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nickgusset Shizzlehurst 27 Jun 17 11.43pm | |
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Originally posted by davenotamonkey
I've refuted both of your factually incorrect claims with: 1. Hard economic data Don't make me quote the OED definition of irony at you. Are the referenced quotes you mention the ones from Boris et al you posted earlier? Forgive me if I take what that useless excuse for a parliamentarian says with a pinch of NaCl. If you are referring to a different quote, I apologise. I stand what I said about Boris though. For the record I want brexit to go well and accept that is the path we are following. I just wish someone with a bit of common (sense and decency) was leading us down it.
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Mstrobez 28 Jun 17 12.47am | |
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Originally posted by nickgusset
Are the referenced quotes you mention the ones from Boris et al you posted earlier? Forgive me if I take what that useless excuse for a parliamentarian says with a pinch of NaCl. If you are referring to a different quote, I apologise. I stand what I said about Boris though. For the record I want brexit to go well and accept that is the path we are following. I just wish someone with a bit of common (sense and decency) was leading us down it. The problem is sacrificing free trade with the EU for the sake of controlling our borders at all costs is not common sense at all, it's ridiculously stupid, hence there not being anyone credible who'd actually lead us down this route, that includes key figures amongst the leave campaign. I fell for the trick of being too ashamed to question the logic behind the confidence of leave voters in fear of being absuively shut down. It wasn't until I educated myself a bit more on both sides that I realised this whole venture is utterly ridiculous and is based around hope rather than facts.
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davenotamonkey 28 Jun 17 12.52am | |
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Originally posted by Mstrobez
Give me the hard economic data that supports us being better off as a country once we end free trade with the largest economic block in the world. Please, I may of stumbled across the first person ever to be able to do this properly, the floors yours, provided you don't use crystal balls... Give me the hard economic data that supports us being better off as a country shackled to the EU. For eternity. No? You can't gaze into the future either? Gosh! So you're just going on conjecture are you? "But muh expurts!!" Ah yes. The IMF. The CBI. The Economist. Bloomberg. Siemens. Toyota. PWC. The EU Commission itself. All (and many, many more) have now U-turned, or indeed simply spoken out, having previously been gagged by Cameron during the election (as per Tony Abbott). As I linked to earlier, the Treasury's sexed-up Brexitgeddon referendum scaremongering unraveled and did not stand up to scrutiny then (see the link I provided to my own post back then), nor now. Will we be better off in the future, having left the EU? Yes. I think we will. My assessment is not borne out of economic tealeaf-reading, nor can yours be of remaining in the EU. But I don't see our membership of an EU superstate as the future direction for this country. This was (according to the most comprehensive exit poll conducted at the time) the #1 reason for voting to leave (sorry to burst your bubble). I read enough economic projections on both sides to judge that, longer-term, it's better we left. I based that on the methodology and assumptions that went into the models used to derive their findings. This is how I work in my day-job, and I came to the conclusion that the near-term uncertainty was a worthwhile factor in securing the many benefits of leaving the EU. Sorry, but not sorry you don't feel the same way. My decision came from a position of research into the subject. Yours demonstrably appears not to have been. Oh, and a little factoid for you: we do not have "free trade" with the EU. It costs us to trade with them. A lot. As you seem to desperately re-fight the referendum, perhaps you should actually educate yourself about the issues. You never know, you might change your mind. While you're there, go take a look at Canada's deal with the EU, and ask yourself why we were paying a fortune to "free" (sic) trade in the single market, when Canadian access, is (sector-dependent) 94-100% tariff free. For free. Now. This really is my last reply to you. I'll do my best to skim past your contributions in future. They don't really advance the discussion.
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davenotamonkey 28 Jun 17 12.56am | |
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Originally posted by Mstrobez
The problem is sacrificing free trade with the EU for the sake of controlling our borders at all costs is not common sense at all, it's ridiculously stupid, hence there not being anyone credible who'd actually lead us down this route, that includes key figures amongst the leave campaign. I fell for the trick of being too ashamed to question the logic behind the confidence of leave voters in fear of being absuively shut down. It wasn't until I educated myself a bit more on both sides that I realised this whole venture is utterly ridiculous and is based around hope rather than facts. You "educated yourself", yet still think UK trade with the EU comes at no cost. LOL.
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Mstrobez 28 Jun 17 1.02am | |
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Originally posted by davenotamonkey
Give me the hard economic data that supports us being better off as a country shackled to the EU. For eternity. No? You can't gaze into the future either? Gosh! So you're just going on conjecture are you? "But muh expurts!!" Ah yes. The IMF. The CBI. The Economist. Bloomberg. Siemens. Toyota. PWC. The EU Commission itself. All (and many, many more) have now U-turned, or indeed simply spoken out, having previously been gagged by Cameron during the election (as per Tony Abbott). As I linked to earlier, the Treasury's sexed-up Brexitgeddon referendum scaremongering unraveled and did not stand up to scrutiny then (see the link I provided to my own post back then), nor now. Will we be better off in the future, having left the EU? Yes. I think we will. My assessment is not borne out of economic tealeaf-reading, nor can yours be of remaining in the EU. But I don't see our membership of an EU superstate as the future direction for this country. This was (according to the most comprehensive exit poll conducted at the time) the #1 reason for voting to leave (sorry to burst your bubble). I read enough economic projections on both sides to judge that, longer-term, it's better we left. I based that on the methodology and assumptions that went into the models used to derive their findings. This is how I work in my day-job, and I came to the conclusion that the near-term uncertainty was a worthwhile factor in securing the many benefits of leaving the EU. Sorry, but not sorry you don't feel the same way. My decision came from a position of research into the subject. Yours demonstrably appears not to have been. Oh, and a little factoid for you: we do not have "free trade" with the EU. It costs us to trade with them. A lot. As you seem to desperately re-fight the referendum, perhaps you should actually educate yourself about the issues. You never know, you might change your mind. While you're there, go take a look at Canada's deal with the EU, and ask yourself why we were paying a fortune to "free" (sic) trade in the single market, when Canadian access, is (sector-dependent) 94-100% tariff free. For free. Now. This really is my last reply to you. I'll do my best to skim past your contributions in future. They don't really advance the discussion. And you still haven't said why or how, or explained your methodology. I've just read paragraphs or more meaningless rhetoric and sound bites. It sums my point up. It's what you all do, other than when you decide to actually bring facts to the table such as the following - "Sir, Boris Johnson recently asserted that the “EU is a graveyard of low growth”. This claim merits proper examination to determine, precisely, how the UK, US, Germany and France have done since 1973, the year in which the UK joined the EU. Per capita GDP of the UK economy grew by 103%, exceeding the 97% growth of the US. Within the EU, the UK edged out Germany (99%) and clobbered France (74%). But hey what does Boris "have your cake and eat it" Johnson know about anything? Edited by Mstrobez (28 Jun 2017 1.07am)
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Mstrobez 28 Jun 17 1.10am | |
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Originally posted by davenotamonkey
You "educated yourself", yet still think UK trade with the EU comes at no cost. LOL. You do know the contributions we make don't just get thrown into some pot don't you?
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hedgehog50 Croydon 28 Jun 17 7.57am | |
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Originally posted by Mstrobez
And you still haven't said why or how, or explained your methodology. I've just read paragraphs or more meaningless rhetoric and sound bites. It sums my point up. It's what you all do, other than when you decide to actually bring facts to the table such as the following - "Sir, Boris Johnson recently asserted that the “EU is a graveyard of low growth”. This claim merits proper examination to determine, precisely, how the UK, US, Germany and France have done since 1973, the year in which the UK joined the EU. Per capita GDP of the UK economy grew by 103%, exceeding the 97% growth of the US. Within the EU, the UK edged out Germany (99%) and clobbered France (74%). But hey what does Boris "have your cake and eat it" Johnson know about anything? Edited by Mstrobez (28 Jun 2017 1.07am) When Britain joined in 1973, the states that now make up the EU accounted for 36% of the world economy. Last year, it was 17%. The EU has been outperformed by the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. It’s not hard to see why - Brussels is more concerned with keeping the Euro together as a means to political integration than in the welfare of the poor buggers who have to use it. Why should we allow our geographical position to override ties of language and law, custom and kinship around the world? Why restrict ourselves to the world’s slowest-growing continent? Edited by hedgehog50 (28 Jun 2017 7.59am)
We have now sunk to a depth at which the restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men. [Orwell] |
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Kermit8 Hevon 28 Jun 17 8.14am | |
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^^^^^ Strangely, you missed out a little country called China in your economic assessment.
Big chest and massive boobs |
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hedgehog50 Croydon 28 Jun 17 8.19am | |
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Originally posted by Kermit8
^^^^^ Strangely, you missed out a little country called China in your economic assessment. Predictably, you try to divert away from the points I was making.
We have now sunk to a depth at which the restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men. [Orwell] |
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CambridgeEagle Sydenham 28 Jun 17 9.06am | |
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Originally posted by davenotamonkey
Give me the hard economic data that supports us being better off as a country shackled to the EU. For eternity. No? You can't gaze into the future either? Gosh! So you're just going on conjecture are you? "But muh expurts!!" Ah yes. The IMF. The CBI. The Economist. Bloomberg. Siemens. Toyota. PWC. The EU Commission itself. All (and many, many more) have now U-turned, or indeed simply spoken out, having previously been gagged by Cameron during the election (as per Tony Abbott). As I linked to earlier, the Treasury's sexed-up Brexitgeddon referendum scaremongering unraveled and did not stand up to scrutiny then (see the link I provided to my own post back then), nor now. Will we be better off in the future, having left the EU? Yes. I think we will. My assessment is not borne out of economic tealeaf-reading, nor can yours be of remaining in the EU. But I don't see our membership of an EU superstate as the future direction for this country. This was (according to the most comprehensive exit poll conducted at the time) the #1 reason for voting to leave (sorry to burst your bubble). I read enough economic projections on both sides to judge that, longer-term, it's better we left. I based that on the methodology and assumptions that went into the models used to derive their findings. This is how I work in my day-job, and I came to the conclusion that the near-term uncertainty was a worthwhile factor in securing the many benefits of leaving the EU. Sorry, but not sorry you don't feel the same way. My decision came from a position of research into the subject. Yours demonstrably appears not to have been. Oh, and a little factoid for you: we do not have "free trade" with the EU. It costs us to trade with them. A lot. As you seem to desperately re-fight the referendum, perhaps you should actually educate yourself about the issues. You never know, you might change your mind. While you're there, go take a look at Canada's deal with the EU, and ask yourself why we were paying a fortune to "free" (sic) trade in the single market, when Canadian access, is (sector-dependent) 94-100% tariff free. For free. Now. This really is my last reply to you. I'll do my best to skim past your contributions in future. They don't really advance the discussion. PwC's recent report on the World in 2050 said: Of course, we should not dismiss political shocks like Trump or Brexit to the extent they point to deeper structural shifts, notably a populist backlash against globalisation, automation and the perceived impact of these trends in increasing income inequality and weakening social cohesion. These trends pose real policy challenges across the developed world and beyond and, as we discuss in Section 4 of this report, there is no silver bullet to address these concerns. They require determined efforts by governments to boost the quality of education and training, and address perceived unfairness through well-targeted fiscal policies. They also require real political leadership to resist calls for increased protectionism and maintain momentum on longer term issues like climate change and global poverty reduction. Also from the Report: Inequality is not just a matter of social justice, but can also act as a drag on economic growth. Recent research by the IMF has found that, on average, a one percentage point increase in the income share of the top 20 percent lowers GDP growth by 0.08 percentage point in the following five years. These findings contradict previous thinking that the benefits of growth will trickle down to those at the bottom. In fact, the findings show that a more equal society could increase economic growth, with a one percentage point increase in the bottom 20%’s income share being associated with a 0.38 percentage point increase in growth over the following five years. This may occur through greater standards of living boosting productivity or equality generating the right incentives for individuals and businesses to invest in education and innovation. Greater economic inequality may also lead to social friction and potentially undesirable political outcomes. The Tories are actively seeking policies that increase inequality, cut spending on education, remove the positive impact of fiscal policy, threats of leaving the EU on WTO terms (a very bad deal), put a climate change sceptic in charge of the Environment Office (May dodges every question about climate change put to her), and employed very poor political leadership since they won a majority in 2015. Unfairness only continues to increase under this government and their policies of austerity (unless of course you live in Northern Ireland now) These guys are going about the challenges of Brexit the wrong way. Dave - did you factor in the Tory debacle and their poor handling of the economy and Brexit into your thinking? I don't disagree with your sentiments that in the long run it can be a success but these guys are sinking the ship and the damage may be difficult to repair.
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CambridgeEagle Sydenham 28 Jun 17 9.12am | |
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Originally posted by We are goin up!
I voted Leave but there's absolutely no chance we'll know whether Brexit is a success or not until about 15 years' time. Nothing has actually changed yet, but both sides are jumping on any bit of good/bad news and showing it as PROOF that their side is right. It's bonkers, and also getting quite boring.
I think it will be clear within 12 months. If the Tories are still clinging to power propped up by the DUP it won't be a success. They will create lasting damage to our nation and our economy. Edited by CambridgeEagle (28 Jun 2017 9.13am)
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hedgehog50 Croydon 28 Jun 17 9.59am | |
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Originally posted by CambridgeEagle
The Tories are actively seeking policies that increase inequality, cut spending on education, remove the positive impact of fiscal policy, threats of leaving the EU on WTO terms (a very bad deal), put a climate change sceptic in charge of the Environment Office (May dodges every question about climate change put to her), and employed very poor political leadership since they won a majority in 2015. Unfairness only continues to increase under this government and their policies of austerity (unless of course you live in Northern Ireland now) These guys are going about the challenges of Brexit the wrong way. Dave - did you factor in the Tory debacle and their poor handling of the economy and Brexit into your thinking? I don't disagree with your sentiments that in the long run it can be a success but these guys are sinking the ship and the damage may be difficult to repair. So campaign for Corbyn, or whoever, start another party that supports your views perhaps, after all we are still a democracy. Sooner or later there will be another General Election and the electorate will be able to choose again between a somewhat incompetent Tory government and a communist-lite alternative.
We have now sunk to a depth at which the restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men. [Orwell] |
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