mancity dan
Well-Known Member
Just make sure you take in a pen to vote, rather than use one of their pencils...cough cough ;)
An American company approaches you and says, 'We want to do business in your country, we'll buy the premises, employ around 1,000 people initially,So how can McDonald's freely trade in the uk then, the us is not part of the eu?
As for countries performing better outside the EU than in it...
4 of the top 10 economies are inside the EU.
The three largest are the USA, China and Japan - with huge populations and manufacturing bases.
Leicester performed better than anybody else too, but I wouldn't jump ship from City to join them.
Ethiopia, Turkmenistan, Congo, Mongola, Mozambique, Cambodia, Rwanda and countless other nations had higher growth rates than even the USA / China and US - they 'performed better' - you have to be very careful about this brexit 'most of the world performed better' mantra.
I'm a firm remain now, originally I sat on the fence and did my own research to get to this point. What turned my back on the leave vote was that my questions about leaving and the risks to personal and business life were just not answered, the leave campaign is just too aspirational and lacks a strategy with actions. For such a big decision this is madness to follow and is too much of a gamble to take. Many use the immigration argument but we control non eu immigration and because governments have never nailed this, the EU is not to blame for this. As for other arguments such as legislature and economic- what the dickens has our successive parliaments been employed to do if they are hand bound by Europe??? As for laws, what have we been paying the lawyers to do for decades? Edit : it's refreshing to hear our parliament and legal system has been wasting it's time because the eu bureaucrats have really been running the uk!
That is IMO just a lazy generalisation - much the same as if Leavers state that the Remainers are a bunch of scared kiddies sheep-like in their need to treat the Project fear rhetoric as if it is gospel
It's harder to sell 'remain' because we're already in the EU and there's discontent and rightly or wrongly many of today's issues are being laid at the EU. It's a lot easier to sell 'leave' because it plays on ideals and aspirations for the future and it's selling the notion of a favourable outcome by leaving. Everything that is bad today is at least in part because of EU membership and everything that COULD be good in the future will come from leaving the EU. Classic sales technique right there - what you have is inadequate, what you could have is available to you if you agree to buy right now...
That view is the opposite to conventional wisdom - which is that it is much harder for an organisation pushing for change to win over one seeking the status quo - I do sense that Remain ae getting nervous
I have always thought it would be closer than people think but that most of the noise would always be leave. As mentioned I backed Brexit at 6-1 as I have always thought it was 6-1 on a 2-1 bet . I haven't really changed on this view from the beginning, I think 60:40 in was the likelihood and haven't changed . Betting wise I would wager the small money and the volume of beta will have always been on Brexit with a much smaller Volume of bigger bets on in.Again - just making conversations/observations - but your post here and the EB2's that you were replying to do seem to contain a level of 'Remainer concern' that a leave vote could win. Could I ask you and EB2 whether your confidence level in a Remain vote has increased/decreased it the last week or so/
I gave you the exact figures, 2 weeks ago (give or take a day) 87% of bets were for leave
Today 57% of bets placed are for remain
No opinion, just facts.
In many industries Germany is more productive, has higher education levels and had a massive advantage of starting from scratch after the war rather than building everything from more of an existing baseNow this confuses me, you say businesses will benefit - so why do these businesses all say different. You say red tape makes our businesses uncompetitive - why does Germany have no issues exporting its goods worldwide dwarfing our exports? You say it will be a huge boost to our economy - why is it the 'experts' all say different?
For those that don't like immigrants I have no argument, vote to leave. It probably won't lead to less immigration but it might make you feel better for a day or two
ps what are these 'laws we don't agree with' - what EU law keeps you awake at night?
I have always thought it would be closer than people think but that most of the noise would always be leave. As mentioned I backed Brexit at 6-1 as I have always thought it was 6-1 on a 2-1 bet . I haven't really changed on this view from the beginning, I think 60:40 in was the likelihood and haven't changed . Betting wise I would wager the small money and the volume of beta will have always been on Brexit with a much smaller Volume of bigger bets on in.
I think you mean 3 don't you in the context of the discussion you're having - you can't include the UK in that list - The percentage of those 3 eu nations in terms of GDP from the top ten nations is around 16%
So more big money bets have gone on Leave recently then?
That is understandable - but it does highlight a significant issue that is seemingly totally missed and one which leaves Cameron guilty of a gross dereliction of his duties to the country.
This is not a GE with people voting for a political party in accordance with a published manifesto. It is the government of the day that should have been undertaking the planning for what actions should be taken should there be a vote to leave and placing that in front of the electorate. Instead Cameron has hijacked the entire government apparatus to operate project fear.
A succinct and well put point of view.
Was thinking the same , Lawson is more intelligent than to pretend for example that The UK can be judged in the same way as a market at the other end of the world that doesn't trade with Europe1. SOME countries outside the EU have performed better. MANY clearly have not.
2. How many of these that have done better have 44% of their exports going to the EU? How many of them have a domestic manufacturing base that is dominated by foreign investment that is there largely because of the country being in the EU? How many of them have an economy dominated by their services sector? Answer: None.
You paint an irrelevant picture because we are uniquely dependent upon the EU in a way that none of the countries you might compare us to are.
I don't really get that. Are you saying that the government should have offered a choice of either "Remain" or "Leave - and on these terms"?
I genuinely mean no offence - but you are in the majority in not understanding this reality.
The Brexit camp will not be implementing the transition plan should there be a leave vote - it will be the elected government of this country.
It is absolutely Cameron's government's job to be undertaking contingency planning for this eventually and ensuring that the populace is fully informed about the pros and cons of each outcome.
The fact that 'as an individual' he supports a Remain position is neither here nor there - his government responsibility is to manage on behalf of the coutry and this does include in the contingency planning for large impact possibilities - this is after not a 'no-briainer' it is a close vote.
Therefore he has totally abused his position in favour of his personal reference - indeed to intentionally limit and skew the amount of information available.
That is the a key point. Any "manifesto" pledges made by the leave side are utterly meaningless and at best highly aspirational. As the majority of the cabinet and conservative MPs are pro-remain, it's highly unlikely that the pro-Brexit leaders will be part of a government following a leave vote.I genuinely mean no offence - but you are in the majority in not understanding this reality.
The Brexit camp will not be implementing the transition plan should there be a leave vote - it will be the elected government of this country.
It is absolutely Cameron's government's job to be undertaking contingency planning for this eventually and ensuring that the populace is fully informed about the pros and cons of each outcome.
The fact that 'as an individual' he supports a Remain position is neither here nor there - his government responsibility is to manage on behalf of the coutry and this does include in the contingency planning for large impact possibilities - this is after not a 'no-briainer' it is a close vote.
Therefore he has totally abused his position in favour of his personal reference - indeed to intentionally limit and skew the amount of information available.
There shouldn't be a referendum, and the fact there is should be enough, after the event, for David Cameron to resign, regardless of the result.
We vote in General Elections to decide upon a government, that government is then tasked with actually governing for the next 5 years, making the decisions that are required to keep the country running. We, the general public, have done our bit. We headed down to the polling stations in our millions, we cast our votes, we elected a government. It might not be the government some wanted but it's an elected government.
So, should we stay in the EU? How about those we actually elected make the fucking decision?! It's what we voted for them for, to make tough decisions and, more importantly, to be abreast of all the facts when doing so. Your average man on the street has absolutely no fucking clue whether we'd be better in or out of the EU, and you simply can't expect him to either. So quite why it was felt a good idea to put this decision in his ill informed hands is beyond me. A vote on something as fundamentally integral to the way the country will exist over the next few decades should be made from a cerebral place, the facts should be studied and a sensible, well thought out position should be reached before voting. That's not going to happen in a huge number of cases. Emotional votes will be cast, votes which simply ignore all the facts and evidence and go with what "the gut" says. That's a frightening position to find ourselves in, and it was an entirely avoidable one too.
Cameron's own bravado, cockiness, and intent on "going down in history" lead us into this referendum. He was convinced he'd be able to control the elements of his own party and that the referendum would be a resounding win for the "stay in" vote. Now he's realised the Tories are as divided on Europe as they ever were and he's running scared that the vote will go against him.
If a decision was required on staying in/leaving the EU then those who we elected to make such decisions should have been the ones making it. To delegate this decision to the masses is a huge mistake. Individual members of the public are intelligent, informed people who know what they are talking about and can reach an educated position on this matter. The general public as a whole are fucking morons who have no idea what they are voting for or the repercussions of it. We've entrusted the future of our country to the types of people who watch Geordie Shore and voted a dog the most talented act in Britain, twice. As I said, Cameron should resign after the vote for putting us into this dangerous position in the first place. Of course he won't, even if he's humiliated in defeat.