People from Europe could still come and work hereExactly.
, they will just need to get a visa, that's all. We don't want to completely cut off immigration, you know. As much as it suits your argument.People from Europe could still come and work hereExactly.
, they will just need to get a visa, that's all. We don't want to completely cut off immigration, you know. As much as it suits your argument.what essential goods and services are only available from the EU?
would the EU not want to buy our essential goods and services?
or is it some miraculous one way street - we want everything of theirs and they dont want anything of ours?
Some on the Remain side have been in the EU for so long they don't seem to remember what things were like before we joined the EU or what it is like outside the EU.People from Europe could still come and work here, they will just need to get a visa, that's all. We don't want to completely cut off immigration, you know. As much as it suits your argument.
In what way?Nobody is saying it's a one way street, that's a gross over-simplification. Both the EU and the UK want to trade with each other. But the weight of trade is in the EU's favour if we want access to the single market.
People from Europe could still come and work here, they will just need to get a visa, that's all. We don't want to completely cut off immigration, you know. As much as it suits your argument.
In what way?
Why do we need European workers to work in the UK in low skilled jobs. What about all the UK unemployed people?To give you one example. Before EU free movement, food processing and packaging companies had to apply for a quota of European workers to work in the UK. It was a costly and convoluted process and the costs were passed onto UK consumers. If the UK went back to this system now, expect to see food prices rise.
That's a strange way of looking at it. Everybody else thinks that that makes it in OUR favour. They want to sell to us. We could always buy from the rest of the world. What is it that we desperately need from the EU and only the EU?As in we buy more from them than they do from us.

Why do we need European workers to work in the UK in low skilled jobs. What about all the UK unemployed people?
I agree with everything you said.I agree it would be good to get the unemployed into these jobs. I was listening to a prog on Radio 4 where the food manufacturers were saying that they use Polish, Latvian and Hungarian workers because they are willing to do the jobs and they do them well for a modest wage, that comparatively is a large wage compared to what they would earn in their native countries. The manufactures were saying that they would probably have to raise the wages to attract UK workers. But I do agree that there is an argument to tighten benefits for the long term unemployed where there are jobs available for them to do.
That's a strange way of looking at it. Everybody else thinks that that makes it in OUR favour. They want to sell to us. We could always buy from the rest of the world. What is it that we desperately need from the EU and only the EU?
when have I said that anything people in the EU say now should be relied on?
I've consistently said everything is subject to negotiations
if the EU insist that they want anybody in the EU to be able to move to the UK then they will have to accept they wont be able to sell their goods and services to us what is the logical reason for wanting people to be able to live in the UK? why should we have to accept up to 700m moving to the UK? I don't expect all of them will but why should we have to accept a lot of people moving here and expecting to be housed and treated in our hospitals and educated in our schools?
if the EU wants to trade with the USA or China will they insist that as part of the deal anybody from the EU could live in either country and get educated and housed?
I can't see any logical reason why they should.
I agree it would be good to get the unemployed into these jobs. I was listening to a prog on Radio 4 where the food manufacturers were saying that they use Polish, Latvian and Hungarian workers because they are willing to do the jobs and they do them well for a modest wage, that comparatively is a large wage compared to what they would earn in their native countries. The manufactures were saying that they would probably have to raise the wages to attract UK workers. But I do agree that there is an argument to tighten benefits for the long term unemployed where there are jobs available for them to do.
Buying goods and services is "hugely convoluted"? Why do companies use call centres in Asia when there's plenty of call centres nearer? There certainly seems an appetite to go down that route. I don't think you are giving businesses enough credit for being able to do relatively straightforward activities. If consumers want to buy cars from outside the EU rather than Germany they dont have to go hunting around for individual cars. A business will buy thousands of cars, ship them over and sell them to retailers. It might be a shocking prospect to you but plenty of businesses do this sort of thing all the tiume.You could look at sourcing all of those goods and services from elsewhere in the world, but that's a hugely convoluted process and would raise practicality and efficiency issues and likely extra costs for UK businesses. I doubt there's any appetite to go down that route.
This is a big problem. You should discuss based on reality rather than on something that supports your argument but is simply not true.I would hazard a guess you've mentioned something someone has said from the EU to support an argument even if it's not this one. But if you haven't then fair enough. I just don't like it when ppl cherry pick that's all.
As for the rest, well I asked the question about being part of the common market and its conditions. I began by asking the question, do we want to be part of it which you seem to have forgotten. Correct me if I'm wrong but the countries outside the EU that you've mentioned aren't part of the common market so those conditions of free movement aren't applicable on their trade deals. If we want to trade on a similar basis then fair enough but like I said, I was asking about wanting to be part of the common market.
I also dont want to get into this bollox about 700m coming over and using the NHS and flooding our schools. I never mentioned that and my point was addressing something else.
So why don't we trade on the same basis as these countries? That is what we are wanting to do.I would hazard a guess you've mentioned something someone has said from the EU to support an argument even if it's not this one. But if you haven't then fair enough. I just don't like it when ppl cherry pick that's all.
As for the rest, well I asked the question about being part of the common market and its conditions. I began by asking the question, do we want to be part of it which you seem to have forgotten. Correct me if I'm wrong but the countries outside the EU that you've mentioned aren't part of the common market so those conditions of free movement aren't applicable on their trade deals. If we want to trade on a similar basis then fair enough but like I said, I was asking about wanting to be part of the common market.
I also dont want to get into this bollox about 700m coming over and using the NHS and flooding our schools. I never mentioned that and my point was addressing something else.
So why don't we trade on the same basis as these countries? That is what we are wanting to do.

But that is what you were talking about. Free movement - you mentioned it above. I'm pointing out that there is absolutely no sense in expecting countries outside the EU to accept free movement. The EU seems to have an obsession with it and doesn't seem to care that it results in people from poorer countries moving to richer countries. What is the logic of encouraging that?I would hazard a guess you've mentioned something someone has said from the EU to support an argument even if it's not this one. But if you haven't then fair enough. I just don't like it when ppl cherry pick that's all.
As for the rest, well I asked the question about being part of the common market and its conditions. I began by asking the question, do we want to be part of it which you seem to have forgotten. Correct me if I'm wrong but the countries outside the EU that you've mentioned aren't part of the common market so those conditions of free movement aren't applicable on their trade deals. If we want to trade on a similar basis then fair enough but like I said, I was asking about wanting to be part of the common market.
I also dont want to get into this bollox about 700m coming over and using the NHS and flooding our schools. I never mentioned that and my point was addressing something else.