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Brexit 2020+

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So the Mail have finally realised that working with he EU to limit cross-border beaurocracy and delays benefits both sides…

Jeez, how far through the looking glass have we gone?


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 2:51 pm
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the daily fail had irony bypass about 50 years ago, **** 'em


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 2:54 pm
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They state both sides will be "gravely damaged". One side might be, the other has a barely noticeable scratch.

The lie/assumption that "they need us more than we need them" always did make me smile wryly. People have to eat but no-one wants to import stuff they don't need and competes unfairly with stuff made locally. That was how it was seen here, we don't want you lot under cutting us but we know you need to eat. Barnier knew exactly what the UK wanted from Briexit, it was all over the British press. The agreement gave him the means of quashing every one of those wants.

That M&S only complain now a month before the deadline makes me smile wider. European businesses have been living with what M&S are about to face for eight months, and it's barely caused a ripple.

Brexit = project self harm.

That was entirely predictable and predicted by many of us on the original Brexit thread. Strangely those so keen on Brexit are only just waking up to the mess they've made and blaming those in the EU with the foresight to take measures to mitigate the mess on this side.


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 3:14 pm
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I’ve been going over and back to Pembrokeshire a few times every summer for about ten years now (don’t go, it’s rubbish!) and this year, I’ve really noticed the difference in numbers of Irish reg played HGVs. Seems the direct-to-Europe Ro-ro services are still seeing relatively high volumes - and I guess COVID has contributed to this too. I wonder if it will continue in a similar vein.

I’m relieved that once Priti’s “starve them” plan is put into action, Ireland has an alternative.

There’d be a delicious irony if Ireland had to supply the U.K. with potatoes for its Christmas roasts*. 😂

*just for the LOLz really - in truth, I don’t think Ireland manage to produce enough spuds for potato self-sufficiency.


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 4:10 pm
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deadlydarcy
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There’d be a delicious irony if Ireland had to supply the U.K. with potatoes for its Christmas roasts*. 😂

*just for the LOLz really – in truth, I don’t think Ireland manage to produce enough spuds for potato self-sufficiency.

Seed potato imports/exports are still not included in the trade deals and DEFRA decided to end the derogation they'd put in place so the 30000 tons of seed potatoes that used to go from Scotland to NI and Ireland now can't. Takes time to sort out that sort of supply chain disaster...


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 4:37 pm
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The UK is a f*****g shit show.

The Daily Mail needs burning.


 
Posted : 29/08/2021 5:30 pm
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The Daily Mail needs burning.

There's a market for it among the hard of thinking. It ain't going anywhere.


 
Posted : 30/08/2021 10:32 am
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Interesting story about the restranaut trade

My take on this is that the low-wage/high hours culture required there to be a pool of available workers to provide the base of the pyramid and keep expectations down at all levels. Brexit has eliminated much of that pool, and Covid has encouraged people with skills to take elsewhere who were hanging in to get out (and not regret it). A bit of a perfect storm.


 
Posted : 30/08/2021 11:18 am
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I'd hope that the working culture in restaurants will change. A friend of my lad is a talented trainee chef, and his hours were horrendous. If nothing else, he's now on slightly better money, but he's stuck with it as he loves it.


 
Posted : 30/08/2021 11:27 am
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That couple who owned the restaurant in the story linked by greyspoke, I wonder if it's dawned on them yet that their staff weren't that happy after all?

We were in the Cairngorms this weekend, quite interesting how many vacancy notices we saw, plus in the local 'tourist' publication I was reading - lots of hotels had vacancy adverts.

But which Brits are going to take a seasonal job at £9.50 who don't actually live there? And it's not like accommodation is cheap or available.


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 12:23 pm
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I think Basic Income would help a lot. If you can move to a local area and work on your own projects (or smoke weed and watch Netflix for six months) but knowing you could have extra income from seasonal work for part of the year that would make a massive difference to rural communities.


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 12:47 pm
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I think Basic Income would help a lot.

As with so many things. The idea that fear of starvation and homelessness is needed to get the workers doing what needs doing needs to be shown the door.


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 12:49 pm
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Apparently the relaunched Brexit Party (nee Reform Party, nee Brexit Party etc) has had it's bank account closed, current leader Richard Tice is having a meltdown about it, but there's more going on than meets the eye...


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 12:54 pm
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^^^

£7.7m of unitemised 'Other Expenses'.

I'm sure I could find a way to be comfortable with that. So long as someone replaced my brain with a turnip. Or (more likely) bunged me a few hundred £k to look the other way.


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 1:12 pm
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Thanks @PMJ1974, that's a fascinating thread. It would appear that setting up another political party for Farage is impossible. No wonder he's grifting on YouTube and GB News


 
Posted : 31/08/2021 1:22 pm
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Its something that will finally directly effect a lot of Brexit voters: Spoons has run out of Carling 😂

https://twitter.com/marieannuk/status/1432975095316860929?s=21


 
Posted : 01/09/2021 10:54 am
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Brexit has eliminated much of that pool, and Covid has encouraged people with skills to take elsewhere who were hanging in to get out (and not regret it).

I have 2 mates who worked in hospitality for years. During Covid, as everything was shut down, they had to find jobs in other areas. They're both intelligent and educated with transferable skills so they didnt struggle.

Now everything has opened up again I asked them if they would be looking to return to the hospitality sector

After considering the question for approximately a quarter of a millisecond, they replied “not a ****ing chance!”

Why the hell would they go back to working longer, antisocial hours for shit pay instead of the 9-5 they have now, on better pay?

Looks like plenty of other people have reached the same conclusion. So its not just EU nationals going home. Covid has provided the catalyst for people to look for better jobs


 
Posted : 01/09/2021 11:20 am
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It's nice when the market on occasion works for individuals. And very inconvenient for exploitative industries when the thing that was supposed to lower their costs via deregulation ends up increasing them, and teaching their staff the lifelong lesson that their labour has value.


 
Posted : 01/09/2021 11:25 am
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Tim Martin won't care all that much. He'll cash out, sell Spoons on and **** off into the sunset with a smaller, but still astonomical to a normal person, amount.

Still - Bollocks to Brexit and all who sail in her.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🍆💦🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿


 
Posted : 01/09/2021 12:24 pm
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MrsRNP has bought wine direct from Portugal for years, nothing big or fancy, its decent price good quality and the company out there are always good to deal with. Usually buys around £100 and shipping is ~£30.

Latest post Brexit shipment was £106 for the wine. £130 DHL invoice for vat/duty/handling charge arrived today 2weeks after the wine arrived.

1st world problem I know.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 1:38 am
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*waves from Australia*

When we first moved out here from the UK, availability of stuff I wanted to buy was really noticeable.

Certain products just aren't available in Australia at all, and somethings months behind them becoming available in other countries.

If they are sold over here - they'll often be available only through a single or relatively small number of suppliers - and often the price is identical. Sometimes an item is sold-out at all suppliers over here for months at a time (even pre-covid).

If you try to buy something from abroad, often they don't ship to Australia at all, and if so, often the price is exorbitant. Even small items are $50 for standard shipping from smaller retailers (M&S, JL etc are much cheaper)

But here, if you import something under $1,000, there is no importation tax due.

I think this new reality is going to be a bit of a culture shock for people.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:17 am
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Brexit may rid of us of the annoying “We Value Your Privacy” pop-ups…

… but what will replace it and will our privacy be removed and exploited instead?

Point of order here, and it's an important one,

The old EU cookie policy and GDPR are very, very different beasts. It's akin to equating "immigrants" and "refugees" as being the same thing. Please be vigilant and tread very carefully here, we're potentially being sold a strip-mining of human rights under the guise of "yes but pop-ups."

So the Mail have finally realised

Mail on Sunday, again, different beast.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 6:06 am
 rone
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Why the hell would they go back to working longer, antisocial hours for shit pay instead of the 9-5 they have now, on better pay?

Begs the question: why didn't they do that before?

So Brexit/Covid (as applicable) encouraged them get better jobs?

In other words (not that I think it's a good thing at a macro level) the jobs market post Brexit/Covid appears to have delivered a good result for them?


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 7:14 am
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The old EU cookie policy and GDPR are very, very different beasts

Yep, details matter but the majority of people can't handle* detail.

* - applies to most subjects


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 8:21 am
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@RustyNissanPrairie

There is a huge selection of quality English wines to choose from, you just need to believe harder. If you think of Blighty and have Rule Britannia on really loud you won't notice you are drinking something with tasting notes that read "Overriding flavour of piss, but subtle undertones of paintstripper".

First World problem, yes, but what are we getting in return for this massive reduction in choice and increase in price?


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 8:50 am
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Yep, details matter but the majority of people can’t handle* detail.

The Devil is in the detail.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 9:41 am
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First World problem, yes, but what are we getting in return for this massive reduction in choice and increase in price?

Sovereignty.... you get a bucket of it with every purchase.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 9:47 am
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Anyone doing a fast track HGV Course then 🙂


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 10:12 am
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Sovereignty…. you get a bucket of it with every purchase.

The bucket has a hole in it, though.

But it does have a reassuring 'Made in Brittun' (sic) sticker on it, though.

🤦‍♂️


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 10:17 am
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Sovereignty…. you get a bucket of it with every purchase.

Unfortunately due to the beer shortage at Wetherspoon's the piss, sorry, sovereignty, is no longer supplied with the bucket. It should be back in stock sometime in 2023.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 10:43 am
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^^^

😂


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 11:07 am
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Must admit I've got the popcorn out waiting to see if the actually do anything with letting furrigner drivers back but I reckon they'll just pass the buck to industry.

I suppose you let one lot of furrigners back then you'll have to let the pickers back as well and all the others which is going to be against the mantra....

What level of discomfort do the public have to take before they're a bit fed up of supply shortages.

I'm also thinking of the people moving from one industry to another.... creating shortages in the industry they leave.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 1:10 pm
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What level of discomfort do the public have to take before they’re a bit fed up of supply shortages.

That's been the big question since 2016.

Unfortunately the answer is 'quite a lot' as Brexit was very successfully tied to bone-headed national 'pride', racism and xenophobia. Admitting it is a colossal mistake challenges those deep-seated prejudices too.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 2:41 pm
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RustyNissanPrairie - you're lucky Mrs RNP's suppler is still delivering to the UK.
A Spanish company I used last year suspended deliveries to UK in January and have no plans to resume anytime in the foreseeable future.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 2:48 pm
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A Spanish company I used last year suspended deliveries to UK in January and have no plans to resume anytime in the foreseeable future.

Given all the unnecessary bureaucracy and red tape, why would they?


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 3:31 pm
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Letting foreign drivers back in won't solve the problem - the shortage of drivers is Europe is estimated at 400,000+ (and also an issue in the USA) and has been growing since 2018:

2018 - https://www.bifa.org/news/articles/2018/dec/truck-driver-shortage-crisis-now-spreading-across-the-whole-of-europe

2021 - https://www.globalcoldchainnews.com/driver-shortage-is-pan-european/

There are several supply and demand factors at play:

Supply:
- an ageing workforce
- poor pay that has pushed many drivers into finding other roles with the same pay that don't involve antisocial hours
- loss of truck stops / basic amenities for drivers
- the slow down in new drivers being trained / licensed even before covid hit
- unwillingness of firms to pay for driver training
- civil servants (UK) sitting on their hands and doing very little to get test centres and the provisional license process up and running
- backlog in trained drivers waiting for tests / full license
- IR35 impacting drivers that own their cabs and are now unable to recover the capital or operating costs

Demand:
- massive modal shifts due to the pandemic resulting in an even greater demand for drivers


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 3:40 pm
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/sep/02/empty-shelves-britain-workforce-workers

This is as clear-eyed an analysis of where we're headed - and why - I've read in some time.

Brexit is merely a symptom.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 3:41 pm
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Letting foreign drivers back in won’t solve the problem

Agreed. They won't come. Well, some with the contacts and friends already here might come back for the right price... but we've sent the message loud and clear to EU drivers... make your lives somewhere else... we'd rather shoot ourselves in both feet than have you living here. The message has sunk in now, better work and lives can be had elsewhere, with the rights and opportunities and respect that they won't get here.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 3:45 pm
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ouch


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:02 pm
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Surely a shortage of drivers, while a short term problem, is partly answered by more goods trains?


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:04 pm
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Dust off all the branch lines and mobilise the pony and carts to distribute from the local sidings.

Or get the RAF to parachute pallets in to Tesco car parks,


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:15 pm
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<div class="bbp-reply-author d-flex align-items-center flex-wrap">Premier Icon<span class="bbp-author-name">Klunk</span>
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But does need to be compared to imports and internal sales over that same time.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:16 pm
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But does need to be compared to imports and internal sales over that same time.

So we have a truck shortage and a truckle surplus.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 5:24 pm
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Surely a shortage of drivers, while a short term problem, is partly answered by more goods trains?

Nah you still need drivers for the end distribution, plus the railways are full already.


 
Posted : 02/09/2021 6:01 pm
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