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Thread: EXIT NEGOTIATIONS
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Furunculus 18:55 06-19-2018
I do think you have a point here, re: the mandate for the free marketeer brexit. But it certainly wasn't a clear rejection either. Mixed message all round.

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Beskar 12:55 06-21-2018
I had a shower moment. Instead of hard or soft Brexit. We are aiming for Schrodinger's Brexit.
A state we are both simultaneous inside and outside the European Union, with the answer depending on who is asking. The issue is, hopefully no one will try to open the box to actually reveal the reality of the situation.

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Pannonian 23:50 06-21-2018
Airbus have said that it will be planning for a no-deal Brexit given the current uncertainty, and in such a situation will leave the UK. The supply chain is cited. Airbus directly employs 14,000 in the UK, with over 100,000 supported.

How many of these will it take before Brexiteers admit Brexit is a bad idea?

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Fragony 09:05 06-22-2018
Originally Posted by Beskar:
I had a shower moment. Instead of hard or soft Brexit. We are aiming for Schrodinger's Brexit.
A state we are both simultaneous inside and outside the European Union, with the answer depending on who is asking. The issue is, hopefully no one will try to open the box to actually reveal the reality of the situation.
A shower moment, what's that, do know the bath-moment, shower-moment would be everything gliding off

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Husar 14:11 06-22-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
Airbus have said that it will be planning for a no-deal Brexit given the current uncertainty, and in such a situation will leave the UK. The supply chain is cited. Airbus directly employs 14,000 in the UK, with over 100,000 supported.

How many of these will it take before Brexiteers admit Brexit is a bad idea?
They will all get hired by BAE Systems to sell more bombers to Turkey and China.

It's the democratic way.

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Furunculus 17:58 06-22-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
Airbus have said that it will be planning for a no-deal Brexit given the current uncertainty, and in such a situation will leave the UK. The supply chain is cited. Airbus directly employs 14,000 in the UK, with over 100,000 supported.

How many of these will it take before Brexiteers admit Brexit is a bad idea?
Will you forgive me if I say this comes across as very Chicken Little?

If we want independent self government then we can damn well have it. :)

p.s. an interesting speech on the vision to pursue for brexit:

https://brexitcentral.com/vision-glo...rexit-britain/

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Beskar 19:58 06-22-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
A shower moment, what's that, do know the bath-moment, shower-moment would be everything gliding off
Where you are in the shower doing a mundane activity so your mind wonders as you contemplate existence, forming connections you would normally not consider as your mind is too occupied with other things. Thus it is common for inspiration to occur.

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Fragony 12:56 06-24-2018
Originally Posted by Beskar:
Where you are in the shower doing a mundane activity so your mind wonders as you contemplate existence, forming connections you would normally not consider as your mind is too occupied with other things. Thus it is common for inspiration to occur.
Just had to look it up and came up with advertisements. A bath-moment refers to archimedes formula of calculating mass with the help of measuring volume with water displacement, hence the bath

Yes I am being a jerk here

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Seamus Fermanagh 16:50 06-24-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
J...Yes I am being a jerk here
Everyone should have a hobby they enjoy.

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Fragony 19:18 06-24-2018
Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh:
Everyone should have a hobby they enjoy.
Got to admit that the shower vs bath cryptism wasn't handled poorly

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Pannonian 01:01 06-25-2018
Brexiteers are developing their Dolchstosslegende, as civil servants had correctly noted.

Originally Posted by :
Brexit done properly will make this country richer, Brexit done badly will leave us in a worse position than before. Brexit on its own isn't some magic cure. What Brexit does is put us back in control of our lives and the problem is, the Prime Minister appears to be rather reluctant to take up that opportunity
Britain is about to go tits up. But it's not the fault of Brexit. It's the fault of the implementers implementing Brexit badly. It's never their fault.

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Fragony 06:48 06-25-2018
Haven't you been paying attention? The France/Germany EU is in a massive crisis

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Pannonian 07:12 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
Haven't you been paying attention? The France/Germany EU is in a massive crisis
Tell that to the guy above. He made sure he got himself a German passport post-Brexit, while the former chairman of Leave lives in France and has no intention of living in the UK.

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Fragony 07:38 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
Tell that to the guy above. He made sure he got himself a German passport post-Brexit, while the former chairman of Leave lives in France and has no intention of living in the UK.
That's stupid of him, he should have gone to Italy as the 2000 billion debt they have does't really bother them all that much considering the transfer-union the Merkel and the Macron want, schnaps for the south, bill for the north, the distribution of the schaffende childless mutti isn't going very well for her either she's about to get shafted (she voluntered for it unlike other frauleins who get shafted by the Mutti's little children).

The EU is in shambles.

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Pannonian 08:53 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
That's stupid of him, he should have gone to Italy as the 2000 billion debt they have does't really bother them all that much considering the transfer-union the Merkel and the Macron want, schnaps for the south, bill for the north, the distribution of the schaffende childless mutti isn't going very well for her either she's about to get shafted (she voluntered for it unlike other frauleins who get shafted by the Mutti's little children).

The EU is in shambles.
But it's typical of wealthy Brexiteers. Make sure you have an escape route, so you can buy up bankrupt UK businesses for a song (bankrupt because you're anticipating a plummeting UK economy) whilst not having to experience the UK post-Brexit. Even if you have to live here, as an active politician needs to, make sure you diversify your investments overseas, as the Brexitters' darling Tree Frog has done.

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Fragony 09:29 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
But it's typical of wealthy Brexiteers. Make sure you have an escape route, so you can buy up bankrupt UK businesses for a song (bankrupt because you're anticipating a plummeting UK economy) whilst not having to experience the UK post-Brexit. Even if you have to live here, as an active politician needs to, make sure you diversify your investments overseas, as the Brexitters' darling Tree Frog has done.
Hypocracy isn't really a good argument, they probably got stocks invested, hypocracy you can find everywhere. In the end the EU is nothing more than a very costly overhead with a twisted relationship between France and Germany nobody is interested in. The EU has no reason to exist, it was all fine before it came to be. A hard brexit might even benefit you as it opens up trade routes (might take a while), you are so pessimistic. The EU is about to crumble, who doesn't sees that comming should get a role in Forest Gumb 2

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rory_20_uk 09:38 06-25-2018
A leaked report states that if there's a "hard" Brexit the UK will run out of food within c. 6 weeks. The news articled did not mention whether this is due to the collapse of the pound (which was due to happen when we didn't join the Euro) or else that there is no food in the world that could be purchased.

That's right folks - leaving the EU will have a greater impact on the UK than did WW2...

Might food cost more? Probably. Might there be some logistical problems - possibly leading to some items out of stock for a long time? Possibly. But the absence of food that would put people's lives at risk??!? Not even Venezuela managed it this quickly.



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Fragony 10:20 06-25-2018
Ah, a leaked report. By knowologues with phd's who should be gently but firmly be escorted to they comfort-space no doubt. Marmite will be more expensive though and you brits do need that tiamide aka b1 that's in it. Hardly a punnishment to pay more for a generously butter-spread toast with carefully spread marmite on it, yummie.

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Husar 11:33 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
The EU is in shambles.
This may actually be true, but I think we would heavily differ on the reasons for that.

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Fragony 12:13 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Husar:
This may actually be true, but I think we would heavily differ on the reasons for that.
As long is it doesn't get scary that's ok no? That's the thing really, eurocrats are scared and we can hardly call them a cornered cat anymore

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Pannonian 12:37 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by rory_20_uk:
A leaked report states that if there's a "hard" Brexit the UK will run out of food within c. 6 weeks. The news articled did not mention whether this is due to the collapse of the pound (which was due to happen when we didn't join the Euro) or else that there is no food in the world that could be purchased.

That's right folks - leaving the EU will have a greater impact on the UK than did WW2...

Might food cost more? Probably. Might there be some logistical problems - possibly leading to some items out of stock for a long time? Possibly. But the absence of food that would put people's lives at risk??!? Not even Venezuela managed it this quickly.

WWI might be a better comparison. Drawing from the lessons of WWI, WWII started with immediate rationing and other aspects of a command economy, so as to make most efficient use of limited resources. WWI began with the assumption of continued normality. When the u-boat blockade bit, something that won't be a factor here, resources became more limited than people were accustomed to, something that will have a parallel here, and a black market arose that both benefited those with needed resources and prompted a panicked run on said resources. Something that we can expect some degree of once the logistical chain breaks down all round. I can point you to the internal blockade of oil refineries in the early 2000s, which was a controlled tightening on a single resource, and the chaos that prompted. With a no-deal Brexit, you can expect that to repeat, except that it will happen across the spectrum, and it won't be called off once the lorry drivers have reached an agreement.

Oh, and none of the current politicians are a patch on the War Cabinet of 1939. Or even the one in 1914. And I expect people will be less tolerant of central control either. So expect a repeat of the oil blockade of 2000, but worse, affecting all aspects of life.

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Pannonian 13:45 06-25-2018
Farage being investigated for manipulating the markets on the night of the referendum. Some pretty odd behaviour from him on the night, while some of his backers made fairly vast amounts on the movement of the markets.

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Fragony 14:13 06-25-2018
Perhaps because they expected the outcome to be the way it is? That's not manipulation that is how it works. It changes if prior knowledge on the outcome is there, but there isn't, nothing but sour empty hands

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Pannonian 14:23 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
Perhaps because they expected the outcome to be the way it is? That's not manipulation that is how it works. It changes if prior knowledge on the outcome is there, but there isn't, nothing but sour empty hands
There ya go.

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Fragony 15:04 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
There ya go.
No I don't, it's risky to anticipate, very risky. Maybe I am wrong, don't hold it against me if I am, but it was pretty much expected that the Brits would vote for a brexit. These kind of things can make markets go crazy. There is a hidden insuation that the outcome of the referendum isn't legitimate in this inquiry and that is foul play imo, want to know more but expect to get little

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Pannonian 15:27 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
No I don't, it's risky to anticipate, very risky. Maybe I am wrong, don't hold it against me if I am, but it was pretty much expected that the Brits would vote for a brexit. These kind of things can make markets go crazy. There is a hidden insuation that the outcome of the referendum isn't legitimate in this inquiry and that is foul play imo, want to know more but expect to get little
Nail on the head. In retrospect some pretty odd behaviour from Farage on the night indeed. In contrast with the Turkish opposition in the election just gone, which is more typical.

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Pannonian 16:02 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Fragony:
Sometimes you wake up and there is something you don't recognise next to you, this time it's a EU army, how did that get here I wasn't that drunk but there it is and it's not leaving after an awkward cup of coffee
Originally Posted by :
Nine EU member states have agreed to establish a European military force for rapid deployment in times of crisis, an initiative which has won the backing of the UK as it seeks to maintain defence ties after Brexit.

Spearheaded by the French president, Emmanuel Macron, the joint enterprise will allow national armed forces across Europe to coordinate and react swiftly together.

Ministers from France, Germany, Belgium, Britain, Denmark, the Netherlands, Estonia, Spain and Portugal signed a letter of intent in Luxembourg on Monday.
Thank goodness we've left the EU, or else we might have been forced to participate. Hang on, what was that? We've actually asked to participate? And other, actual EU members, don't have to participate?

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Fragony 17:01 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
Thank goodness we've left the EU, or else we might have been forced to participate. Hang on, what was that? We've actually asked to participate? And other, actual EU members, don't have to participate?
So it is a such a total mess nobody can understand it anymore, that? Hiding in plain sight, but ohohoh how populist of you to not trust them.

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Pannonian 17:37 06-25-2018
And now BMW have said that its UK plants will close if supply chains stop at the border. How many will there have to be before Leavers admit that Brexit is a bad idea?

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Furunculus 18:02 06-25-2018
Originally Posted by Pannonian:
And now BMW have said that its UK plants will close if supply chains stop at the border. How many will there have to be before Leavers admit that Brexit is a bad idea?
Will you forgive me if I say this comes across as very Chicken Little?

If we want independent self government then we can damn well have it. :)

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