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Strange first post. American?
Or maybe just a troll.
The first sensible post in this thread!After reading many, many pages of this thread, going way back to specific points in the whole drama. It's fairly obvious that British business has delusions of grandeur... I guess that's why all the successful Brits leave! Many of which have more control over government policy now they've left than when they were living there.
British business has totally failed itself, it fails to even lobby the right politicians. (Though to be fair, the politicians don't even know who or what they represent. They're too busy throwing each other under buses left, right and center. Anything to avoid taking responsibility.) UK business is always secondary to foreign businesses/interest yet few seem to care.
The rest of the world would be mad to take any of you seriously. You literally spent 100 billion (Nearly a years worth of an NHS budget) on a testing regime that's totally counter intuitive. Yet a sizeable majority take pride in that. The ROW see a weak self-indulgent nation, ripe for the picking.
Do any of you want to leave anything positive to your offspring? Or is serfdom a kind of character building?
Except that in this case, Randle McMurphy is busily lobotomizing himself!Very revealing of the situation that the UK currently finds itself. The Randle McMurphy of the world...
After reading many, many pages of this thread, going way back to specific points in the whole drama. It's fairly obvious that British business has delusions of grandeur... I guess that's why all the successful Brits leave! Many of which have more control over government policy now they've left than when they were living there.
British business has totally failed itself, it fails to even lobby the right politicians. (Though to be fair, the politicians don't even know who or what they represent. They're too busy throwing each other under buses left, right and center. Anything to avoid taking responsibility.) UK business is always secondary to foreign businesses/interest yet few seem to care.
The rest of the world would be mad to take any of you seriously. You literally spent 100 billion (Nearly a years worth of an NHS budget) on a testing regime that's totally counter intuitive. Yet a sizeable majority take pride in that. The ROW see a weak self-indulgent nation, ripe for the picking.
Do any of you want to leave anything positive to your offspring? Or is serfdom a kind of character building?
Very revealing of the situation that the UK currently finds itself. The Randle McMurphy of the world...
The rest of the world would be mad to take any of you seriously. You literally spent 100 billion (Nearly a years worth of an NHS budget) on a testing regime that's totally counter intuitive. Yet a sizeable majority take pride in that. The ROW see a weak self-indulgent nation, ripe for the picking.
I presume you are talking of our track and trace? Can I ask who is taking pride in that? (Citing some evidence would be helpful)
We (the U.K.) are a massively divided nation (or, perhaps more presciently, nations) but I think that there are currently two things that we all - Rich, poor, leave, remain, north, south, old, young - agree on:
1. Our track and trace system is a shambolic (and possibly criminal) expensive failure.
2. Our vaccine roll out is going well.
I am far from being anti-Brit. In fact, Britain is a fantastic place to live if you live far enough away from London and you are just a bit wealthy.Or are you like Byre just a anti Brit but nowhere better to live so does not emigrate, but just moans about everything
I am far from being anti-Brit. In fact, Britain is a fantastic place to live if you live far enough away from London and you are just a bit wealthy.
You do not have to have a great deal of wealth, but you do have to have a seven-figure net value and an independent and reliable income that is far from the sticky tentacles of HMRC. Now that the UK is out of the EU, that means that all the connections and information sources of the EU are denied it. It is in effect blind. Not only that, but the current government is obviously not going to make the various tax-havens dotted around the world accountable. The present situation is jam for the wealthy!
But then of course, as a Brit, you do not have to hide your wealth or your income. The tax system is carefully designed to be applicable to the middle-classes only. You do not have to pay VAT on big-ticket items. You do not pay stamp duty on that manor house. You do not get troubled by pesky things like inheritance tax. You obviously do not pay income tax - but Papa State is still kind enough to give you a full state pension at other tax-payers' expense.
And if the middle-classes get upperty and above their station and begin to imagine that they too ought to be wealthy and not pay taxes by using such things as forgivable loans and trying to off-shore their incomes and pretend that they are making films that never get made, HMRC slaps them down, assumes that they have been doing that for at least 20 years and takes their house away.
"You're middle-class and you're supposed to pay taxes!" says HMRC. "Not paying taxes is for plebs and nibs only! Where the hell do you think you are? Russia?"
But then, ever since the 70s, there was a secret pathway for the lower orders to become upwardly mobile and (heavens forbid!) become wealthy. They could leave the UK and work in Europe, the States, or the Far East. The States is now picky and only wants useful people. The Far East is far less accommodating and we've stopped all that nonsense about kids (whose parents had to buy their plastic furniture on the never-never) building businesses in mainland Europe.
Oh, but it gets better! Try buying a decent house for £200k. You'll get a not very nice flat somewhere. Now up that to two million - do you get ten times as much? Hell no! You can have a luxurious manor house with 17 acres for that kind of dough! And the house is owned by an Ltd. and that belongs to a holding company in the Bahamas. The Ltd. is VAT registered, so tractors, diggers and any other toys are VAT-free and you buy the holding, so no stamp duty.
For sale now for £2m -
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Then there's this one for half the price, 12 bedrooms and 8 acres -
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You have to go to bonkers places like Rumania or Hungary to get properties like that! You used to get them in France and Italy until Brits snapped them all up and wondered why the locals don't speak English.
So if you can afford a decent place to live and you can't be arsed to learn Rumanian and you want low crime rates, rule of law and relatively cheap labour, and you don't mind the weather and you hate paying taxes - well, the UK it is!
It's a bit like American trust-fund and hedge-fund managers and Peurto Rico!
As it happens, the UK has allocated test and trace a budget of £22 billion (not 100 billion as claimed by the troll), and the vast majority of that is spent on the cost of the tests themselves.
So who is leading the world then in your eye's you obviously know who you think is doing it right and would like the UK to follow there lead
Ah, not a troll, just a little goblin.
I am a lot more optimistic about the future, the UK is a fantastic place to live, and is a great trading nation. Whilst we are going through a lot of changes, so will the EU in the future.
So who is leading the world then in your eye's you obviously know who you think is doing it right and would like the UK to follow there lead
I was referring to the "Moonshot testing" plan. I suppose the price is more about optics, nothing to do with reality. Fact is that testing is not really reliable enough to measure large number of cases. The greater the tests, the greater the false positive/negatives. You cannot decide covid policy on it.
China and most of Asian pacific... No I am not some neocon hawk. I cringe when I see media criticising western response given success of China and Russia vaccines being rolled out across developing world. Partly down to their shadowy science, they were always getting in first. One things for sure, the selfishness in the western world has really excelled itself. I'm not sure we can recover. I pray that we can keep ahead of the convergent evolution. We all should be. It's far too late to follow other countries lead now...
Let me be clear on this, if it hadn't been for Trump, this would NOT have happened on this scale. TLR - He was too frightened of negatively affecting the economy in an election year. Even he would have closed borders if it had happened earlier in his term.
If only! I wish I knew what Britain stood for now. I have no problem with ideology, but I struggle to see any sincerity in any UK party... The Conservatives and Unionists seem to be neither, I liked that their Minster for Unionism lasted two weeks! They seem to be interested in power for powers sake. I'm just amazed business has rolled over. The liberal democrats are the same. Neither Liberal or Democratic. Who knows what Labour really stand for? The SNP and Greens are the only ones with any sincerity. Doesn't bode well in FPTP two party state with more unelected lawmakers than the EU! (Though the MEP's actually have to win a vote.) There's an argument to say China is doing a better job of democracy considering they outnumber you 20 to 1! I am being facetious, but I see the stories of the poor souls who have been shafted on flammable cladding and I wonder...
A great trading nation? As a nation you've managed to put border/custom controls within your own country and overseas territories. Obviously the media / government are very good at pulling the wool over the eyes of the populous.
Your amazing artists/musicians/architects/audio+visual people are going to be seriously hindered in being able to work on the continent... That's before you fisherman and farmers get royally stuffed. I see a deal with Brazil looking likely.
The way your government speaks regarding state subsidy of business is crazy. You have deals with third nations (JPN/CA) that already bind you, yet any agreement with the EU on the subject is considered sacrilege.
I suspect the media has a lot to answer for, and many suggest that business was very fearful of government. 9 times out of 10 when democracies find themselves in this situation they do not recover. I fully expect the Conservatives, quite possibly with Johnson still at the helm, to be in power a decade from now.
A great trading nation? As a nation you've managed to put border/custom controls within your own country and overseas territories. Obviously the media / government are very good at pulling the wool over the eyes of the populous.
Your amazing artists/musicians/architects/audio+visual people are going to be seriously hindered in being able to work on the continent... That's before you fisherman and farmers get royally stuffed. I see a deal with Brazil looking likely.
The way your government speaks regarding state subsidy of business is crazy. You have deals with third nations (JPN/CA) that already bind you, yet any agreement with the EU on the subject is considered sacrilege.
I suspect the media has a lot to answer for, and many suggest that business was very fearful of government. 9 times out of 10 when democracies find themselves in this situation they do not recover. I fully expect the Conservatives, quite possibly with Johnson still at the helm, to be in power a decade from now.
After three months of no haircut I could take it no more. My wife would not cut it so I did a selfy-job. I now have a Boris cut, good luck to the barber who has to fix it.
Sorry - wrong thread I had them both open however it was meant to be a bit of humour. My good wife has sent the photo to everyone at my expense.
In your dreams.I think a lot of French people will be starting to look at Brexit, wondering how their economy might change if they had the franc again. A recent survey was predicting the UK to outstrip France by 25% in a few years time, once they were a larger economy, then equals, now ......
Not only France. Many eyes all over the EU are watching to see what happens to us, though it will be hard in the next year or so to separate what is a pandemic effect from a Brexit effect.I think a lot of French people will be starting to look at Brexit, wondering how their economy might change if they had the franc again.
France gains the record for the highest deficit for an EU nation in 2020, 82.5 billion euros.
I think a lot of French people will be starting to look at Brexit, wondering how their economy might change if they had the franc again. A recent survey was predicting the UK to outstrip France by 25% in a few years time, once they were a larger economy, then equals, now ......
And just what was it before the referendum? The best comparison is the day before Cameron announced the referendum. Things have continued to go downhill since.Pound is very strong against the Euro, Dollar and Yen which is great for importers but bad for exporters £1 buys 1.159 euro, 1.408 $, and 105.29 yen
And just what was it before the referendum? The best comparison is the day before Cameron announced the referendum. Things have continued to go downhill since.
Sorry - wrong thread I had them both open however it was meant to be a bit of humour. My good wife has sent the photo to everyone at my expense.
it will be hard in the next year or so to separate what is a pandemic effect from a Brexit effect.
More like 1.43.
I don't recall the exact date the referendum was announced, but the draft bill was published in May 2013. According to this chart, the exchange rate as of April 30th 2013 was 1.18.
https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/bank-of-england-spot/historical-spot-exchange-rates/gbp/GBP-to-EUR
UK economy to recover to pre-Covid levels this year...
Today's news, governor of Bank of England says:
Er, has this guy not heard about Brexit?