Leaving the EU

trex

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 15, 2011
7,703
2,671
Sturgeon: Independence poll 'highly likely' if UK leaves EU
the Pound (1.45USD) is also at its highest since January.

All down to Barak Obama.

The price for a 'remain' vote at the 23 June ballot dropped from 4/9 (69%) to 2/7 (77%) with Ladbrokes, while William Hill saw its odds shorten from 4/9 to 1/4 (80%). Matthew Shaddick, head of political betting at Ladbrokes, told IBTimes UK: "The odds for remain have fallen drastically in the last three or four days, at least some of that you can put down to Obama."
 

timidtom

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 19, 2009
757
175
Cheshire
GambiaGOES.blogspot.com
"I very much value British culture and identity - but to me its about liberal values, openness, tolerance and freedom, what's at the heart of Shakespeare or Donne etc. there's very few people I can imagine having less in common with than Nigel Farage and culturally living in the kind of Donald trumpdom he envisages would be more alien to me than relocating to Fiji."
(Borrowed from a previous post)

I think the arguments for and against leaving are clouded. Verifiable facts are quite scarce. They are mostly delivered by politicians who, sadly, have a delicate connection with truth. I don't see much wrong with the ECHR, saving it limits some excesses of 'free behaviour' some of the above mentioned politicians feel hampered by. Zero hour contracts are, perhaps, just a step away from slavery? Re-badging 'minimum wage' as 'living wage' shows what we're dealing with. Slavery must make economic sense to some capitalists. Would you buy a second-hand eBike from one of these people?
So, how will I vote?
'Always keep a hold of nurse
For fear of finding something worse ...'
 
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trex

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 15, 2011
7,703
2,671
..
Verifiable facts are quite scarce. They are mostly delivered by politicians who, sadly, have a delicate connection with truth..
I don't think that the availability of verifiable facts is the problem, if anything, we have too much facts. It's their extrapolation by politicians the problem. I don't mind a little bit of convenient 'remodelling' but listening to George and Boris, the two possible PMs after Brexit, their constant exageration causes me to despair of the future.
My favourite candidate for the next PM is now May.
 
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oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
I don't think that I have any fond memories of Empire.
We were Primary school kids, some had lost their fathers in the war, half the school building was missing because of the bombing.
My best friend was a German speaking Jew whose parents had got out before 1939, as was my Doctor.
But, I didn't know what a Jew was, he just didn't come to assembly prayers with the rest of us.
Empire was what grown ups talked about.
Much more important was whether the grocer's would soon have bananas. Cream was something that my Mother talked about, I had never seen it.
Pretty much the same as my experience, I remember Empire Day too, and getting a ticking off by the Teacher for failing to understand that the natives should feel honoured to be part of the "White man's burden" when I asked if they minded us being there.
He was not impressed when I asked if we had such a wonderful Empire, why were we dressed in hand me downs and patched clothes, and underfed?
It was because it cost a lot of money to run the Empire for the benefit of ungrateful foreigners.
Was the explanation....
Sounds a bit like complaints about the modern welfare bill, doesn't it?
As for Bananas, there was a special shipment around Xmas one year and pretty much every kid got one, I remember the first bite being disappointing until Father explained you had to remove the skin first...
 
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oldgroaner

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 15, 2015
23,461
32,613
80
"I very much value British culture and identity - but to me its about liberal values, openness, tolerance and freedom, what's at the heart of Shakespeare or Donne etc. there's very few people I can imagine having less in common with than Nigel Farage and culturally living in the kind of Donald trumpdom he envisages would be more alien to me than relocating to Fiji."
(Borrowed from a previous post)

I think the arguments for and against leaving are clouded. Verifiable facts are quite scarce. They are mostly delivered by politicians who, sadly, have a delicate connection with truth. I don't see much wrong with the ECHR, saving it limits some excesses of 'free behaviour' some of the above mentioned politicians feel hampered by. Zero hour contracts are, perhaps, just a step away from slavery? Re-badging 'minimum wage' as 'living wage' shows what we're dealing with. Slavery must make economic sense to some capitalists. Would you buy a second-hand eBike from one of these people?
So, how will I vote?
'Always keep a hold of nurse
For fear of finding something worse ...'
Interesting the Police have been raiding Hand car washes in several cities as there have been complaints of immigrants being used as slave labour!
 

timidtom

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 19, 2009
757
175
Cheshire
GambiaGOES.blogspot.com
I don't think that the availability of verifiable facts is the problem, if anything, we have too much facts. It's their extrapolation by politicians the problem. I don't mind a little bit of convenient 'remodelling' but listening to George and Boris, the two possible PMs after Brexit, their constant exageration causes me to despair of the future.
My favourite candidate for the next PM is now May.
You may well be right about the facts. My problem is sorting the chaff from the rest of the chaff. Perhaps we should select the next PM by lottery? My main worry is immigration? My family were immigrants and I don't think we've done much damage to our adopted country. My worry is that it may be disastrous to limit it. The suggestion that we admit, over a 20 year period, 3000 children? Why not leave the doors to Britain open? For heaven's sake these people want to come here. They want to work, they have skills and intelligence and determination. I cannot begin to understand the courage it must take to walk out of your front door, holding the hands of your wife/partner and children, taking only what you can carry on your back and walk into a future, in the belief that somehow you will find a better future. And to have that hope and courage and love die in the mud of the Calais Jungle, condemned by fat faced politicians of all creeds. I have worked in a third world country, governed by a dictator. I knew young men who have made such a journey and who have died in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.
 

Croxden

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 26, 2013
2,134
1,384
North Staffs
I usually go opposite of the politicians I dislike but so far, I need a third way.

Can anyone offer another choice?
 

Gubbins

Esteemed Pedelecer
I think the immigration card is being shown more by the In crowd, trying to make the outs seem like racists, when it apears that all they want is to control immigration, not stop it dead.
Does big business want to remain because leaving may herald an end to exploitable, profit boostable cheap labour?
 

trex

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 15, 2011
7,703
2,671
the migrant issue is very muddied. If you look at the right of abode afforded to all commonweath citizens, it was stopped in 1982 and could not stop their continued immigration. Despite being outside the EU, Switzerland have a lot more EU immigrants as a proportion than we do. Immigration has more to do with wages than anything else.
 
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flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,152
30,567
Does big business want to remain because leaving may herald an end to exploitable, profit boostable cheap labour?
No.

If that was their objective, they'd take the very profitable option of shifting the employment to Eastern Europe where wages are often even lower than our minimums.

This even applies to farming, where a number of English arable farmers have shifted to such as Romania and Bulgaria where land is dirt cheap and labour costs minimal.
.
 

Gubbins

Esteemed Pedelecer
When I was working, I was told by a manager that he had visited a new factory where they will only employ east europeans. He said they will work for minimum wage without wanting pay rises, if a machine breaks down they will go home and come back when its fixed even if its midnight, they are not bothered with the working time directive so will happily work 15 hours day or night without overtime premium or shift premium, and ended with you lot wouldn't do any of that!!
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,152
30,567
Some interesting statistics on the link below.

http://www.ukiperewash.co.uk/TheTruth.pdf
Those arguments are simplistic though. Of course the EU will trade with anyone if the price is right or the import is not readily available from elsewhere.

The UK doesn't have much to offer that fits either of these criteria.

The EU can manage very nicely without its tiny percentage of imports from us. We'd find it very difficult to replace our near 50% of exports to the EU with exports to other parts of the world. So in any negotiations with the EU we start at a disadvantage.
.
 
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six9giant

Pedelecer
Apr 16, 2016
73
10
66
Maryport, Cumbria
Not bullshit though, it's what we agreed to when we joined.

Of course we could be dishonourable and walk out, but that would only be injuring us since we'd be shutting down our EU export market without anything to replace it immediately.

Leaving would hurt a bit, but walking out abruptly would very severely hurt us in many ways, since not only would the EU punish us, the Americans would be very annoyed too. Life could be very uncomfortable with bad neighbours on both sides, not to mention the harm done to our international reputation for being trustworthy.
.
I voted in the referendum in the late 70's
The population voted for the common market!
Not The Union States of Europe
Not the Lisbon Treaty

We traded stronger before joining the common market and we can be strong again once more, the population are and will be strong again.
America is running scared! They invested Billions of money after 1945 into Germany to re build the infrastructure.
Threats and intimidation by both governments is turning people towards Brexit.

I'm British not European and will vote out to save our sovereignty
 
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Croxden

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 26, 2013
2,134
1,384
North Staffs
I abstained the first time and look where that got us.

Flecc said to emigrate, I feel at my age who would want me, there's not a lot of work in me these days.

I think the ostriches have the right idea.
 

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