicious circle.
- Yambo
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
You missed a a bit.
Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 12:24 pm
Will this be easy, no.
Will this be quick, no.
Will this be painful, yes.
Do we have the politicians (of any colour) around that are capable of implementing these ideals? No
Will this happen? Not in my lifetime.
- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
I have a suspicion you may be right. I had hopes the current lot might rise to the challenge, but recent events do not support that view.Yambo wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 12:48 pm You missed a a bit.
Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 12:24 pm
Will this be easy, no.
Will this be quick, no.
Will this be painful, yes.
Do we have the politicians (of any colour) around that are capable of implementing these ideals? No
Will this happen? Not in my lifetime.
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- Horse
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
By the sounds of your list, Brexit is irrelevant, both to the issues and potential fixes.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 12:24 pm The UK has been living on borrowed time for years ...
We need to become a high wage, high tech, high achievement economy, with low levels of unemployment and even lower levels of the unemployable.
benefit system
Unemployment benefits
disability benefits
Sickness benefits
Schools
Will this be easy, no.
Will this be quick, no.
Will this be painful, yes.
Will this happen, dunno, but Brexit provides an opportunity. Let's not waste it.
I doubt whether any politicians, of any flavour, could achieve any meaningful changes.
Even bland can be a type of character
- Horse
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Not yet, no. Thought I'd see what reception it got here before venturing further.
Of course, all of that further deterioration as a result of Brexit was completely unpredictable.
Even bland can be a type of character
- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Brexit just brought forward the issues that would have happened anyway. Unless of course we could continue to find sources of cheaper and cheaper labour. Perhaps Syria and Iran would have joined the EU, that would have kept it going for a few years.
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- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Cometh the hour, cometh the man.
We have an opportunity to change, we may, or may not grasp it.
If we don't the situation will get worse, new politicians (and perhaps new parties) will arise, and new opportunities will arise. And new problems too.
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- irie
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
The endless nostalgia.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Thu Mar 02, 2023 10:59 pm Me, I'm bored, as I suspect others are, with rehashing all the old arguments.
"Truth does not change because it is, or is not, believed by a majority of the people." - Giordano Bruno
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
I argument herePotter wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 2:18 pm Well, just on a single note, membership of the EU has been so awesome for the UK that UK farms are now only financially viable by employing foreign workers and subsidising their revenue via EU grants.
FWIW I voted Remain because it suited me personally, but I think the gist of leaving was to take the pain and at some point be able to stand unassisted.
Or spend the next decade arguing about who's the dickhead
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
I'm getting notes of bitterness and sour grapes from the brexiteers now.
Green shoots of change getting you worried?
Green shoots of change getting you worried?
- Cousin Jack
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Sadness, perhaps, for wasted opportunities, but no bitterness here.demographic wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 6:49 pm I'm getting notes of bitterness and sour grapes from the brexiteers now.
Green shoots of change getting you worried?
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 7:06 pmSadness, perhaps, for wasted opportunities, but no bitterness here.demographic wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 6:49 pm I'm getting notes of bitterness and sour grapes from the brexiteers now.
Green shoots of change getting you worried?
Aye, right.
- Count Steer
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Re: If we were to rejoin the EU tomorrow, what benefits would you miss most about Brexit?
It will be a cold day in hell before the ones that took the Brexit maggot, hook line and sinker, even contemplate, never mind admit, that they bought (and tried very hard to re-sell in a very aggressive way) a complete pup. They come up with reasons that were never in the debate, talk about a long term project, forget how abusive they were, ask us to stop talking about it and that we have to dig in and help make it work and they're the ones that thought, lo! 'taking back control' meant giving it to a competent authoritydemographic wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 6:49 pm I'm getting notes of bitterness and sour grapes from the brexiteers now.
Green shoots of change getting you worried?
The day that one of them on here considers, even vaguely, that they made a mistake and screwed us all up then, maybe, we can stop pointing and laughing at the ridiculous wriggling, posturing and whataboutery that seems to be the order of the day,
Until then, you won...get over it.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire