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....
Claret Dragon
- 21 Jul 2017 11:10
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Should leave EU at 12 midnight.
Seems to work when Beer & Petrol Duty goes up on Budget day!!!!
hilary
- 21 Jul 2017 11:11
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CC,
At the moment, I'm at home in the south of France. I may have a glass of local wine with lunch shortly - Mrs Merkel kindly uses your money to subsidise the vignerons, doncha know. :o)
Chris Carson
- 21 Jul 2017 11:37
- 7170 of 12628
Hils - Nice one :0)
Dil
- 21 Jul 2017 11:43
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There's no real problem with immigration round here hils but Blaenau Gwent voted over 60% out.
People I spoke to mentioned immigration but amongst other things. Think they were just fed up of being told how good the EU had been to this area when in fact it has lost us 100's of jobs and built us a new bloody road at 110% of the cost of building it ourselves outside the EU and not having to subsidies them.
They even got the cheek to put signs on the road saying built with EU funding when we sent them the money in the first place for them to send a smaller amount back !
Martini
- 21 Jul 2017 12:04
- 7172 of 12628
Hi Hilary
If the EU is going to survive IMO they will need to take more control from Nation States to harmonise Laws, taxation and and many other aspects of life. I did not vote for that when I voted to join the EEC naively I thought it was all about free trade. I want sovereignty back so I can vote for or against the Government that makes the laws and decisions I live under.
I don't want to be living in an increasingly Federal European State.
I will vote for any party that can achieve that irrespective of their political persuasion knowing they can be kicked out at a later date if they get other aspects of policy wrong.
Claret Dragon
- 21 Jul 2017 12:46
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Ditto Martini
iturama
- 21 Jul 2017 13:18
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It's not the EU workers that are the problem Far from it. Most have a work ethic and are thankful to be out from under the thumb of the soviets and in the case of the Poles, the German influence and their mate Tusk.
Immigration. legal and not, from Africa and the Asian sub-continent, where corruption is endemic, is the real issue.
hilary
- 21 Jul 2017 17:30
- 7176 of 12628
Hi Martini,
I totally get that, but the UK sets its own interest rates and sets its own monetary policy.
Really, are there any EU laws that adversely affect UK residents' way of life and standard of living? I know folks get the hump because the UK couldn't deport the terrorist with a hook for a hand a few years back, but wasn't he very much a one-off that the Currant Bun latched on to?
But what about the good EU laws that have standardised mobile roaming charges, and brought air fares down? And isn't it nice to have properly labelled food, breathe clean air, and to swim in a clear sea?
iturama,
The UK government have always had the power to limit immigration from those places you mention - it's not EU related. Strange they haven't done so in the last 30 years, doncha think? Maybe they need the tax revenues and social security contributions of a young labour force to cover the welfare costs of an ageing population? Just a thought.
hilary
- 21 Jul 2017 17:45
- 7177 of 12628
Doc,
I'm sure the Eastern Europeans you talk to are nice, and aspire to greater things. That's easy to understand of anyone who's spent 8 hours a day for 20 years queueing for a loaf of bread. Certainly, I've never encountered any hostility from the natives whilst living abroad, and they've always been very polite (except the local bike shop owner, who I called a peasant for not cleaning up his dog shit).
However, a 10% population increase also means 10% more houses, 10% more schools, 10% more hospitals. You get the drift... Governments can't just take their money, and fail to invest in infrastructure.
The bloke who has a wife with a gob that looks like a pillar box, and the one-eyed Scottish moron that took his job, have got a lot to answer for!
Martini
- 21 Jul 2017 18:11
- 7178 of 12628
Hilary
I believe the direction of travel is for more centralisation of monetary policy,we only avoided the Euro by the skin of our teeth. Thank you Gordon Brown for that.
All the other stuff we could have done on our own. did we need the EU to clean up our beaches and label food for us? And as for, breathe clean air, have you been in a UK large city recently?
I am happy to pay more for phone charges or air fares if sovereignty is back with us. That could be easily covered if we did not have things like the restrictive practises of the common agricultural policy hiking up food prices.
No I wish them well on their path to The Unites States of Europe but Europe is not like America and even they struggle at times to unite the Nation and make America Great again ( Where have I heard that phrase recently?)
M
hilary
- 21 Jul 2017 18:27
- 7179 of 12628
I think you're probably right in terms of greater monetary policy centralisation within the EU, Martini, and I don't think it can ever work all the time you've got a two-speed economy with an industrialised north and a lazy south. The habits and lifestyles of Club Med have been founded over generations, and they're not about to change anytime soon. However, the UK are outside of all that, so I'm not entirely sure how it affects your Brexit choice.
And the stuff the UK could've done alone? Well they haven't.
Taking clean air as an example, it was only February this year that the European Commission were threatening to fine the UK for failing to meet pollution targets. After the initial 'How very dare they?' harumph, isn't improving the life quality and expectancy of its electorate actually something that all governments should be doing as a matter of course, regardless of political persuasion? And in answer to your question as to whether I've been to a large UK city recently, I was last in London for a couple of weeks in January. Gotta say, it wasn't too pleasant and I'm not exactly rushing to go back.
Off to sniff some pine trees. :o)
Claret Dragon
- 21 Jul 2017 19:41
- 7180 of 12628
EU is a fricking disaster unless your German. One currency suits them down to the ground. 1 euro the equivalent as a one from Greece!!!!. Those old enough to remember Drachma, Lira, et al know dam well that every independent central bank printed it for fun to stay competitive. Long before QE became the only way forward. Now we have a human land fill site, to keep up demand with no productivity to support it flooding in from all over Africa and Middle East.
hilary
- 21 Jul 2017 20:31
- 7181 of 12628
Hmmm. An interesting and intelligent observation.
You understand the currency markets and economic subtleties like GDP?
Claret Dragon
- 21 Jul 2017 20:56
- 7182 of 12628
Yep
Sure do
MaxK
- 21 Jul 2017 20:58
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Lets assume we are clueless hilly, and give us a rundown in laymans language.
Dil
- 22 Jul 2017 10:25
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Exec re Polish , I totally agree.
Got 3 Polish guys living near me all in their early/mid twenties who are three of the hardest workers I've ever met and put some of the lazy locals to shame. One once told me after hearing someone moaning about the state of this country on TV that if they didn't like it they should bugger off to Poland for a year and then they might appreciate what they have here.