required field
- 03 Feb 2016 10:00
Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 14:05
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my attitude and opinion has remained constant once i decide that "out" was the way i would vote
Haystack
- 24 Aug 2016 14:18
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With the City, some larger businesses and the EU.
2517GEORGE
- 24 Aug 2016 14:28
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Well you can't count the EU and what the 3 stooges are proposing shows that we were right to vote 'Leave' Whilst there are difficult times ahead they will be shown to be less difficult than if we voted to 'Remain'
2517
Haystack
- 24 Aug 2016 14:35
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MaxK
- 24 Aug 2016 14:50
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Well Haystack, you know what you can do with your version of brexit!
Haystack
- 24 Aug 2016 14:52
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Not mine. I prefer a complete cut, but I am not convinced we will get it
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 15:01
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does your definition of "a complete cut" mean severing all trading links with eu?
Haystack
- 24 Aug 2016 15:13
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No. That would be impossible. I would prefer to be treated as though we were not adjacent to EU, such as Australia and have us swallow tariffs if necessary to avoid other constraints.
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 15:17
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so effectively ditch all preferential rates then as to get those would inevitably have certain strings attached
mind you, all goods sold into EU would have to comply with their regs anyway
any concerns over the potential loss of the City's influence and stature as the European commercial hub across the board?
MaxK
- 24 Aug 2016 15:27
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All goods sold anywhere have to conform to local standards, that's a non starter as an argument.
The city in all likelihood will depart these shores if the €uroloons get their way, so no point in including it in the pot.
However, everything else outside the above can be run to suit ourselves, and not be dictated to by Brussels.
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 15:31
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am i correct in thinking that City-related services contribute about 20% of UK GDP?
if that is about right right (or even too low) you can't just ignore its loss!
MaxK
- 24 Aug 2016 15:37
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Yes, a big chunk of gdp.
And how long do you think we will hang on to it if the €uroloons get their way?
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 15:40
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i merely ask the questions, not provide the answers :-)
MaxK
- 24 Aug 2016 15:41
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Trade with €uroland while it's still functioning (not long for that) at whatever tarrif applies...and apply the same to their goods, see who starts squealing first.
Haystack
- 24 Aug 2016 15:42
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Cynic
If you are handy to a TV, there is a program on at 5:30 in London Live channel 8 freeview. The vanishing Jewish way of life of Hessel Street Whitechapel. It was made in 1962
iturama
- 24 Aug 2016 15:48
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Financial services added about £67 billion to the balance of trade, of which £18.5 billion was EU related. Still a large amount but not all of that is threatened by Brexit. Nevertheless, still an amount coveted by Germany and France, who have been making threatening noises for years. But as we all know, one door closes and another opens, particularly when you don't have to deal with the EU mad house bureaucracy.
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 15:50
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had never even heard of it, but worth reading on internet
below is an extract ....
From the turn of the 20th century Hessel Street [left in 1936] became the site of the East End's main Jewish market, open every day except Saturdays. The narrow street was filled with small shops and stalls. Chickens and other poultry were kept in cages; buyers selected one, which was killed according to kosher ritual and dressed while they shopped elsewhere (the archway, left, next to Carver's shoe shop at 9 Hessel Street led to 25-40 Morgan Houses and also to the abbatoir area). There were also many wet fish stalls, and general shops, with pans and kettles hanging on strings, and bookmakers. Some described it as an 'oriental' scene, the last of the ghetto markets. See these highly pejorative comments from 1902. Right are two idealised portraits: an artist's impression, looking towards Commercial Road, and a drawing by Noel Gibson of around 1980 (long after the street's heyday).
The Vanishing Street
In 1961, the day before the bulldozers moved in to replace the old buildings with high-rise blocks, Robert Vas made a 20-minute film showing a typical day in the life of the street, and its declining but still vibrant Jewish community. Initially called District for Sale, it was funded by the British Film Institute Experimental Film Fund and the Jewish Chronicle, and was approved by the Council for Christians and Jews before its release; it was first shown at the National Film Theatre in November 1962.
Vas, who had been brought up in a Jewish ghetto in Nazi-occupied Germany, was an advocate of the 'Free Cinema' technique. It was shot with a lightweight 16mm camera and tape recorder and presents impressions of the street, combinging long shots and close-ups over a background of natural sounds, snatches of conversations and old Yiddish songs; there is no voice-over commentary. It has a lyrical and nostalgic quality. Authorised viewers can see the film on BFI screenonline.
A few shops remained, in Jewish or increasingly Muslim hands - left is a greengrocer's in 1978, one offering eggs for both Passover and Easter, with signs in Arabic too, and a 1991 grocery shop. In 1988 Alan Dein photographed [right] derelict shopfronts to record the last moments of the Jewish community in the area – the bustling world of the inter-war years had been moved into the suburbs, and the community that stayed behind was less identifiable. In the nineteen eighties they were just hanging on, some premises had been empty for more than five years. Like a mouthful of broken teeth, a boxer’s mouth that had been thumped, with holes where teeth once were.
iturama
- 24 Aug 2016 15:56
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that last line reminds me of looking into a mirror after a rugby match...
iturama
- 24 Aug 2016 17:46
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The Scottish government’s North Sea revenues collapsed in 2015-16 to just £60m from £1.8bn a year earlier.
It is a far cry from the rewards reaped by Scotland in 2008-09, when North Sea revenues were £11.6bn.
The £60m revenue last year was the smallest on record since the Scottish parliament was convened in 1998-99. It represented a 78.5% share of North Sea revenues.
Well, let them go alone with that to spend. No doubt the wee one will blame it on Brexit and demand reparations from London...
cynic
- 24 Aug 2016 17:58
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don't worry; apparently the chinese already own most of the rigs, so they'll gallop to the rescue