
is more likely ... not least because

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Is that a real quote? Or have the BBC mistranslated it?Donald Tusk wrote:"As a historian I fear Brexit could be the beginning of the destruction of not only the EU but also Western political civilisation in its entirety," he told the German newspaper Bild.
Indeed!Cody wrote:...a shortage of pizza could have unknown consequences!
Ireland is a separate, sovereign state - has been since at least 1937 - and a member of the EU in its own right (the Republic of Ireland - drew 1-1 with Sweden the other night). Northern Ireland (beaten 1-0 by Poland on Sunday) is not part of the nation of Ireland, but is part of the UK. Although the majority of people in Northern Ireland seem - according to most opinion polls - to be strongly in favour of remaining in the EU, I think it's unlikely that the UK leaving the EU will cause Northern Ireland to split with the UK (although the decades of economic turmoil, and the dominance of UK politics by the Little Englander-Clown Wing of the Conservative Party, will not do the Northern Irish Unionist cause any favours).Day wrote:the partition of UK [...] Ireland, Scotland, etc.
In the past, the UK drained money from India, Africa etc. and poured it into itself: now it drains money from all the parts of the UK and pours it into London.At the end of 2011, the IPPR North thinktank totted up all the government's spending on transport projects up till 2015. Londoners enjoyed public investment of £2,731 per head, far outstripping any other region. The north-east received a measly £5 per head.
<nods sagely>Disembodied wrote:But ... as well ask an astrologer, as seek to predict the future with economics. History is chaotic, in a mathematical sense: tiny changes can have huge consequences, and predictions aren't worth much.
I totally agree with that. If we don't want to be fully in the EU we should withdraw and let the Eurozone get on with its political integration project unhindered.Day wrote:one less country in the EU with a special status
Totally agree, the loss of sovereignty at Maastricht (i.e. who sets the V.A.T. rate) was unforgivable and now is the only chance to reset the relationship. I think the boats on the Thames was a hoot, both campaigns are appalling, and yes we do need to work with our neighbours on things like fish stocks and trade deals. The Ireland-U.K. relationship predates all this by 50 years, but I do agree that the S.E. budget concentration needs to be avoided.kanthoney wrote:If all we want from the EU is Single Market access, then EFTA is probably a better fit for us,
Being part of the EFTA, following the Norwegian model, would cost the UK around £2 billion per annum in fees (and with no EU investment coming back), and we'd have to accept EU trade rules - including free movement for EU citizens - while having no say on what those rules are. It would be a tricky political sell in the aftermath of a vote to leave, to say the least.kanthoney wrote:If all we want from the EU is Single Market access, then EFTA is probably a better fit for us, and if we want to throw out all the immigrants and head back to the stone age then Farage probably has plenty of good ideas on how to do that.
With the vote coinciding with Euro 2016, England’s games could have a major bearing on the result. Imagine, as a footballer, stepping up to take a free kick late in the game and suddenly realising that the whole future of the continent as a political entity, the integrity of Nato and the progress of TTIP rests on it. The pressure will be too much for Ryan Bertrand and he will sky it.