Brexited | the worst threads live the longest

Do you think there will be a Deal or No Deal?


  • Total voters
    194
  • Poll closed .
Unilever's European supply chain is an ongoing 25 year project, has been designed by some of the best business minds in a generation, to maximise the efficiencies and benefits offered by the EU. Its very complicated to de-link what costs are attributable to UK and what is imported, and some poor accountant is going through that painstaking exercise right now!

Same with deployment of people: Unilever, like all truly multinational British businesses would have legally benefited from the free movement of people throughout Europe, and so I imagine there will be plenty of non UK people in British Unilever factories and plenty of UK people in mainland Europe factories.

Every multinational British business would have spent £millions and years on operating successfully within the EU framework. BrexIt is asking them to undo all that work. The utter madness of Brexit is now really starting to be felt; this is a small indication of the pain in front of us. Unilever will just be a micro-ism of all UK businesses - the question you ask is an accounting cluster-f*ck and is only relevant due to political point scoring from the decision to BrExit.

Yes exactly, but think of the benefits of Brexit
 
The Marmite wars are over according to Unilever, so that's the worst of Brexit over with and it's all sugar coated rainbows from here on in.
 
According to the Daily Mail, the BBC is guilty of failing "to present the positive case for Brexit."

The BBC subsequently announce that unfortunately during certain periods of the day, viewers will now only see a blank screen.

I find the Mail's outrage with moaners and remoaners etc to be amusing considering the reason it exists is to moan.
 
According to the Daily Mail, the BBC is guilty of failing "to present the positive case for Brexit."

The BBC subsequently announce that unfortunately during certain periods of the day, viewers will now only see a blank screen.

They can speak about how the UK will leave the EU and make a success out of it, and that Brexit means Brexit, and that the UK is the 5th biggest economy in the world....and they are leaving the EU and they are going to make a success to it and WTO and.......they are going to make a success out of it
 
Stolen from Facebook but

Suppose remain had won by a few percent and the government took that as Carte blanche to pursue hard remain and adopt the euro, insist on multilingual signs and banned using imperial measurements

The brexiteers would have gone (rightly) ape shit
 
Last edited:
Stolen from Facebook but

Suppose remain had won by a few percent and the government took that as Carte blanche to pursue hard remain and adopt the euro, insist on multilingual signed and banned using imperial measurements

The brexiteers would have gone (rightly) ape shit

Ban English and adopt French as the national language, regain our heritage, 1066 and all that
 
Why? Are you claiming everyone you know is an economics expert?

1. People have been misled or even lied to by the campaigners....who immediately backtracked on immigration and NHS hours after the vote results.
2. People in towns who have the get the most benefit from EU currently have voted exit. There were numerous articles which did bring to light on common voters not understanding the full implications.
3. Numerous have voted Exit as a protest vote which has nothing to do with Brexit per se.

I work in Financial Sector and closely with both UK and EU and do attend regular calls/seminar from leading economists to understand this better. Not everyone has access to those and those are the ones who voted (not saying this is a fault, just pointing out a reality check).

It's obvious that not everybody can be a expert in everything, so the comment on 'stupid' is just nonsense. It's the way the referendum was organized that galls me more than the results.

You speak the truth sir. I am one of the many you speak of who had no real idea what the ecomical implications of an in or out vote would mean for the country. I have to be totally honest and say that it is only by reading through this thread ( so it's probably why I'm a little behind where you guys are at. Believe it or not I've probably read through most of the pages on this thread!) that I'm actually really understanding the ramifications of the whole eu debate. I had to learn from real people who are actually discussing and presenting the reasons behind Brexit and the possible dangers or benefits.

I felt I was left with two stark choices. One was to remain and try to solidify what was already a pretty influential position. The other was to leave because we wanted more control over immigration and border control because our NHS, jobs, homes and very Britishness was under attack.

Now my family were one of many immigrants (from former British colonies) who were invited to help rebuild Britain after the second world war. They worked long, hard hours in often hostile environments to contribute to the Great in Britain. I grew up being aware and enjoyed the benefits of my parents culture whilst being essentially being English. I ate rice and peas on Sunday and fish and chips from a newspaper on Friday night like most English families. I feel as English/British as the next man.

For me the choice was simple. I felt a vote to leave would be an insult to people like my parents and the benefits of free movement. I absolutely hated the rhetoric coming from the leavers and didn't particularly fancy the faces of either side. I mean Fecking David Cameron was meant to be my champion!!! Jeez!!!

No I voted on my moral code, principles and gut instinct. No great political insight because it was never presented as such or in a manner that the average person could understand.

For what it's worth based on what I've read and learnt on here (and am therefore becoming more engaged in) it seems that my decision was right at least.
 
Brexit fears send pound tumbling – Politics Weekly

The value of the pound nose-dived to its lowest level in 168 years this week as the money markets took fright at the government’s harsher tone on its plans for Brexit. With little detail spelled out, there was also little reassurance for investors that the UK was determined to stay within the European single market and customs union.

We hear from former business secretary Sir Vince Cable who says the pound has been overvalued for too long, but admits the crash will leave people poorer.

Joining Heather Stewart to discuss it all are economics editor Larry Elliott, columnist Rafael Behr and the IPPR’s Catherine Colebrook.

Also this week: we hear from former Labour leader Ed Miliband who has been leading calls for parliament to have a full role in the Brexit process.

And we hear from Labour MP Chi Onwurah who has decided to stay on Labour’s front bench under Jeremy Corbyn despite her harsh criticism of his management style in the summer.

Listen online :: https://audio.guim.co.uk/2016/10/13-52406-gdn.po.161013.politics-weekly.mp3



Larry Elliott asks some good questions about the economy. Over to the Government and its successors for the answers.

Ed Miliband did remind us why he shouldn't be PM though.
 
Last edited:
About what, Remainers moaning, you should read the Daily Express and The Mail.
Remainers have got every right to moan, democracy and all that.
If I was now living in the UK I'd be ripping into the Brexiteers.

Before the vote they were all over facebook and all that and those of my family/friends who voted leave couldn't wait to bring it up. Now barely a peep. In my own little bubble, the only people who seem to still give a shite are those who voted remain.

But hey, as long as we stop calling brexit voters stupid and all work together, it'll all be ok.
 
Before the vote they were all over facebook and all that and those of my family/friends who voted leave couldn't wait to bring it up. Now barely a peep. In my own little bubble, the only people who seem to still give a shite are those who voted remain.

But hey, as long as we stop calling brexit voters stupid and all work together, it'll all be ok.

Same here, have family in the UK who voted leave, not a peep either, although I did try to stop talking about it some time ago with them to avoid family arguments.
They won't say anything unless or until it all goes wrong and then they'll blame the EU for being vindictive or immigrants for still being there or whoever they can blame for their own decision.
 
Several weeks ago most on here were criticising the UK for failing to activate A50, now you wish for it to be mired in uncertainty and killed by a thousand cuts.


Stolen from Facebook but

Suppose remain had won by a few percent and the government took that as Carte blanche to pursue hard remain and adopt the euro, insist on multilingual signs and banned using imperial measurements

The brexiteers would have gone (rightly) ape shit

If joining the Euro had been part of Remain's pitch, your comparison might have at least had some validity. As it is however...

You would also have to factor include a Leave dominated Commons in your scenario, and their ignoring of a majority Europhile public for many years.
 
Same here, have family in the UK who voted leave, not a peep either, although I did try to stop talking about it some time ago with them to avoid family arguments.
They won't say anything unless or until it all goes wrong and then they'll blame the EU for being vindictive or immigrants for still being there or whoever they can blame for their own decision.
They'll blame the remainers for not rolling up their sleeves enough to give it a jolly good go.
 
About what, Remainers moaning, you should read the Daily Express and The Mail.
Remainers have got every right to moan, democracy and all that.
If I was now living in the UK I'd be ripping into the Brexiteers.
I have no time for negativity. It's tedious.
 
How divided will the UK become as time elapses over the coming months and years
Much much more, given we are not even close to actually leaving yet!

Expect a major schism clause on the day clause 50 is actually activated and several more smaller but significant ones after that, once newsworthy fall out decisions get announced.

I think £1 < €1 & $1 is a genuine reality coming up.
 
Last edited:
"However, those who opted to Leave have stronger feelings of remorse about their vote. Whereas only 1% of Remainers regret their choice, 6% of Leavers do (a further 4% are undecided, compared with 1% of Remain voters). That would have been enough to have changed the outcome of the referendum to a win for Remain. The theory that many Leavers voted as a protest against the political elite, as well as experts, gets more credibility from the study. Leaver remorse is strongest among those who didn’t expect their side to win: one in ten of them regret their vote."

http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2016/10/daily-chart-6
 
You speak the truth sir. I am one of the many you speak of who had no real idea what the ecomical implications of an in or out vote would mean for the country. I have to be totally honest and say that it is only by reading through this thread ( so it's probably why I'm a little behind where you guys are at. Believe it or not I've probably read through most of the pages on this thread!) that I'm actually really understanding the ramifications of the whole eu debate. I had to learn from real people who are actually discussing and presenting the reasons behind Brexit and the possible dangers or benefits.

I felt I was left with two stark choices. One was to remain and try to solidify what was already a pretty influential position. The other was to leave because we wanted more control over immigration and border control because our NHS, jobs, homes and very Britishness was under attack.

Now my family were one of many immigrants (from former British colonies) who were invited to help rebuild Britain after the second world war. They worked long, hard hours in often hostile environments to contribute to the Great in Britain. I grew up being aware and enjoyed the benefits of my parents culture whilst being essentially being English. I ate rice and peas on Sunday and fish and chips from a newspaper on Friday night like most English families. I feel as English/British as the next man.

For me the choice was simple. I felt a vote to leave would be an insult to people like my parents and the benefits of free movement. I absolutely hated the rhetoric coming from the leavers and didn't particularly fancy the faces of either side. I mean Fecking David Cameron was meant to be my champion!!! Jeez!!!

No I voted on my moral code, principles and gut instinct. No great political insight because it was never presented as such or in a manner that the average person could understand.

For what it's worth based on what I've read and learnt on here (and am therefore becoming more engaged in) it seems that my decision was right at least.

This post pleases me.
 
Outside this forum I've heard nowt

Almost every single British or Irish friend I have are shocked and stunned. The very few who aren't as far as I know might be but I haven't discussed it with them.
 
I think people are starting to realize that Britain are up shit creak without a paddle.
Yes, and it's not really any comfort to be able to say "I told you so".
No, not only on here - people in the real world who are trying to deal with the inplications of this mess.
I was only yesterday talking about it to a friend who has been living and working here in Italy with his family for years now. His teenage kids have done most of their schooling here, but they're not Italian citizens. The cost of everything is just steadily climbing for Brits now, both at home and abroad.