Brexit: A change of heart?? |
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Chaser
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 18 2018 Location: Nottingham Status: Offline Points: 1202 |
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So, we're beating America 9 - 7? Excellent!
But how much time is there left in the game?
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Songs cast a light on you
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micky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46833 |
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weeks.. months...
though hahaha... I think that score is a bit more lopsided than that..
Trump is a temporary problem we have...his successor will clean up his messes as Clinton did.. as Obama did...and his supporters a distinct minority in this country... and Trump has done much to drive the middle away from Trump and the politics of his supporters.. as I've said.. we here are on the cusp of a progressive revolution akin to what Reagan ushered in nearly 40 years ago which. I did see an interesting poll in which nearly 1 in 3 millinials self identify as progressives.. socialists. It is about time this country stopped worshiping the rich and plurocrats and greasing their way through the government.. and start takiing back this country and rebuilding our nearly destroyed middle class and provide real opportnity.. education and economic to the lower classes yours is an existential problem. There really is no way out is there short of admitting this was one huge mistake and revoking Art. 50 and suffering the political and social consequences but avoiding the economic ones which is what is going to hurt and hurt badly. |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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The Dark Elf
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 01 2011 Location: Michigan Status: Offline Points: 13063 |
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With the U.S. political landscape turned to a muddy quagmire, I've had little time to concentrate on Brexit news; however, I thought you Brits would appreciate a bit of humor (albeit, Andy Serkis can be downright ominous sometimes)....
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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology... |
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Chaser
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 18 2018 Location: Nottingham Status: Offline Points: 1202 |
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Love the video TDE and you know we Brits love a bit of humour, especially dark humour in these dark days.
The thing is that there's enough dark humour in real events at the moment, without having to turn to the comedians. I haven't posted on this thread for a while, as I thought it was maybe time to give Brexit a break, but maybe it's time to open the lid on the Brexit box once again to peek at the wonders inside.... So, this week, we had the bizarre spectacle of seeing the Prime Minister, Theresa May, having told us that her deal was the only deal in town, telling us that actually it wasn't the only deal in town and then promptly voting against her own deal. The EU said that the UK could not cherry pick, but parliament wants cherries, so they decided to vote for cherries anyway, and parliament cheered to the rafters when the vote came back for lots of cherries and lots of cake. Now Theresa has been told to go back to Brussels and fetch the cake and the cherries. Meanwhile, as "Project Fear" or "Project Reality", depending on your point of view, reached fever pitch, we learned that, in the event of a "no deal" Brexit, the UK will see "putrefying piles of waste", "plagues of rats", "empty shop shelves", "food shortages", "riots on the streets", and the possible imposition of marshal law. Anyway, faced with the threat of armageddon the voters decided that they still want to leave the EU, with one voter commenting that it "will do us good to go without food". It is probably fair to say that the EU is not very popular in the UK when starvation and the collapse of society are preferable to staying in the EU. |
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Chaser
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 18 2018 Location: Nottingham Status: Offline Points: 1202 |
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[QUOTE=micky]weeks.. months...
Trump is a temporary problem we have...his successor will clean up his messes yours is an existential problem. There really is no way out is there short of admitting this was one huge mistake and revoking Art. 50 and suffering the political and social consequences but avoiding the economic ones which is what is going to hurt and hurt badly. As a Brit I'm not going to claim to be an expert on American politics, but I see Trump as the symptom and not as the cause of the disease. Yes, you may get rid of Trump (although I don't expect him to go quietly), but unless America deals with the root causes of the discontent that gave rise to Trump in the first place then Trump will only be replaced by someone or something much worse. The fact is that this is a problem across the western world at the moment. It certainly is part of the reason for the Brexit vote in the UK, and Europe cannot be too smug either, as populism is rife across Europe at the moment. Globalisation is good for the metropolitan elites and the super rich, but it does very little for post industrial communities, who see their factories disappear to low cost countries abroad and their jobs get replaced by cheap foreign labour. While money poured into London, the left behind communities in the north of England and the midlands saw their communities left to rot. They voted for change and change was Brexit. If you've got nothing anyway then you've got nothing to lose. I see the same story across the rust belt of America. Post industrial communities abandoned and left to rot. They wanted their voices to be heard and they made sure that they were. I am glad that we voted for Brexit. It showed all of the deep seated problems in our country in all their ugliness in a way that can no longer be ignored. We cannot go on as we are. We cannot continue to live off the vast wealth generated by the City of London whilst other parts of our country go to rack and ruin, exacerbated by ten years of austerity that has driven communities to the edge of existence. As for the idea that we can simply revoke Article 50 and pretend that all of this never happened, not even the most ardent remainers actually believe that fantasy. The genie is now firmly out of the bottle and neither prophecies of impending doomsday nor the desperate pleading of the liberal elites is going to put it back in the bottle any time soon. |
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record collector
Forum Newbie Joined: February 02 2019 Location: Amsterdam EU Status: Offline Points: 17 |
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I'm really not a big fan of EU and I'm sorry to say i'm living in a country which is a member of the EU. It's a matter of fact... I don't think EU exist year 2035 or 2040.
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lazland
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 28 2008 Location: Wales Status: Offline Points: 13634 |
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An exceptional post. I have made many similar arguments on varying political threads here on PA, but this is by far the most articulate I have ever seen. Unfortunately, Micky clings to the fantastical belief that getting rid of Trumpalot with a Democrat will automatically cure the disease, in much the same way as Remainers believe a second referendum in our country will bring us all together again. These are dangerous fantasies which ignore totally the reasons behind the way traditional working class communities voted. |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14742 |
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The irony is that Britain was a leading power in paving the way for this kind of globalisation within the EU. It was always extremely welcoming to the global rich, backing all kinds of tax havens and opening borders more widely than almost all other EU countries to foreign workers. Quite a bit of what many brexiteers criticise about the EU was either actively promoted by Britain or doesn't even exist in some other EU countries. Take back control my ass. When it comes to "nothing left to lose", look at those who are picked up by ships in the mediterranean. 98% of Britons still have far more to lose.
Edited by Lewian - February 03 2019 at 04:43 |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17524 |
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The reality is that you can not trade to other countries with so many different currencies that have different values, and something like the EU helps in maintaining the pricing so everyone can benefit from it, and not gain anything. You gotta see this ... a loaf of bread here in Portland is 2 Bucks. In Mexico, it is the equivalent of 40 to 50 Cents here ... and you will not be able to pay your own employees, or sell any to Mexico and Latin America for that matter ... the same issue with cars ... a GM car for $40K dollars? You really think that so many of those folks over there earn that many pesos per year? You have to stop thinking about making money ... the EU is about and guaranteeing you a decent sale, in return, there are other items that you can buy at also a discounted rate ... so everyone can afford it ... and if you go around thinking that you are in it simply for the money ... forget China ... they will kill you one day with the cheer volume of sales and you will be hung out to dry! I honestly think that this is a "trumpism" in England, and have to stop this "democratic" thought that we have the right to make more money than the Albaplutonians ... and help turn the scale on its side ... you'll end up all alone, I guarantee you!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
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While I agree with this, I also concur with Chaser's point that events like Brexit or Trump 2016 are the symptom, not the cause of the problem. Now let me draw a comparison between the elites' complaints and the way the elites treat workers/employees. A complaint the elites have about the way the Brexit is being handled (and it is a legitimate complaint) is that they still don't know how things are going to transpire with only a couple of months to go (less if we are being exact). They worry about the losses they are going to incur if there's a no deal Brexit and hold the grievance that this isn't their fault and that the political process has derailed them. Fair enough. Now what is that employers do to employees/workers? Tap them on the shoulder one fine day and say they are no longer needed. How many times, since the advent of neo liberalism, since the advent indeed of star CEOs like Jack Welch, have CEOs asked themselves whether this is how they ought to treat those who are also stakeholders in the business? Did they not see employees as merely numbers on the balance sheet and completely ignored how destablising their decisions would be to the lives of these employees? Well, now they know what it feels like. Except they still don't because they don't seem to be capable of self-reflection. They are angrily lashing out at populism and wishing centrists can be brought back to power so it will be business as usual. There's no business as usual coming any time soon. Read the tea leaves. The arms control treaty has been nuked (pun fully intended). We are in an all bets off zone, have been since 2016 and will remain there for some more time. And all this is happening largely because the elites completely avoided culpability for the financial crisis they created and let the working class take a pounding. Sure, it may not be in the working class' self interest to bring on a no deal brexit. But they are used to suffering anyway. Now they want the elites to get a taste of it. If you keep pretending no community exists ("there is no such thing as society" in the words of Thatcher) and you can keep acting ruthlessly towards your own self interest alone, the community will strike back one day.
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14742 |
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I don't disagree with much of what Chaser and you have written in terms of diagnosis, but deal or not, I have difficulties to see Brexit as a cure for any of this. Well maybe Brexit and then a socialist Corbyn government? But people don't seem to be too keen on that option either (and Corbyn, for all his anti remain stance, still seems to want a Brexit soft enough that the noisy arch-Brexiteers - which are surely fewer than 52% - shout that this would be no Brexit at all). All bets may be off but the sad thing (to use moshkito's favourite wording) is that I expect the economic elites to adapt to whatever outcome much better than the working classes. At least in the UK they can hope to win freedom from a number of EU-regulations regarding environment, workers protection etc.
Edited by Lewian - February 04 2019 at 10:11 |
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Sean Trane
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Good luck with that.... You think all those wrongdoers will admit f**king up dearly?? We're talking of Albionites here.
Absolutely... It seems like the western-type of democracies are reaching an end, and it will either have to renovate itself from scratch and face programmed economic degrowth (if only for the planet's sake), but if this is not planetary-wide, it's no use |
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rogerthat
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I want to respond specifically about Midlands. As I mentioned earlier, the company I work for is the holding company of Jaguar Land Rover. They have factories in Midlands from what I know. Their business in Europe is going to be badly affected in the event of a hard Brexit. I love the look of a Jaguar but good luck convincing European customers that it's still worth the money after a high customs duty cost is added to the sticker price vis a vis Audi or BMW. You say the Midlands are rotting and as an outsider I have to believe you. However, is the cause globalisation or is it the neo liberal policies followed by the Tories and New Labour? There was perhaps no way other than a mad disruption like Brexit for the working class to send its message. But the question is are British politicians, except those who seek to manipulate such sentiments to gain a votebank, really listening? Further, in the short run, reversing globalisation may likely prove detrimental to Midlands. I am sure jobs at a luxury car marker factory pay more than agricultural jobs and the like. Edited by rogerthat - February 05 2019 at 01:30 |
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Davesax1965
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The Midlands are definitely rotting, ditto the North West, where I live.
Can we all have a Lexit next and have a separate country to London ? |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17524 |
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So, you do not think that it was "populism" that created so many different countries, not only around Europe, but Africa (specially!) and Asia. This "populism" is about giving each person and community their own this and that ... with one problem and EUROPE figured this out sooner than AFRICA or ASIA ... that you had to work together, and you did not need to do this with 30 different countries and currencies, which would be difficult to keep track of, not to mention creating tensions between some members because one day someone wants to raise the prices, too much, so they can get their new cadillacs! The main problem with England, is that super rich want to retain their control of the people and the economy. With the European Union, it prevents them from playing the Trumpalot game ... and say out loud ... you fired! ... which, btw, THE GOONS invented ... not that guy! (It was a gun shot sound effect though!) ... and separating from them, means that now the control ends up back in the hands of the folks that are doing not a whole lot, except stealing from everyone else ... yes there are some honest ones, but don't tell me that a guy with colored balls did not cheat and hurt some folks ... badly! It's the English way! I'm betting, though I will likely be dead by then, that these folks will regret the mess they created, and I'm almost thinking that they did that to ensure that they could raise the prices on everything ... and hurt the public even more!
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14742 |
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As much as I'm pro EU, I think the introduction of the Euro was a big, big mistake; look how the inability to control a country's own currency pitted the Greeks against the Germans and the Germans against the Greeks and how populists all over Europe (now Italy) use the dependency that is created by a joint currency with still coexisting local economic, financial and fiscal policies for their anti-EU propaganda. If there was still a possibility to respond to economic crises with lowering the value of a country's currency and budgets wouldn't need to be rubber stamped by Brussels because the joint currency depends on them, there would be no way whatsoever to blame the EU for the outcome of silly local decision making, and neither could the Germans, Scandinavians etc. be made believe that they pay for other countries' debts.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17524 |
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And, yes, there are major issues at stake, but in some cases, the style of economy is so different that it makes for serious concerns ... and Germany is one of them, like America, England and Japan, always demanding the highest of prices, in a place where the value of their currency is so small (don't even try Latin/South America!), that regardless of which deal you make, something is always wrong. The harsh part of it, is that Germany was able to make itself an industrial state that became very strong, while places like Greece, and other places in Europe, continued their traditional tourist spot thing, and had no industry or work available for anyone ... and you know what that means? The government ends up paying everyone! And guess what may have been drowning the Greeks? And how was Greece going to pay "debts" when these debts were not even incurred based on the items, but based on the difference in value of the items involved? This is a serious problem that even you and I can not discuss properly. But I can tell you that having lived in Brazil on a straw and newspaper mattress with a bed that had wires instead of springs to hold it, that you can not afford to purchase a "bed" to sleep on ... and when this or that country all of a sudden sends in 1000 of these beds at such and such a price ... how the heck am I EVER going to pay for it? We need to resolve that first ... and maybe the real problem was the GREECE should not be in the European union since some of those smaller countries were taking advantage of everything else ... and they would have to pay sooner or later ... in the old days it was bloodshed and this country now is a part of my country ... these days? The media tells you they are bankrupt and hurt their economy (travel and such) even worse, and then let them die in the desert oasis of life. Are we ... humanitarians, or greedy motherfudgers? We have to define that first, before we decide anything else ... it's a very important thing, and no one is paying attention to the details that are being hidden regarding so much of this stuff! France is not the problem. Spain has this issue in that one area is bleeding the other. Portugal is on the edge. Greece you already know, and we have not yet looked at the newer places in the Balkans and Mediterranean. And Italy ... with its high and mighty and the rest poor as can be ... Very scary thing, and the whole Brexxit thing is no less.
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
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A single currency without a fiscal union, let alone a single political state, was always going to be a disaster. I hold no brief for America as someone who is neither American nor European, but given how much Europeans pat themselves on their backs for their superior intelligence vis a vis 'dumb' Americans, I have to ask how the f**k do you guys (to be clear a figurative you) still defend the Eurozone the way it exists now?And if you agree it is flawed, why do you still not want to do something about it? And if it is going to be impossible to do something about it in spite of all the best intentions, maybe it's best to just go back to the old currencies however much that would be embarrassing not to mention extremely expensive and cumbersome in the short run? In the end, the Euro was just an ill thought out attempt driven mainly by Germany and France to create a new currency to counter the US hegemony. And to that end, it has largely worked but at what cost to the 'southern' half of the Eurozone.
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Chaser
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 18 2018 Location: Nottingham Status: Offline Points: 1202 |
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Absolutely spot on, and I agree with everything you say here. I support the idea of Europe, but not THIS Europe. This project driven by political idealism rather than pragmatism. The Euro has been a disaster for Europe. Greece should go back to the Drachma. Italy should go back to the Lira. Spain and Portugal should also abandon the Euro. Maybe Germany, Belgium, and Luxembourg should keep the Euro if they want, plus one or two other countries, but the rest should abandon it. Of course the Euro was introduced not only to create a currency to rival the dollar, but also to force european countries into closer union by means of a common currency. Thus countries that were ill suited for such a currency union were persuaded to abandon their own currency and adopt the Euro for entirely political reasons that were often in opposition to that country's own interests. We need a Europe of proud independent nations working together in friendship and collaboration, not this attempt to subsume national identity into some pan European identity at all costs. The EU is yesterday's solution to yesterday's problems. As for us in the UK... When the ship is sinking it's best to head for the life raft, and the EU ship is now holed below the water line. |
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someone_else
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Agreed. If the EU were a ship, Greek fire should be reinvented again .
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