Japan Goes Public With Brexit Demands, Says Data Flow Deals Must Be Protected (arstechnica.com) 315
Kelly Fiveash, writing for ArsTechnica:UK Prime minister Theresa May said at the weekend that she wanted to take her time to secure the best trade deals for a post-Brexit Britain, and reiterated -- in her trademark vague terms -- that the so-called Article 50 won't be triggered this year. But political pressure from governments as far away as Japan continues to mount. On Sunday, in a bold move, the Japanese government published a 15-page memo setting out a number of demands it wants the UK to adhere to, once it leaves the European Union. It underscored that Britain faces a torrid time of negotiations -- not just with member states in the EU, but further afield, too. Japan, which has close economic ties with the UK, listed its demands based on requests from businesses in the country. It said; "It is of great importance that the UK and the EU maintain market integrity and remain attractive destinations for businesses where free trade, unfettered investment, and smooth financial transactions are ensured." It's brutal stuff from Japan, and could well lead to other countries making similarly robust demands. On tech specifically, the Japanese government called on the UK and EU, post-Brexit, to maintain cloud agreements between businesses at an international level, by safeguarding the "free transfer of data."
Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't follow European news, but I doubt that very much. The UK is ~14% of the total GDP of the EU (second largest in the EU): it dropping out without replacing the existing trade deals would be a massive economic blow to the EU. The EU may want to punish the UK for leaving, but I doubt they'd do it at the risk of collapsing the EU economy.
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
The EU are saying "you voted leave, and this period if instability is good for no one, including the rest of the EU".
Not a bad point, on the whole. I mean, it's almost like we went into a referendum to leave the EU without having any idea about what this means, or any plans to achieve it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I understand where this is coming from, we're looking at Donald Trump for example, but consider what democracy means. The people are not happy with this global economy (in most 1st world countries, and some 3rd world countries, see Russia). While a referendum to leave the EU was probably oddly specific and not the best solution to put in front of the average person, it may serve to put the brakes on the process, which is what is really needed. The big business types are all excited about the various forms o
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Q1 - Is the British Government sovereign in any and all decisions about how to run the country while in the EU.
Q2 - Can the UK sustain net immigration each year of 300,000 people, and can this be avoided while staying in the EU?
Any more questions, because those are the only two that fucking matter.
Re: (Score:2)
Let me be the first to point out that:
Q1: the UK have had a place at the negociating table for years. If British people don't like the EU decisions, they only have themselves to blame, because they did not negotiate properly. Period.
(As an aside, I am fscking tired of freaking politicians, British or French or otherwise, who complain about EU decisions: DO YOUR JOB YOU MORONS! And negotiate in the best interest of your countries!!)
Q2: See Q1. Immigration is a subject like any other and should be negotiated
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Really? You think the British can outvote 27 other nations?
On some matters, yes - we have a veto.
On the rest? No. Multiple times the British Government has been outvoted and forced to adopt legislation it didn't want.
Negotiations are good. Being unable to walk away and reject the outcome is not. Since the little decisions wouldn't go our way, we took the big one. We're walking away, and we'll make our own law, take our own decisions, and we wont have to negotiate with corrupt cunts in Europe to do it.
Re: Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:2)
Negotiations are good. Being unable to walk away and reject the outcome is not.
What would be the point of the former if each party could choose the later? Seriously, the point is to reach a consensus, not get what YOU want.
Ok, so you voted to leave... Then leave already. Before the vote, the Brits wouldn't shut up. After the vote, it's the EU that is speaking louder... About you guys leaving.
And to the other Brits that voted to stay... You lost. Get over it and work with your brothers to steer the ship properly. Stop whining.
And we all know that the majority of the Brits (aka: adult
Re: Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:4, Insightful)
What would be the point of the former if each party could choose the later? Seriously, the point is to reach a consensus, not get what YOU want.
erm. Actually yes, the point of negotiation is to get what you want.
The negotiation is to find common ground so that all parties can get what they want, and everybody's happy. At no point does this presuppose that all parties must agree at the end.
Haven't you heard the term, "Negotiations broke down..." ?
Tell you what, I'll buy your car for $4. Lets negotiate - you can probably bargain me as high as $7, but I wont go beyond that.
Accepting this negotiation outcome? Or walking away? Oh look, reality just intervened.
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
UK has been behaving like a spoiled child throwing a tantrum every time things didn't go their way. Unfortunately the rest of the union has been way too soft to the brits instead of telling them a well-deserved "fuck you".
Re: (Score:2)
I mean, it's almost like we went into a referendum to leave the EU without having any idea about what this means, or any plans to achieve it.
Almost like?
Er, I believe this is what's known as "humour", m'lud.
:-)
:-( might be more appropriate.
I suspect the point the OP is making is that it's *exactly* like we went into a referendum to leave the EU without having any idea about what this means, or any plans to achieve it because that's what in fact happened.
On the other hand, I think
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Every single one of those people are just "morons"? There is no reason at all to want your country run by your laws and nothing else?
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
OK, let me help you.
True, the UK can get its own trade agreement with the EU, but if it is going to be even slightly comparable to the one it has now (full, unhindered market access), it will have to cede control of its borders to the EU when it comes to EU nationals immigrating (as this will definitely be a condition of a favourable deal - see other non-EU countries in Europe who trade under agreement with the EU). Non-EU immigration has always been under the control of the UK, and Brexit changes nothing
Re: (Score:3)
Multiculturalism can be great, no question. But there has to be some level of shared values between those cultures, and immigrants have to integrate at leas
Re: (Score:3)
The EU is saying that the Irish government giving state aid to Apple is not compatible with their EEC treaty obligations. It's like any trade deal, there are rules which both sides agree to. In the case of a free trade deal that usually means that the playing field has to be more or less level, so the state giving assistance to companies is unacceptable.
China can do it because we don't have a free trade agreement with them. People complained that the EU has "failed" to get a good deal with China, but what t
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't follow European news, but I doubt that very much. The UK is ~14% of the total GDP of the EU (second largest in the EU): it dropping out without replacing the existing trade deals would be a massive economic blow to the EU. The EU may want to punish the UK for leaving, but I doubt they'd do it at the risk of collapsing the EU economy.
"The EU" doesn't want to punish the UK, a few eurocrats in Brussels and guys like Drunker might want to in order to scare others into staying, but a couple of leaders like Merkel and Hollande have already sat them down hard.
You can bet your bottom dollar that: the UK will be significantly worse off than the EU when brexit is finally realised for the simple reason that you cannot expect to leave the country club and retain all of your member rights. Furthermore the EU will not collapse as a result of this, there will be no 'hard Brexit' (unless the UK leadership has been beaten over the head with a stupid stick) and eventually, however much May denies it, the UK will end up with some equivalent of the 'Norwegian model'. That la
Re: (Score:3)
I think you are naïve. Some people will want to punish the UK, some may not.
But it ultimately comes down to this: the British people chose to leave. Fair enough.
It is now in the interest of the entire EU to negotiate as hard as they can with the UK and get the best deal out of Brexit FOR THE EU. And NOT for the UK.
Here is a very simple example: why should "we" (I am a European) accept a country where banks and financial institutions run amok and without any supervision? Where these same banks can laund
Re: (Score:2)
That'll teach the Angles and the Saxons! Feel free to try reenacting the Battle of Hastings while we sit here and giggle.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
EU law was written by the EU. Article 50 is a mess, there was an interview with the guy who wrote it where he said he didn't bother doing it properly because he thought it'd never be used.
Re: Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:2)
Then maybe the UK should have fixed that up before voting to leave? Now... Deal with it.
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:4)
What the other governments are saying is that they want to follow the rules for the exit, which spell out a 2 year deadline. What they want to avoid is endless negotiations, so forcing the UK to actually (legally) declare they are leaving the union before any negotiations begin.
Re: Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
If tariffs are introduced on tea (or whatever it is that the UK makes) then the UK will introduce them on cars & cheese.
If they did that, there'd be leadership elections in Germany & France before you could say "fuck shit, the whole country is on strike and rioting".
Re: Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Congratulations you just described trade barriers. But the interesting part is a that when two major economies who trade with each other each impose tarrifs the net gain is normally zero unless there's a massive imbalance in the trade conditions. This is why for instance trade barriers make sense between Australia and China, but not Australia and New Zealand, as the abolishion of barriers in the later doesn't result in work offshoring.
Speaking of offshoring 1/3rd of cars sold in the UK last year were German. But no where near 1/3rd of them were made in Germany. BMW, Mercedes etc have factories in the UK to serve the UK market. The effect won't be anywhere near as dramatic as all of the anti-Brexit propaganda is making out, and I say this as someone who's dead set against this idiotic idea of a Brexit.
Re: (Score:2)
It would not be the end of trade + just the UK having the same tariff barriers imposed on their products as the rest of the world.
No it won't Those trade barriers imposed on the rest of the world have been carefully negotiated down for decades. The UK is going to start from nought. Except a worse deal with the EU, at least initially.
Re: (Score:3)
I don't follow European news, but I doubt that very much. The UK is ~14% of the total GDP of the EU (second largest in the EU): it dropping out without replacing the existing trade deals would be a massive economic blow to the EU
You're counting your chickens after the eggs have been broken.
The UK voted its way out of the restrictions that being in the EU. While some sort of arrangement will no doubt be negotiated, it's not going to be anything like the status quo. You can't expect other countries to release the UK from its obligations while still enjoying the benefits those countries have to sacrifice to get. Some form of trade barrier is going to go up between the UK and Europe.
Likewise you have to expect third party countries
Re: (Score:2)
If they don't release these obligations, then the situation will remain as it is. Which is what status quo means.
Re: (Score:2)
They have no choice but to release these restrictions under the treaty. What they have a choice is the degree to which they continue to grant Britain the advantages it enjoyed when it formerly abided by them.
Re: (Score:2)
Some officials in the European Union (EU) want the United Kingdom (UK) to invoke article 50 of the Lisbon treaty before beginning any negotiations. The Lisbon treaty amended the Treaty on European Union (TEU) and the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). The TEU and TFEU form the constitutional basis of the EU. The UK agreed to the Lisbon treaty when their house of commons debated and passed it on Jan. 21st, 2008.
Invoking article 50 of the Lisbon treaty simply means that the UK would be of
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
and stop the flow of refugees.
WTF? How will stopping legal EU migrants stop refugees from crossing a border that they're already not allowed to cross? It won't and if you voted Brexit because of non EU immigration then you're a colossal pillock.
Re: (Score:2)
Exports from the UK to continental EU are ~13% of the GDP of the UK, while exports from continental EU to the UK are 3% of the GDP of continental EU. The impact of a BREXIT without a replacement trade deal on continental EU would be large but manageable. The impact on the UK would be much more massive. Continental EU can afford to play hardball in the negotiations, the UK can't. The UK absolutely needs a deal. Continental EU could even benefit in some areas, if no deal is done, as many international compani
Re: (Score:2)
I don't follow European news, but I doubt that very much. ...
I do follow the EU news, fairly closely. The reasoning is that the uncertainty is worse than the leaving.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't follow European news, but I doubt that very much. The UK is ~14% of the total GDP of the EU (second largest in the EU): it dropping out without replacing the existing trade deals would be a massive economic blow to the EU. The EU may want to punish the UK for leaving, but I doubt they'd do it at the risk of collapsing the EU economy.
Ah, yes, but anywhere from 40% to 50% of all UK exports (I believe the exact figure is around 43% [europa.eu]) are sent to the EU.
A 14% drop in GDP is painful.
A 40+% drop? Ouch. Kiss bye bye to your economy, baby, it's going down the drain.
Oh, and most of the EU is getting pissed, and itching for a fight. Even The Guardian pointed that out [theguardian.com]. The negociations are not going to be pretty, that's for sure.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If they then won that election, it would give cover for a future Conservative government to scrap Brexit completely.
Re: (Score:2)
To be fair, lots of people were saying that right after the vote.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
The EU being unresponsive to the desires of its populations is exactly why the UK left.
Well in this case, the populations wanted all of the benefits with none of the responsibilities. So, yeah...
When the EU demands countries start taxing their own local companies for trading with the UK (which is what tariffs are), its legitimacy will be further undermined.
The EU already does this with non common market members.
Re:Meanwhile the EU is saying... (Score:5, Interesting)
The EU being unresponsive to the desires of its populations is exactly why the UK left.
Not on this earth. The UK left because of diffuse and non-concrete fears that large waves of refugees might enter the country, coupled with latent racism against Polish immigrants.
... Not to mention 30 years of vicious, ultra-conservative propaganda against the EU. Just like Fox News in the USA is polluting the political discourse with crappy propaganda, the British tabloids have been spewing nonsense about the EU.
And the fact that both are owned by Rupert Murdoch should tell you a lot...
Re: (Score:2)
the EU is legally prevented from negotiating with the UK about when happens after the UK has separated from the EU until after the UK has lef
Which legislation is that? I'm not sure that's the case.
Shit, there's constant ongoing negotiation between all EU nations all the time, it'd be rather naive to assume none of it mentions anything post article-50.
Although I guess unworkable legislation has never been an issue for the EU.
"We" did not vote to leave (Score:2)
You voted to leave, so leave already.
The problem with this is that we did not vote to leave. Several large regions of the country voted to remain and even worse than that several million British citizens living outside the UK were denied a vote altogether. In any modern democracy major constitutional change such as leaving the EU requires a majority in all regions and all citizens have the right to vote. This is particularly poignant in this case because many of those citizens living outside the UK are living elsewhere in the EU and would in
Re: (Score:2)
No it doesn't. Most UK regions (pseudo-countries aside) have zero legal status.
This was a nationwide one-person one-vote plebiscite. Why is that not compatible with a democracy?
Re: (Score:2)
The problem with this is that we did not vote to leave
Please, don't be a major fucking cockwomble.
In any modern democracy major constitutional change such as leaving the EU requires a majority in all regions and all citizens have the right to vote.
What, like a vote to dissemble the Union that's been around for several hundred years? I'd call that pretty fucking major and yet because I live in another part of the Union and not Scotland I didn't get to vote to kick the whiny shit stirring twats out.
Now they want out again, so that they can hand all sovereignty to unelected shitstains like Juncker in Brussels. The SNP is a fucking tartan joke.
Meanwhile, the British people voted very unambiguously on a very cle
Re: (Score:2)
Japanese focus on Britain (Score:5, Interesting)
Half of Japan's investments into EU have gone into Britain, seeing as a gateway to the EU. Now they are scared shitless that they have bet on the wrong horse. EU tariffs on cars and other products produced in GB means all those factories were built on the wrong side of the channel.
Re: (Score:2)
We also can get back our blue passports (actually, I don't have a British passport) and fly flags in our garden*
* I listened to a colleague say "now we're leaving the EU I can fly a Union Jack in my garden". I queried why he can't already and apparently he was told by the council in the 90s that he had to take down the flag pole outside his business. The fact that countless homes, businesses and local government buildings currently fly a Union Flag was ignored. I suggested that maybe the reason that it's no
Re: (Score:2)
I listened to a colleague say "now we're leaving the EU I can fly a Union Jack in my garden".
That's about the stupidest thing I have heard, not for the reason you suggest but because in all probability Scotland will vote for independence at which point the Union flag will no longer exist in its current form and calling whatever it becomes anything with 'union' in it will require far too much sarcasm to be healthy.
The problem with globalism (Score:2)
Yeah, but at least we Took Back Control and are free to be bossed around be the whole world instead of just the EU!
The problem with globalism is that it forces wealth-building countries to partner with non wealth-building countries.
Countries become first world nations by allowing their citizens to build and keep wealth. This requires layers of legal system to protect the citizens: laws for safety (protections against rape/murder/theft), property ownership (you can't build on or farm or mine my property), enforcing contracts (I did the work, you must pay), and easy access to business creation (separation of personal asse
No bossing, just obvious fallout (Score:2)
Yeah, but at least we Took Back Control and are free to be bossed around be the whole world instead of just the EU!
The Japanese "demands" are nothing more that what a lot of us knew would happen. If the UK leaves the EU a lot of foreign companies will relocate their infrastructure back into the EU. The Japanese can demand all they want but it seems increasingly likely that this unelected PM and her cabinet will drag the UK into an economic dark age simply to control immigration based on the result on an undemocratic vote which excluded millions of UK citizens. Frankly all that remaining part of the single market will d
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, and I can assure you that if one was to pull any such BS when you (very briefly) held the upper hand, the long-term damage to your now-toxic reputation and subsequent avoidance of anything resembling investment would massively outweigh any short-term benefit.
Re: (Score:2)
If the UK as a society could truly not maintain its national identity within the EU, than it is in deeper trouble than a Brexit could fix.
Of course the ultimate irony is that this step could break the kingdom for good, if a fed up Scotland decides to rather throw in its lot with the EU.
Such Brutal Much Scare (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Dear non-Commonwealth nations, thank you for your offer. Upon consideration, we are not interested, but our door is always open in case you'd like to provide another offer. Until then, cheers! UK
FTFY.
100% EU access or your money back! (Score:5, Informative)
1. The UK makes sure that Japan doesn't lose much by staying there. That means trade with the EU must work as if the UK were still a member. That means a huge free trade agreement needs to be secured ASAP.
2. A lot of Japanese companies will abandon their UK factories and headquarters and build new ones on the continent because staying in the UK is no longer financially sound. The UK loses a whole bunch of jobs and tax income and the Japanese companies lose a whole bunch of sunk money. Nobody wants this scenario.
Of course scenario 1 is hindered by the fact that the EU isn't keen on making trade agreements with a leaving member before the member has even left. So they're pushing for the UK to just invoke Article 50 already so things can get started.
tl;dr: Yes, the door is open - for Japanese companies to leave the UK. If you want to avoid that you'll have to convince them that trade with the EU won't be impacted by Brexit.
Re: (Score:3)
Sounds like Japan should send their demands to Brussels then.
Re: (Score:2)
i think all EU countries would welcome a "Norwegian" deal where all four freedoms (including movement of people) are in, and the UK keeps implementing laws and paying without having a vote in new legislation. That's basically what Japan is asking for too. And I very much think they could get it, if they want it. But that would mean accepting free movement of people, and not "taking back control".
The thing is, no one knows what the UK wants. The political leadership is down to "brainstorming" to figure out w
Re: (Score:2)
May has rejected a Norway style agreement, and rejected retaining freedom of movement.
Yes, the EU would love it, because it barely changes anything. That's why it's not acceptable and wont happen.
And yeah, the Spanish must be doing something pretty astonishing to have no already attracted massive investment, given their current levels of unemployment and need for foreign money. It's a bit strange.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, and if the UK rejects freedom of movement, a) Japan won't be happy as per the document referenced above and b) I'm not sure the UK can hope for a better deal than tariff-free exchange of goods. Certainly there will be countries going "well, if Polish plumbers can't sell their services in Manchester, UK banks will have to open EU offices to sell financial services to Berlin". And this still wouldn't be "punishment", but grounds for a fair deal, IMO.
And yes, I know that May has rejected freedom of moveme
Re: (Score:2)
Freedom of movement and freedom to travel are very different.
Most people have no issue with tourists, it's immigration that causes so much fuss. So EU citizens crossing the Irish border are a non-issue unless they want to live, work and/or take advantage of social support structures in the UK, and that's the bit that's unlikely to be retained.
Worse case Northern Ireland becomes an easy target for terrorists seeking to target the UK. But they're kind of used to that over there.
Re: (Score:2)
I mean, you hear PM May say in the same week that there will be strong immigration controls, but also no border checks between Ireland and Northern Ireland. WTF? The only way I can put those two together is by handing Northern Ireland over to independence within the EU or as a part of Ireland...
Border checks within a country are not unheard of. For example Spain has border checks between the mainland and the north-african exclaves.
They could also have a system where EU citizens could visit freely but were not allowed to claim any benefits and needed permits to work.
Re:100% EU access or your money back! (Score:5, Funny)
tl;dr: Yes, the door is open - for Japanese companies to leave the UK. If you want to avoid that you'll have to convince them that trade with the EU won't be impacted by Brexit.
What! Nigel Farage insisted that the EU was the reason there are no jobs in the UK and that when we're out we will overnight turn into a giant booming manufacturer of world goods! Are you saying he lied? This is Nigel we're talking about! If you can't trust a politician who can you trust!
Re: (Score:2)
That means trade with the EU must work as if the UK were still a member. That means a huge free trade agreement needs to be secured ASAP.
I think most 'leave' voters would be very happy with that. Trade was never the issue.
I suspect we'll retain the data protection legislation too - it's good for the public, it's good for companies working in and with the EU, and it's clearly good for our other trade agreements too. Really it's only the US that hate data protection.
Do it for Japan (Score:2)
People in the UK should make national sovereignty decisions to benefit Japan, I guess. Hasn't that been the problem all along -- citizens of the UK being told that everyone's input about their country matters except their own? Do it for the migrants, the refugees, the Japanese, the big international bankers, the transplanted people from other EU countries, and the rich businessmen in London -- they matter, not you, or your family, or your friends and neighbors.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well said.
What part is "brutal"? (Score:2)
It's brutal stuff from Japan, and could well lead to other countries making similarly robust demands. On tech specifically, the Japanese government called on the UK and EU, post-Brexit, to maintain cloud agreements between businesses at an international level, by safeguarding the "free transfer of data."
Japan wants to use the Internet. That's really brutal all right.
A plot that could jeopardize money protection (Score:2)
Re:Leaving the EU was a huge mistake. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
I've noticed that the have rather poor memories or simply weren't paying attention. Here are the 1975 campaign leaflets:
http://www.harvard-digital.co.... [harvard-digital.co.uk]
All this crap about "we weren't told it was a political union" is nonsense, it was a major part of the campaign and the stated goal of the whole thing.
If we can delay by 5 years enough people will have died to swing a second vote the other way. Maybe the next general election will serve.
Re: (Score:2)
The old are more apt to become jaded because they gloss over critical differences in details when something is tried again, but the young are easily mislead into thinking the old is new and better because they weren't there the first (second/third/fourth) time it was tried. Both can be misleading.
Re: (Score:2)
I was wondering about this the other day.
On age, at a population level, young voted in, old voted out.
On education, at a population level, people with degrees voted in, people without voted out.
Is there any evidence that old people with degrees voted in too?
That the breakdown of voting amongst both age groups with or without degrees was any different?
Just that due to the devaluation of a university degree over the past two decades, there are a lot lot more 'young' people with a degree than old ones. So the
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it has occurred to us. Except they can't solve the problem they want to solve.
The imaginary decline of the UK that people love to hate wasn't so much a shift out of the country but a power shift from manufacturing to banking. That's not an EU problem that's a western world problem experienced by countries all over. It was very much the result of Thatcherism and mismanagement, it was a shift away from resources which were no longer demanded by the west but rather the east which could get them cheaper fr
Re: (Score:2)
Local politicians have a vested interest to use the EU as a scapegoat, to deflect blame. Having done this for decades will eventually result in something like the Brexit. Yet, all economic research indicates the UK benefited from the EU. But of course it did not shelter it from other consequences of globalization.
Like in the US many good manufacturing jobs were lost. Yet, to think that the UK's fate would have been more successfully outside the EU is rather foolish. There's no way back to the glory days of
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Leaving the EU was a huge mistake. The old, who voted for it out of xenophobia, will be dead by the time we will feel the consequences.
That's what this generation of old people do. This generation - not the previous ones. Previous generations of old people tried their level best to be more like wise elders and guiding lights, repositories of wisdom that the youngers would have been utterly foolish to disregard.
What you describe in the EU is in the same spirit as what is happening in the USA. Look what the Baby Boomers have done to their grandchildren. In American history they are the first generation to leave their descendants with LES
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Everything should be decided by bureaucrats because people don't know better.
We bureaucrats in Brussels think that too much cinamon is bad for you. Therefore you Christmas snackies must be outlawed.
We (the all-wise, all-knowing bureaucrats) also know that consumption of raw milk products is dangerous therefore you (french, italian, spanish, communities t
Re:Leaving the EU was a huge mistake. (Score:5, Insightful)
We (the all-wise, all-knowing bureaucrats) also know that consumption of raw milk products is dangerous therefore you (french, italian, spanish, communities that have been making raw milk cheeses are now declared to be WRONG and OLD FASHIONED. And any production of such products will now be ILLEGAL.................
Of course the fact that no such prohibition exists probably won't stop you from repeating it, will it?
There are some rules with regards raw milk cheese mainly that it has to be produced in a clean environment and it has to be labeled as being produced with raw milk. All of which seems pretty sensible to me.
But don't let me get in the way of a nice rant, try using more caps.
Re: (Score:2)
Still the point remains. An all-powerful centralized state is not good.
The point of the caps was to mock those who desire centralized control. An homage, if you will to Stalin, Mao and other perfect states.
Re: (Score:2)
My mistake. I was in France in the late 1990s and this was a big concern,
Such an easy mistake to make, oh well.
Still the point remains. An all-powerful centralized state is not good.
Yes, I remember being in Russia in the late 1917s and this was a big concern
The point of the caps was to mock those who desire centralized control. An homage, if you will to Stalin, Mao and other perfect states.
And you really nailed it too!
Re: (Score:2)
The production of products using raw milk is not illegal in the EU. They are authorized with some very reasonable stipulations concerning the health of the animals producing the raw milk, labeling the product and making sure the conformity of the milk is consistent.
References:
http://www.eurosurveillance.or... [eurosurveillance.org]
http://slowfood.com/slowcheese... [slowfood.com]
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Leaving the EU was a huge mistake. The old, who voted for it out of xenophobia, will be dead by the time we will feel the consequences.
Yes, because having unelected bureaucrats deciding what's best for your country and waiving sovereign rights to them is an even better idea! The entire state of the EU at this point is anti-democratic. Then again, I suppose if the "remain" camp especially all those entitled whiny millennials really wanted to remain, they would have gotten up off their asses and actually voted. But they didn't, which is why they had the lowest turnout.
Re: (Score:2)
In what way is it anti-democratic? People in the EU vote for their MEPs. They also vote for their national Governments who then send representatives to the Council of Ministers. Between them they are the legislature of the EU.
It is actually more democratic than the UK with its completely unelected House of Lords. And you do know that the UK is also run by unelected bureaucrats, in the form of 500,000 civil servants who do all the day-to-day work.
Re: (Score:2)
Which unelected bureaucrats decide in the EU? You have the council of ministers, who are elected, you have the EU commission, which is probably what you refer to, and then you have the European Parliament, elected, that actually decide what becomes law and what not, and which, incidentally, also needs to approve the EU commission from even being formed. The process of becoming a commisioner is a bit sketchy, but power is limited and checks and balances are in place.
Compare that with the British "democrac
Top Gov (Score:2)
Leaving the EU was a huge mistake.
Nobody has left yet: the UK is still a member. The biggest mistake so far has been appointing Johnson as foreign secretary. That makes the team leading the country May, Hammond and Johnson and as we all know from Top Gear the team just doesn't work without Clarkson as the recent "China Special" has showed.
Re: (Score:2)
Leaving the EU was the right move for anybody with even an ounce of self-respect.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
If you leave, you're on your own, what else do you expect? Throw away 40 years of trade agreements and expect everything to stay the same? Take note tough, the EU currently isn't doing anything. 2 years after article 50 has been invoked and UK officially exits, THEN they'll make an example out the UK, and every time someone tries to blame the EU, someone else will point out that UK choose Brexit themselves and can't hold someone else responsible for the shit they're in.
Re:Welcome to the Hotel EuroUnion... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Angela Merkel, arguably the most powerful of the EU leaders, said there's no need to be nasty to the UK in response to Brexit (i.e. punish them, as you're suggesting). The reality is that the UK will be punishing itself, because it's leaving the club (the EU) and losing the benefits, including free trade with the rest of the EU.
Well that's just the thing, isn't it? If Angela Merkel actually said both of those things, then that was the most threatening non-threat she could have uttered. The free trade deals could be kept intact trivially, by signing a new treaty that incorporates the old deal verbatim. That's the least painful path. Anything other than that gets progressively nastier. "Lose the deals, renegotiate from scratch" is quite far along the spectrum toward the nasty end. The only thing nastier steps over the line bet
Re: (Score:2)
Wait until France has elections next year. If the National Front gets in, which is a high probability, the EU can kiss France, and probably the EU itself, goodbye.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Remember when Brexit was going to cause worldwide economic collapse, terrorism all across the EU and collapse of society and cannibalism on the streets of the UK?
No
All that happened in the end was a bunch of sniveling and crying from foreigners.
We are far from the "end". It is yet to be determined whether we will completely leave the EU or whether we will nominally leave it but remain a "special realationship" where we are subject to some aspects of EU law and get some of the benefits of EU membership.
Once we actually know what is going to happen then the buisnesses will be able to decide whether it is viable to continue serving Europe from the UK or whether to move their European HQs across the channel.
Re: (Score:2)
2. Is the UK not allowed to create trade agreements with the EU countries?
Well, the UK already has trade agreements with the EU countries. Until/unless Article 50 is invoked those remain and any renegotiation will be done as a group.
Invoking Article 50 specifically triggers negotiations seeking an agreement. It's not illegal for the agreement to be reached on the first Thursday following invocation, it's just rather very unlikely.