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Post by buccaneer on Feb 10, 2023 11:00:42 GMT
1. How much would Britain pay into the EU budget if it rejoined? 2. What would annual net migration be after Free Movement is restored? 3. What proportion of the global economy and of British trade will the EU represent in twenty years’ time? 4. What would be the effect on future trade of abandoning negotiations for closer relations with the Pacific region? 5. What would be the economic cost of our eventually joining the Eurozone? 6. Will the UK rejoin the Common Fisheries Policy? 7. As we already have a Free Trade Agreement with the EU, what precisely would be the advantage of rejoining its Single Market and Customs Union? 8. Will Brussels lawmakers have priority over the UK parliament and will the European Court of Justice be superior to British courts? 9. Would Rejoiners agree to the EU being in overall charge of foreign and security policy? 10. Will Rejoiners commit to a referendum to approve the terms negotiated for a new relationship with the EU? www.briefingsforbritain.co.uk/ten-questions-for-rejoiners/Suffice to say, you couldn't convince us before. Fancy having another go by answering these?
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Post by jonksy on Feb 10, 2023 11:12:16 GMT
1. How much would Britain pay into the EU budget if it rejoined? 2. What would annual net migration be after Free Movement is restored? 3. What proportion of the global economy and of British trade will the EU represent in twenty years’ time? 4. What would be the effect on future trade of abandoning negotiations for closer relations with the Pacific region? 5. What would be the economic cost of our eventually joining the Eurozone? 6. Will the UK rejoin the Common Fisheries Policy? 7. As we already have a Free Trade Agreement with the EU, what precisely would be the advantage of rejoining its Single Market and Customs Union? 8. Will Brussels lawmakers have priority over the UK parliament and will the European Court of Justice be superior to British courts? 9. Would Rejoiners agree to the EU being in overall charge of foreign and security policy? 10. Will Rejoiners commit to a referendum to approve the terms negotiated for a new relationship with the EU? www.briefingsforbritain.co.uk/ten-questions-for-rejoiners/Suffice to say, you couldn't convince us before. Fancy having another go by answering these? The silence will be deafening mate..
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Post by The Squeezed Middle on Feb 10, 2023 11:33:09 GMT
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Post by buccaneer on Feb 10, 2023 12:30:22 GMT
Gnomey, gnomey where art thou?
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Post by steppenwolf on Feb 10, 2023 13:10:35 GMT
And what would be the cost of having to join the euro and losing control of our currency and fiscal policy? It's like the SNP demands to leave the UK and join the EU - they haven't thought it through.
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Post by buccaneer on Feb 12, 2023 0:03:46 GMT
Seems like rejoiners have steered clear of this thread. Telling.
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Post by Steve on Feb 12, 2023 1:58:43 GMT
Maybe you should read your idiot trolling thread title if you don't understand why no one wants to answer your questions
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Post by Red Rackham on Feb 12, 2023 3:20:37 GMT
Where is Oracle, I would have thought he/she would have explained the error of the OP by now...
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Post by Deleted on Feb 12, 2023 9:54:17 GMT
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Post by Steve on Feb 12, 2023 12:08:00 GMT
I suggest wake up and smell the coffee. If even Gove is admitting Brexit to date is a failure then it's a real issue.
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Post by jonksy on Feb 12, 2023 12:15:51 GMT
I suggest wake up and smell the coffee. If even Gove is admitting Brexit to date is a failure then it's a real issue. And the usual cunts will try and make it a failure….Keep polishing your EUSSR turd John because that’s all you have.
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Post by Steve on Feb 12, 2023 12:18:10 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Feb 13, 2023 14:31:48 GMT
1. How much would Britain pay into the EU budget if it rejoined? 2. What would annual net migration be after Free Movement is restored? 3. What proportion of the global economy and of British trade will the EU represent in twenty years’ time? 4. What would be the effect on future trade of abandoning negotiations for closer relations with the Pacific region? 5. What would be the economic cost of our eventually joining the Eurozone? 6. Will the UK rejoin the Common Fisheries Policy? 7. As we already have a Free Trade Agreement with the EU, what precisely would be the advantage of rejoining its Single Market and Customs Union? 8. Will Brussels lawmakers have priority over the UK parliament and will the European Court of Justice be superior to British courts? 9. Would Rejoiners agree to the EU being in overall charge of foreign and security policy? 10. Will Rejoiners commit to a referendum to approve the terms negotiated for a new relationship with the EU? www.briefingsforbritain.co.uk/ten-questions-for-rejoiners/Suffice to say, you couldn't convince us before. Fancy having another go by answering these? They're more interested in crying and complaining, whilst making demands on authority to wipe their tears.
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Post by Einhorn on Feb 13, 2023 14:33:58 GMT
1. How much would Britain pay into the EU budget if it rejoined? 2. What would annual net migration be after Free Movement is restored? 3. What proportion of the global economy and of British trade will the EU represent in twenty years’ time? 4. What would be the effect on future trade of abandoning negotiations for closer relations with the Pacific region? 5. What would be the economic cost of our eventually joining the Eurozone? 6. Will the UK rejoin the Common Fisheries Policy? 7. As we already have a Free Trade Agreement with the EU, what precisely would be the advantage of rejoining its Single Market and Customs Union? 8. Will Brussels lawmakers have priority over the UK parliament and will the European Court of Justice be superior to British courts? 9. Would Rejoiners agree to the EU being in overall charge of foreign and security policy? 10. Will Rejoiners commit to a referendum to approve the terms negotiated for a new relationship with the EU? www.briefingsforbritain.co.uk/ten-questions-for-rejoiners/Suffice to say, you couldn't convince us before. Fancy having another go by answering these? They're more interested in crying and complaining, whilst making demands on authority to wipe their tears. It's a winning formula. 65% and counting. If it's not broken ...
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Feb 13, 2023 14:52:45 GMT
Loads of questions
I'll have a go at this one though.
It's difficult to say. There is only one important country in that region, and that is China. China is the world's second largest economy and destined to become the world's largest. You can't stop this from happening - point number one. The question boils down to would the UK be able to get a better trading deal with China outside of the EU compared to the EU without us, to the state where we are back in the EU and try and a bloc.
Well things are changing. The problem is alignment to the US. China is very tentative about states that don't make their own decisions but simply take orders from the US, which they know would lead to trouble, as has occurred many times. As it is right now we are totally subservient the US and the EU is breaking away from it after they blew up their pipeline. So what we have in the EU is the institution as a whole is led by Ursula von der Leyen who is a US plant, and yet major countries like France, Germany, Netherlands are trying to form closer ties. I'd include Hungary here as well, but that's one where the leader is pretty anti-EU anyway. Germany and France though are the backbone of it.
So looking at how things may turn out, if the EU splits from the US then it will form a close relationship with China and get a good free trade agreement. The way each successive prime minister in the UK since Cameron has been anti-China due to being pro-US (May was about half and half) and all the party leaders are similarly aligned, I think we could do far worse in China. It would take someone like Cameron/Osborne to go over there and chat them up and say hey guys, we're not working on Maggie's Farm no more and would like to be friends. If we did we would see some juicy contracts pushed out way. Waht I'm saying is we asa nation are our worst enemies. We beat ourselves up.
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