BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
ok I will post some fucking benefits of leaving for 1000th time , just to shut you up
1 we don’t have to pay billions into the EU each year to pass throughout european countries and instead can use that money in the uk
2 we can remain an independent sovereign nation and take decisions about sanctions and trade independent of the EU , talks on trade deals with countries like japan and Australia are going well but of course as we are in a transition period we are still within the eu trade deals.
3 we can control immigration as a country and you will see that the points based system of immigration has passed through parliament
4 we don’t have to have further layers of politics Beuracracy and waste by not being involved in the eu elections and political system
5 it really pisses Nicola sturgeon off
6 we will have control of our fishing waters which will be a great boost for the uk fishing industry Who can catch it and sell it the Spanish and French etc for a tidy profit.
7 the fears of companies leaving on masse has not materialised or remotely true. Nissan investing Further in the north east at the expense of Barcelona , Goldman sachs opening its European HQ in London, Siemens announcing that it is investing further in its train factory in Europe . The european space centre picking Leicester as it’s space tech centre.
8 not being part of the growing integration and ultimately fall out coming from greater centralisation fiscally and militarily ( which we were told was not going to happen) .
9 seeing that the idea of not being able to go on holiday in Europe if we leave won’t be possible to be utter bollox
10 most importantly that we , like all the other countries around the world not in the eu discovering that it is possible to trade in and out of the eu all the time every day without coughing up billions to do so.
thanks.
1. The cost of not being in the EU will be greater. Trade barriers, especially NTB will suppress growth. Brexit has already cost the economy more than our contributions.
2. Britain is too small to have any impact on sanctions unless it is in conjunction with other nations and too small to be effective in trade negotiations. We have seen that already with less than half of current trade deals rolled over and nations like Japan wanting extra concessions.
3. The immigration bill is not points based.
4. There will be increased bureaucracy and red tape. Companies will be subject to more admin and bureaucracy because there will be new trade barriers and trade barriers require forms to be filled and boxes to be ticked. There will be red tape on our own internal trade where none previously existed. Additionally we will have to create our own regulatory framework (which will be expensive and complicated) which we currently subcontract out to the EU who do all this on behalf of all member states and is very cost effective. Also means UK companies will have to adhere to two sets of regulations to trade in Europe. UK regs and EU regs. More red tape and cost to business.
5. Emotional.
6. We already sell to Europe. Most of what we catch goes to Europe. We don’t eat what we catch. Personally I don’t care about fishing.
7. FDI is down in all sectors other than financial. Japan FDI also reduced. No decision has been made in Sunderland. It’s Renault’s decision. If a deal is struck that retains the current status quo then you won’t see much change. Fingers crossed that happens. European space center has nothing to to with the EU. It’s a ten country consortium of which we are one. All ten countries get a slice of the pie.
8. Correct.
9. That was always a nonsense. What you have lost is your right to freedom of movement around Europe. You can go on your hols.
10. We can trade. What we will lose is preferred access. It will cost the UK economy more. You cannot beat reality. Trade barriers increases trade friction and reduces trade. If you accept that Brexit is not about trade but isolating and decoupling the UK economy from Europe then fine, but you can’t argue it is about trade or even global Britain. It was always about protectionism and isolation.