More powerful stuff. "Internauts" indeed!fuzzy wrote:Another angry old man - JW, tries to get to get a handle on the slime of politics/economics.
In 1, 2 order:
https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2017/10/12 ... e-at-last/
https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2017/10/13 ... r-of-fact/
John is usually on to something, but it's not always clear what that is [a bit like reality I suppose].
Brexit process
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- emordnilap
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I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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In the early 50s the population of the UK was circa 42 million and starting to drop. Alarmed at this threat to the UK's economic growth the government instituted a policy of mass immigration. Since then the population has soared to 64 million. So, on that basis nearly a third, 33% of the population are either immigrants or children of immigrants.fuzzy wrote:Powerful stuff, and that's without mentioning the 65 years of immigration that have made Walsall, Tipton, Handsworth, Smethwick etc. what they are today.
No wonder poor indigenous people are feeling insecure.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- emordnilap
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fuzzy wrote:Another angry old man - JW, tries to get to get a handle on the slime of politics/economics.
In 1, 2 order:
https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2017/10/12 ... e-at-last/
https://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2017/10/13 ... r-of-fact/
John is usually on to something, but it's not always clear what that is [a bit like reality I suppose].
One of my gripes. Good, it's not just me then.Financialisation of our everyday lives is apparent to the older generation
Yeah, inflation indexes are fundamentally inaccurate and have simply propaganda value these days, no real meaning.Three years ago, the UK Think Tank New Economics Foundation (NEF) showed that the true impact of inflation on the poorest 50% in Britain had been woefully understated by official measures. It highlighted an eye-popping 15% real drop in spending power by the bottom half from over one year beginning late in 2012. The NEF report stated:
“A key difference is that poorer households spend proportionately more on essential goods and services – housing, food and utilities – than the richest. Because CPI is based on average for everyone, it ignores this effect. And with the prices of essentials rising so much in recent years, with food up 46% and gas and electricity 73% since 2005, this income effect matters.�
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Obstinacy
Agreed. I think the EU elite fail to understand that, whether or not it can be seen as rational in the short term, the British have a long history of digging their heels in when they perceive that others are trying to coerce them. For better or for worse, Brits are not as malleable as many other nations.UndercoverElephant wrote:And yes it is partly because they don't understand internal British politics - they don't understand the level of support there would be for a government that was brave enough to go down the "no deal" path if the alternative is also pretty bad.
This will end in tears for the EU. As for the UK, it will end up bloodied (so yes, pain for us too, undoubtedly) but unbowed, still snarling defiance, while a certain segment of Guardian readers clutch their pearls and shriek at the uncouthness of it all.
It also seems to me that, slowly, almost imperceptibly, even the pro-EU media are starting to realise, and comment, that the real intransigence is to be found on the EU side, not on the side of the UK. Whatever moral high ground the EU thought they had, they are gradually ceding.
It's looking a lot like no deal.
Suss
Re: Obstinacy
You just made me laugh my tits off at that.Susukino wrote:
....This will end in tears for the EU. As for the UK, it will end up bloodied (so yes, pain for us too, undoubtedly) but unbowed, still snarling defiance, while a certain segment of Guardian readers clutch their pearls and shriek at the uncouthness of it all....
Suss
Thanks.
I needed that.
Re: Obstinacy
British exceptionalism? (rofl)Susukino wrote:Agreed. I think the EU elite fail to understand that, whether or not it can be seen as rational in the short term, the British have a long history of digging their heels in when they perceive that others are trying to coerce them. For better or for worse, Brits are not as malleable as many other nations.
The EU may be badly damaged but the UK will be destroyed by this. We'll have to bend over and become the USA's bitch (even more than we are now).This will end in tears for the EU. As for the UK, it will end up bloodied (so yes, pain for us too, undoubtedly) but unbowed, still snarling defiance, while a certain segment of Guardian readers clutch their pearls and shriek at the uncouthness of it all.
Every country is exceptional
I'm not so much arguing exceptionalism for the UK, as exceptionalism for everybody. I once (when I was in my teens and early 20s) believed that all nations and peoples are essentially the same. With the benefit of a few decades of experience, and having lived, worked and travelled overseas for many, many years, I see that I was incredibly naïve to believe that.cubes wrote: British exceptionalism? (rofl)
I now think that there is a massive chunk of truth in many national stereotypes. Yes, Germans do tend to be very organized. Yes, the Italians - again, just anecdotally - do tend to take a seat-of-the-pants approach to life. And so on. I should add that this is not an issue of ethnicity so much as culture, and I'm talking about a tendency rather than an iron rule that must apply to all individuals.
The flipside is that the organization and attention to detail in, for example, Germany and Japan seems to me to have resulted in a much stronger sense of deference to hierarchy. I find both those nationalities far less likely to rock the boat than Brits, who I find quite willing to stick two fingers up at the authorities, whether that be in the context of a company or society. Whether this is a positive or not is hard to say. I'm inclined to think it is often a negative.
I think there is much we could profitably learn from both Germany and Japan - the apprenticeship system from the former, for instance. But we have to accept that the journeyman system as it exists in Germany is the product of centuries of custom and cannot simply be bolted on to the UK.
"Destroyed"? You see, this is the kind of hysterical response makes it difficult to have a rational argument. Are you truly suggesting that as of, say 2025, the UK will be some kind of Mad Max-style wasteland simply because we change our trading terms with the EU and end up with a 3% tariff on some products, when the exchange rate has already offset a much larger tariff? You need some perspective.The EU may be badly damaged but the UK will be destroyed by this. We'll have to bend over and become the USA's bitch (even more than we are now).
The British Isles have been trading with other countries since before the birth of Christ. That is not going to stop now. The UK was doing fine before the Maastricht Treaty and it will certainly survive, and I think there is a good chance of continuing to prosper outside the EU.
Our trade with the EU will continue, certainly on different terms, but it will continue. We will remain an important trading partner for our existing partners (as an example, we are the largest market for German cars in Europe, excluding Germany itself), and our existing partners will remain important for us. Yes, there will be some short-term volatility, some winners, some losers. But we will be fine. The reality will be far more boring than the predictions made by either remainers or Brexiters.
(For those of you with longer memories, the current furore is very reminiscent of the decision by the UK not to join the Euro, which caused similar, totally erroneous predictions of doom by economists in the late 1990s. "How do these little Englanders think they can go it alone the big bad world?! What fools they are!")
For me, one key question is, longer term, whether we wish to cede more and more power to the EU as it integrates further, or not, because I believe that is the way things are gradually moving. At some point the EU will deliver an ultimatum to the UK: "If you're not going to integrate you need to get out or accept inferior status within the EU". Then we will either have to accept a disadvantageous position, or become part of a European superstate, or leave. So we might as well leave, while we still have a chance to influence the terms.
Another issue is whether we wish to continue to allow hundreds of thousands of economic migrants every year, or not. We may indeed wish to do that, but it is a decision of which we should have complete control, in my opinion. The current free movement principle of the EU makes that difficult to achieve without dramatically reconfiguring our welfare and social systems, such as introducing ID cards.
Of course, a large chunk of those immigrants come from outside the EU, but as somebody who is married to a non-British, non-EU person, I am keenly aware that getting permission to live in this country is actually not at all easy. Those controls are already in place, and we can expect similar controls for Europeans.
Yes, control over free movement from the EU is likely to cause problems for people planning to come to the UK who do not already have work, a firm job offer, or a strong and provable family connection. Nevertheless, I think it is entirely rational and sensible to demand that we have control over who gets to work and live in this country.
It is all very well for the Germans to talk about allowing more immigration: their population was unchanged from about 1995 to 2015 at roughly 81 million people. Over the same period the population of the UK increased from 58 million to 65 million - a thumping 12% in just 20 years. That kind of growth is unprecedented in our history, and (given that it is based on volatile flows from outside its borders that could easily reverse) it is very difficult to plan for in terms of infrastructure. Change as substantial and as rapid as this was only ever going to cause problems - and indeed it has. (Hence UKIP.)
Anyway, you must excuse me if I do not respond further in this thread. Like most people here, I have an interest in energy policy and pricing over the long term, although I have always taken the view that things are not as bad as a certain vocal segment of the power-down movement suggests. (Matt Savinar for one is probably making more accurate predictions now that he is an astrologist; you couldn't make up.)
Ten years ago there were some pretty wild projections being made in this forum, which looked to me to be highly unlikely to come true. Sure enough, they did not. And while I share some of the entirely reasonable concerns expressed here about many aspects of modern society, I choose to limit the amount of obsessively negative, "glass half-empty" hysteria I deal with. For that reason I gradually withdrew from participating in this forum, and now I only drop in once a year to see whether anything has changed.
It will be interesting to talk again in 12 months and see how things are going. I suspect that by this time next year tensions will have ratcheted even higher, the rhetoric (and the hysteria) will be even stronger. In three years' time, assuming that Brexit actually happens, things will probably have calmed down a little. Just as the earth has somehow survived despite talk of the mysterious planet Nibiru wiping out life this year, we will find that life persists after Brexit...
Suss
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I agree to that, Sus. Do drop in more often so that we can have a more varied input. I do appreciate that there are better things to do in life than to try and convert the inconvertible but some input can be good for both sides especially when it is so eloquently put.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
Re: Every country is exceptional
Ah, a politician's answer, take an extreme view of the question and answer accordingly. You know perfectly well what I meant.Susukino wrote:"Destroyed"? You see, this is the kind of hysterical response makes it difficult to have a rational argument. Are you truly suggesting that as of, say 2025, the UK will be some kind of Mad Max-style wasteland simply because we change our trading terms with the EU and end up with a 3% tariff on some products, when the exchange rate has already offset a much larger tariff? You need some perspective.
The British Isles have been trading with other countries since before the birth of Christ. That is not going to stop now. The UK was doing fine before the Maastricht Treaty and it will certainly survive, and I think there is a good chance of continuing to prosper outside the EU.
And will continue afterwards no doubt, but we're just swapping one set of rules mainly outside of our control for another imo. In fact, I'd say we have more control in the EU than outside.
You talk as if a european superstate is a bad thing? I don't believe it is, it's the only way europe can compete with America and China economically and Russia militarily imo. We're stronger together and fall divided.Our trade with the EU will continue, certainly on different terms, but it will continue. We will remain an important trading partner for our existing partners (as an example, we are the largest market for German cars in Europe, excluding Germany itself), and our existing partners will remain important for us. Yes, there will be some short-term volatility, some winners, some losers. But we will be fine. The reality will be far more boring than the predictions made by either remainers or Brexiters.
(For those of you with longer memories, the current furore is very reminiscent of the decision by the UK not to join the Euro, which caused similar, totally erroneous predictions of doom by economists in the late 1990s. "How do these little Englanders think they can go it alone the big bad world?! What fools they are!")
For me, one key question is, longer term, whether we wish to cede more and more power to the EU as it integrates further, or not, because I believe that is the way things are gradually moving. At some point the EU will deliver an ultimatum to the UK: "If you're not going to integrate you need to get out or accept inferior status within the EU". Then we will either have to accept a disadvantageous position, or become part of a European superstate, or leave. So we might as well leave, while we still have a chance to influence the terms.
I can't see the problem with inter-european immigration - they're doing the jobs many unemployed british people don't want or cba to do. The government had the power to limit to some degree immigration from europe already, it decided not to. I can still see significant immigration from europe even after brexit unless the government wants to cut the nose off some british industries to spit their face.Another issue is whether we wish to continue to allow hundreds of thousands of economic migrants every year, or not. We may indeed wish to do that, but it is a decision of which we should have complete control, in my opinion. The current free movement principle of the EU makes that difficult to achieve without dramatically reconfiguring our welfare and social systems, such as introducing ID cards.
Of course, a large chunk of those immigrants come from outside the EU, but as somebody who is married to a non-British, non-EU person, I am keenly aware that getting permission to live in this country is actually not at all easy. Those controls are already in place, and we can expect similar controls for Europeans.
Yes, control over free movement from the EU is likely to cause problems for people planning to come to the UK who do not already have work, a firm job offer, or a strong and provable family connection. Nevertheless, I think it is entirely rational and sensible to demand that we have control over who gets to work and live in this country.
Yup, in a year's time we'll have a better idea (hopefully) on what brexit will look like. As much as I'd like to see it stopped I can't see the EU wanting us back now. My personal prediction is that the government will throw everything it needs to under the bus to save the city and it's financial centre and everything else will just have to survive as best they can. Farmers will be particularly badly hit with subsidy withdrawls.It is all very well for the Germans to talk about allowing more immigration: their population was unchanged from about 1995 to 2015 at roughly 81 million people. Over the same period the population of the UK increased from 58 million to 65 million - a thumping 12% in just 20 years. That kind of growth is unprecedented in our history, and (given that it is based on volatile flows from outside its borders that could easily reverse) it is very difficult to plan for in terms of infrastructure. Change as substantial and as rapid as this was only ever going to cause problems - and indeed it has. (Hence UKIP.)
Anyway, you must excuse me if I do not respond further in this thread. Like most people here, I have an interest in energy policy and pricing over the long term, although I have always taken the view that things are not as bad as a certain vocal segment of the power-down movement suggests. (Matt Savinar for one is probably making more accurate predictions now that he is an astrologist; you couldn't make up.)
Ten years ago there were some pretty wild projections being made in this forum, which looked to me to be highly unlikely to come true. Sure enough, they did not. And while I share some of the entirely reasonable concerns expressed here about many aspects of modern society, I choose to limit the amount of obsessively negative, "glass half-empty" hysteria I deal with. For that reason I gradually withdrew from participating in this forum, and now I only drop in once a year to see whether anything has changed.
It will be interesting to talk again in 12 months and see how things are going. I suspect that by this time next year tensions will have ratcheted even higher, the rhetoric (and the hysteria) will be even stronger. In three years' time, assuming that Brexit actually happens, things will probably have calmed down a little. Just as the earth has somehow survived despite talk of the mysterious planet Nibiru wiping out life this year, we will find that life persists after Brexit...
Suss
Be interesting to see how wrong I am in 2 year time.
See you next year!
- UndercoverElephant
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Re: Every country is exceptional
I don't think they have a choice. If the UK revokes Article 50, it would be legally as if it had never been issued in the first place. Politically everything would have changed, but the EU could not stop the UK from remaining a member. If this were to happen, I think it is extremely difficult to predict what would follow.cubes wrote: As much as I'd like to see it stopped I can't see the EU wanting us back now.
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If there was a hard Brexit many European countries would be billions worse off without our payments in or Germany and the Netherlands would be worse off as the only two net payers left into the European pot. They don't want us to leave and would have us back but might try it on to get our rebate further reduced.
We would then have to watch as the Commission then instituted even tighter union and even tried to force us into the Euro. That way takes the UK into PIGS territory as our financial position is as bad as or even worse than some of those economically benighted countries. Only having our independent currency and the ability to print money saves us from their fate.
We would then have to watch as the Commission then instituted even tighter union and even tried to force us into the Euro. That way takes the UK into PIGS territory as our financial position is as bad as or even worse than some of those economically benighted countries. Only having our independent currency and the ability to print money saves us from their fate.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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