Author Topic: Brexit  (Read 79346 times)

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Offline Diverbaz 1

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #40 on: July 22, 2018, 18:13:28 PM »
It’s becoming clearer now. No deal woul mean no flights being allowed to enter Eu airspace, certain foods not allowed to be imported /exported into/from the UK and worst of all specific medicines, including vital cancer drugs not available in the U.K.  These are FACTS not scaremongering.

What a load of tosh.



Offline Scunner

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #41 on: July 22, 2018, 18:19:58 PM »
Ray come on, raise your game - what a load of rubbish. I am truly shocked that there are people who actually believe and share this nonsense.


Offline Highlander

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #42 on: July 22, 2018, 18:41:25 PM »
It’s becoming clearer now. No deal woul mean no flights being allowed to enter Eu airspace, certain foods not allowed to be imported /exported into/from the UK and worst of all specific medicines, including vital cancer drugs not available in the U.K.  These are FACTS not scaremongering.

Clearly a Grieve fan

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk86kiwJW8I

Offline Scunner

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #43 on: July 22, 2018, 18:59:17 PM »
Clearly an idiot

Offline LindseyMitchell

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #44 on: July 23, 2018, 07:42:08 AM »
Some important questions:
Why has Jacob Rees Mogg moved his business to Southern Ireland.

(JRM stated yesterday that it could take 50 years for Britain to see the benefit of Brexit)

WTO rules would definitely mean a hard border in Ireland.  Who will pay for this, both the fences and the manning of border posts?

Why did Raab refuse to answer the question of whether the U.K. was stockpiling food?

How long will it take for the U.K. to broker a deal with Japan;  the EU has just done so, but we won’t be part of it after next March.

What will happen to U.K. citizens living and working in the EU?  At present, they’re covered by reciprocal health care.  Methinks a lot of them will return after selling their homes cheaply, and be unable to buy here.

We import a lot of food from the EU.  Will we have to charge tariffs on those foods? 

Who will pick fruit and harvest vegetables when all the EU workers go home. (A lot already have)

How many jobs will be lost when big firms relocate?

Answers, please.


Offline peter16

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #45 on: July 23, 2018, 09:02:28 AM »
LindseyMitchell. You will sadly wait a long time for answers to your questions, a very long time if you want sensible answers. Future generations will wonder why we as a nation were so stupid and/or blind (to give up their peace and prosperity). The mythical land of milk and honey they seek has never existed and for little Britain it never will.
 

Offline Ray1951

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #46 on: July 23, 2018, 12:01:42 PM »
These are factual reports, provided by politicians and people in the know. I don’t take kindly to being referred to as an idiot. You have no respect but I have come to expect this from certain forum members.your way or no way.

Offline KKOB

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #47 on: July 23, 2018, 12:15:06 PM »
Love the way you combined "factual" and "politicians" in the same sentence there Ray. A very rare occurence.

Offline stoop

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #48 on: July 23, 2018, 12:42:03 PM »
It’s becoming clearer now. No deal woul mean no flights being allowed to enter Eu airspace, certain foods not allowed to be imported /exported into/from the UK and worst of all specific medicines, including vital cancer drugs not available in the U.K.  These are FACTS not scaremongering.

It’s precisely this sort of scare mongering crap that made so many people vote to leave.

The EU have no right in aviation law to ban us from their airspace. Google it if you want.

As for a no deal. Leaving with one on WTO rules has guarantees that the EU will not be able to shaft us. I think it’s ten years from leaving that they have to abide by current trade rules. They also cannot legally block the movement of goods to and from the EU. WTO rules don’t allow that.

A no deal would be just as ‘devastating’ for many EU countries (Ireland especially) as it would be for the UK.

Offline Ray1951

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Re: Brexit
« Reply #49 on: July 23, 2018, 16:18:56 PM »
MILLIONS of Brits could see their holidays cancelled next year as the EU is refusing to discuss an emergency aviation deal in a Brexit “no deal” scenario.

Without an emergency Plan B, thousands of flights from the UK to Europe could be cancelled if talks between our government and Michael Barnier’s team collapse before March 29, 2019.

 Aviation leaders need at least nine months to create an emergency plan in event of a 'no deal' but Brussels won't negotiate until March deadline.

Taken from The Sun but other newspapers are reporting the same.




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