Am I the only one who doesn't understand this post?Seem to be missing the real question here: are the planes being sold below cost? That in turn raises the spectre of manufacturing in JC’s ‘modern’ GB with state-owned utilities and government controlled investment banks. Not so sure we will find too many customers for the big-ticket items.
The second sentence seems unconnected with the first and rather incredibly, brings either Jesus Christ or Jeremy Corbyn into the strange mish-mash with which the poster presents the readers.
By not starting sentences using the normal rules of grammar, (and I'm no expert), I have a difficulty pinning down, for example in sentence 1, whether the author refers to we, meaning we readers, as if to suggest we are all incapable of grasping the thread or perhaps it is he confessing that he doesn't understand....I'm not sure what.
Neither do I understand the point about a 'GB with state-owned utilities and government controlled investment banks'. Those things already exist in the UK - sadly though, it is other states which own large chunks of our utilities. Equally, there still exists the National Savings and Investment entity, formerly known by a couple of other names at various times, which does take its orders direct from government from time to time (pensioner bonds a la George Osborne's directive).
As for the last part,
I struggle to imagine what we will offering to overseas buyers after 'Brexit' that merits the term, 'big ticket'. I'd guess though it won't be anything made of steel or anything with wheels attached. Perhaps James Dyson will make a greater success of his planned electric car than Clive Sinclair did? At least, the country makes a fortune in tax from Dyson's vacuum cleaners and he employs a whole army of workers to keep up production of his expensive models......oh wait!Not so sure we will find too many customers for the big-ticket items
Tom