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#251
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 11:47:13 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017, tim... remarked: A bit silly to rely on polls when the overwhelming majority rejected any exit which would make them poorer. how do you know this? I've never seen reports of a survey that asked There's been a recent poll which indicates (iirc) where? Don't remember. that sufficient Brexiters to have swung the vote believed they wouldn't be poorer, but that it's obvious they will be, why it is obvious that THEY will be? Exchange rates, OK I'll give you that loss of EU grants, most of these will carry on out of HMG's budget trade barriers, Not yet confirmed tim |
#252
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 12:06:44 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017, tim... remarked: I think you are unwilling to engage because you simply don't understand what being a member of the CU brings us (which ISTM just proved my other point that few people understand its significance) I'm unwilling to engage, because I'm sick of talking to brick walls. Oh come on I've made a substantive new point and you ignored it you can't respond like that and expect it to be accepted tim |
#253
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In article , (tim...)
wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (Roland Perry) wrote: In message , at 14:52:24 on Wed, 1 Feb 2017, remarked: Membership of EFTA requires remaining in the SM with FoM So not really a Brexit at all. Not what Norway think. http://openeurope.org.uk/intelligenc...e/norway-and-s witzerland/ An anti-EU group, I see. Norway and Switzerland are in the Schengen zone which is not part of this discussion. Why would we be different? If we were the same, it wouldn't be a Brexit in any sense that was campaigned for. Not a universal view, especially as expressed before 23rd June 2016. I'm fed up with arguing what people did or didn't vote for when there are polls which show conclusively that the "leave" people wanted a hard Brexit by a country mile (an order of magnitude more than the winning vote margin) and also closer examination shows the various "Norway/Singapore" soft Brexits were never a realistic proposition. A bit silly to rely on polls when the overwhelming majority rejected any exit which would make them poorer. how do you know this? I've never seen reports of a survey that asked A series of polls, mostly asking how much people would pay themselves for leaving EU. Very few willing to pay anything non-trivial. All I have see is politicians spouting it like its "obvious" (which to them, it is) (and then misusing it to imply that no-one voted for anyone to be poorer) The whole debate has been so dominated by fantastic promises, especially from Brexiters, that paradoxical poll positions have been inevitable. As it is with staying in ("to change it" as just one example) Not as much but not entirely absent, I concede. And consequences of leaving will undoubtedly be far worse. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#255
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In message , at 12:31:53 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017,
tim... remarked: I think you are unwilling to engage because you simply don't understand what being a member of the CU brings us (which ISTM just proved my other point that few people understand its significance) I'm unwilling to engage, because I'm sick of talking to brick walls. Oh come on I've made a substantive new point No, it's all very old news. and you ignored it you can't respond like that and expect it to be accepted -- Roland Perry |
#256
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In message , at 12:30:28 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017,
tim... remarked: that sufficient Brexiters to have swung the vote believed they wouldn't be poorer, but that it's obvious they will be, why it is obvious that THEY will be? Exchange rates, OK I'll give you that loss of EU grants, most of these will carry on out of HMG's budget Extraordinarily unlikely. I don't know how many grants you've applied for from Westminster vs Brussels, but the latter go through as a tedious but somewhat inevitable bureaucratic process once the point of the grant category has been established. The former have to be fought tooth and nail as special cases, even when funds have allegedly been allocated to the subject, except what they fail to say is that by the time they announce "funding for..." it's all been allocated to their pre=chosen acolytes. trade barriers, Not yet confirmed But inevitable. -- Roland Perry |
#257
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#258
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![]() "tim..." wrote in message news ![]() wrote in message ... In article , (tim...) wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (Roland Perry) wrote: Membership of EFTA requires remaining in the SM with FoM So not really a Brexit at all. Not what Norway think. that's not what I read All the negatives of being in, but none of the positives sorry, can't find a link I didn't say they liked it, just that they know they are NOT in the EU. Only in the box ticking sense on not being in The point is that many of them say "it feels like we are in, but don't get Vote" and it just happens that, from yesterday's papers, here's someone (from Norway) saying it: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017...t-want-inside/ (full article available) tim |
#259
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 12:31:53 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017, tim... remarked: I think you are unwilling to engage because you simply don't understand what being a member of the CU brings us (which ISTM just proved my other point that few people understand its significance) I'm unwilling to engage, because I'm sick of talking to brick walls. Oh come on I've made a substantive new point No, it's all very old news. We aren't discussing whether it is new or old news we are discussing your claim that it is a sideshow (well I am discussing it, you are just dismissing it) It isn't tim |
#260
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 12:30:28 on Fri, 3 Feb 2017, tim... remarked: that sufficient Brexiters to have swung the vote believed they wouldn't be poorer, but that it's obvious they will be, why it is obvious that THEY will be? Exchange rates, OK I'll give you that loss of EU grants, most of these will carry on out of HMG's budget Extraordinarily unlikely. I don't know how many grants you've applied for from Westminster vs Brussels, but the latter go through as a tedious but somewhat inevitable bureaucratic process once the point of the grant category has been established. The former have to be fought tooth and nail as special cases, even when funds have allegedly been allocated to the subject, except what they fail to say is that by the time they announce "funding for..." it's all been allocated to their pre=chosen acolytes. trade barriers, Not yet confirmed But inevitable. not if we stay in the Customs Unions all of the barriers to trading with the EU are erected by the Custom's Union, not the Single Market rules tim |
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