Quizzes & Puzzles8 mins ago
Is This An Acceptable Compromise?
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What do we want?
We in a Utopian scenario, full independence, a good agreement on tariff free and check free trade, and an open border in Ireland for the sake of the peace EU supporters claim was the main reason that the EEC was formed.
In the real world, maybe expect low tariffs and as little delay checking as one can achieve. Oh, and a decent friendly attitude in the future.
We in a Utopian scenario, full independence, a good agreement on tariff free and check free trade, and an open border in Ireland for the sake of the peace EU supporters claim was the main reason that the EEC was formed.
In the real world, maybe expect low tariffs and as little delay checking as one can achieve. Oh, and a decent friendly attitude in the future.
That's a very good point, ymb - I've been thinking for a good while that "We've done this wrong".
Surely it was up to the EU to make us their 'best offer' (given that they want the wonga to keep flowing after we leave) - which we would then have decided as to whether it was good enough?
Instead we've been humiliated as belly-crawling supplicants, with every offer we make being condescendingly waved away by the supercilious Barnier and Drunko Junko ...
Surely it was up to the EU to make us their 'best offer' (given that they want the wonga to keep flowing after we leave) - which we would then have decided as to whether it was good enough?
Instead we've been humiliated as belly-crawling supplicants, with every offer we make being condescendingly waved away by the supercilious Barnier and Drunko Junko ...
This would be an initiative driven not by the EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, but by German "policy makers. Last year, Germany posted a 159.3 billion euro surplus on its goods trade with other countries in the EU, that's the way it's been since 1958, when Europe's common market opened up. This year looks set to mark another record-high EU trade income for Germany. The surplus during the January-April period was running at an annual rate of 175 billion euro, a 10% increase on the country's EU trades in 2017, according to statistics from Germany's Bundesbank. So it is Germany who has "blinked" first. Guess which of the EU's 27 current members contributes most to this massive trade surplus? Now it is our turn to turn the screws. Tell them sorry not good enough. We will make our own deals with the rest of the world starting with Germany. France will squirm and the Irish howl,( they are due a 4% reduction in payouts when we stop shelling out like a man with no arms) lets see what they have to offer. Why should we allow the pyramid scheme to dictate to us regarding who we are allowed to trade and on what basis? Time for our offensive, which is rather fitting, given that it was the 100th anniversary of the Amiens offensive that finally brought the breakthrough.