AliasAggers wrote:I didn't vote for May's version of Brexit, or any other version for that matter. I just wanted OUT.
This is the whole problem. Leaving the EU has been wrapped into a sound byte and then warped into some nightmarish version of alternate reality, then presented as something people voted for.
We will be OUT of the EU. Whether or not we choose to bind ourselves back to the EU, for a trade deal, or not, is another matter. The fact that people like Blair are trying to use the lack of a deal to stop the UK leaving the EU is all anyone needs to know about what is good for the UK and what is good for Blair.
For now, that is the largest part of what everyone who voted to Leave needs to know. Yes, in reality, we need some more clarity on what things will need to be fixed and aligned post Brexit and if we don't get that clarity then the 6 months following our Exit from the EU are going to be fairly bumpy.
The big problem, as I see it, is that those who are delivering the "deal" don't really want to leave the EU, so they are using the lack of a deal to scare everyone (including the EU), into seeing things their way.
So I'm relying on the intransigents in the EU to screw it up and push us beyond 29 March 2019. Then it will be come very evident VERY quickly that in terms of goods there are about 10 times as much goods coming into the UK from the EU as are leaving the UK bound for the EU. Think Kent is going to be bad, Nord Pad De Calais is going to grind to a halt if we don't have a deal. At which point Macron is going to have his head served on a platter for making things worse, not better.
Perhaps it is better to remember that the UK economy is very heavily SERVICE orientated on our exports. Whereas the EU exports to the UK are massively PRODUCT based.
Contrary to the rhetoric going on today, services are agile, easy to move to other markets and don't require millions of trucks every year. Products are NOT.
I'm more than a little tired of the posturing. Who read the statement from Arlene Foster, yesterday, quoting the Irish Government and the EU that regardless of a deal, or no deal, the NI border would not be closed. It got air in the Belfast Telegraph, I didn't see it anywhere else.
The phrase "being sold a pup" comes to mind more and more these days and it is not Leave who are doing the selling.
Give it a decade or two, keep the politicians on their toes and the UK will be free and clear of the EU. I never expected to live it, much, but I do expect my children and grandchildren will.