The perfect fumble
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2012
- Messages
- 26,114
As we pay in a lot more than comes to the UK is it not simple logic that any money that farmers and scientists receive from the UK does not need to face any shortfall?
We could just make those payments direct – or we could decide to invest ALL of the money elsewhere in the UK based on what WE rather than the EU determine to be our priorities.
Again, you're peddling the delusion that we take back our money, spend it as we wish and our departure from the EU will not dent our GDP as we carry on with the same growth trajectory or better.
This is not just wrong, it is a pernicious lie. Our GDP will be adversely affected by Brexit and the downside will be greater than any upside we make by retaining our EU contribution, certainly in the short to medium term.
If you're definition of a good deal is the status quo PLUS, then you're "living in another galaxy". Let us assume for the sake of argument that a land of milk and honey awaits us after Brexit, that land is years away, but the downsides are more immediate, hence May's "pain".
The UK will not benefit in the short to medium term by leaving the EU, our country will not be "rewarded" with a better deal for leaving than she enjoyed as a member, this is gobsmackingly obvious, all 27 EU countries agree on this. What club operates where non members get privileges akin to or greater than members?
So we are going to take a hit in the short to medium term, that is simply beyond dispute. There is no good deal to be had, defined as better than the one we have now, there is only a least worst deal and then a long hard slog to your promised land, if we are incredibly lucky.
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