Where do you sit with regards the current Brexit dilemma? Looking at what Carney has said- it’s better for the U.K. to take what’s on offer. Or is it?
Except that’s not part of the deal and the EU aren’t prepared to agree it is or will be.The only amendment to TMs deal I would make is the removal of the backstop!
I respect your views and agree with some and disagree with others. What you fail to address is the fact that the people have already voted to leave. For me democracy dictates we leave.I would have voted Remain but as I was off the Electoral Register at the time (wandering around the UK living on board the motorhome) I couldn't vote. So, my opinion is that of a remainer and of someone who has lived and worked in Europe for fourteen years and loved it.
The first thing is that I can't tolerate is that my freedom of movement has been restricted, nay blocked. I can understand that some people are frightened of foreigners and so voted to leave but that's their business if they wanted to hide under their (contintental) quilts but I don't like the fact that I can't go and live abroad again without having a skilled job. Ideally I would have gone out there to live and work non-skilled work but now I can't.
There are major issues with pulling out and, for what? The control of borders we always had but it was never enforced. Are those who want to stop immigration concerned about too many Danes and Swedes or are they confusing EU immigration, which has never been a problem, with immigration from outsided the EU?
The right wing press hasn't helped by lumping immigrants with refugees. There's two wars going on on the edge of Europe and which we have a hand in: our munitions and even if this weren't so then we have a duty as a civilised nation to take in refugees.
Then that brings us to Brexit. We hear that the EU isn't democratic and, yet, it's more democratic than the UK. We 't have a series of new governments stuffing the upper house with bodies and now it's got out of hand. I wish that we had the US model when there are two senators per state: we should have two per county and also we ought to stop pissing around gerrymandering to stop 'the other lot' getting seats.
The EU is more open than our government. Look at what' sgoing on now: we've had to have had two Humble Addresses to get information from the Government and, still, the government is refusing to publish the legal statement.
We've got a thriving music and film industry. London has one of the world's best post-production facilities in the world and there's concern that data can't be sent to and from Europe because of copyright infringements.
Then there's touring musicians. Good luck organising a tour these days into Europe I have musicians (not to be confused with DJs) as close friends and they're worried massively about how things are going as they won't be able to work as easily.
Lorries. Christ what a mess. We have a fleet of lorries going to and fro over the Channel. When we drop out of Europe our quota of permits is going to be only 5% of what we need to move stuff overseas. So what was once a farmer filling a container, with the help of Polish and Rumanian labour, getting it onto a back of a lorry at 10pm, driving to Dover, over the Channel and unpacking at Brussels at four in the morning local time is going to change. There's no lorry that can go overseas so what will happen? Well, the container may be filled a lot slower and so the food is leaving his farm in not a fresh state. The lorry will have to go to somewhere like Tilbury where it's unloaded and sits by the dockside. Then the container is loaded onto a ship which may take a day or two and then finally sets sail to Rotterdam or Antwerp. It then is unloaded and has to clear customs and then is finally released for a local lorry to take it to market. Five or six days later.
We have lots of industries here such as the car assembly plant in Sunderland and Airbus in North Wales. The logistics are relying on Just In Time and this isn't going to happen. Land Rover and Jaguar are looking to move their assembly to eastern Europe as are the other car manufacturers. Well, we still have a British motor industry, don't we? Well, yes. The biggest British car manufacturer is Morgan and it makes cars from wood!
Then there's the banking and finance industry. London keeps the lights on. Frankfurt has been trying to get the British financial centre for decades, ever since the 80s in particular. People don't like the bankers. That's fair enough but to expel them from the country and to remove most of the GDP in one fell swoop is ridiculous. London has, or had, the world's largest financial centre. Where it wasn't the top in one thing it was the second: New York, for example, has the biggest stock market, Chigago had the futures market. London has the insurance and the re-insurance market. And the list goes on: where London is the leader it's the second leader and it's all happening here in London and this is going to go overseas next year.
Already the banks are talking about moving 800 BILLION pounds over to Frankfurt. That's a **** load of assets to lose.
What else? Well, then there's Northern Ireland. I can remember working in a place in the 70s which was bombed and I don't want to go through all that again. There's Galileo as well that's gone and needs to be replaced.
In fact there's a little to be shouting about with this mess. We have one new trade agreement in place: we have promised to take Chile's excess avacado crop. So that's Islington saved then.
What should have happened is that when the news of the vote came out the Government should have said "Hang on, we have a lot to sort out" and then rebuilt the country. Industry should have been restarted so we have things to sell. We should have got a team of trade delegates for each of the 220+ plus countries out there out negotiating treaties. We have TWENTY trade officials and that's it.
It's been a right balls up and all because of what? People being scared of non-EU immigrants who, as a rule, pay their taxes and add to the economy and do work that they wouldn't do themselves.
And most of the people who have voted out spout the same slogans: Take Control Of Our Borders (we had that anyway), Immigration (there's hardly a problem with the Dutch), Democracy (well, the EU and the ECJ is certainly better than our Establishment) and what we have left is a nasty divided country.
I have now moved to Scotland and I am happy to be here because when I go south of the Border it's just unpleasant. I can see another Independence vote happening soon here. It's a mess and a total shame.
Ah, yes. The people have spoken and must never be allowed to speak again.I respect your views and agree with some and disagree with others. What you fail to address is the fact that the people have already voted to leave. For me democracy dictates we leave.