GREER FORECASTS A NO-DEAL/HARD BREXIT
https://www.ecosophia.net/an-astrologic ... de-brexit/
Key features:
- either no agreement or a bare-bones agreement in March 2019
- disruption in travel, trade and communications in 2019
- major political crisis, with cabinet resignations and just maybe a change of PM
- media in the UK will have a nervous breakdown
- economic boom in Britain post-Brexit as real wages for working Brits rise
Greer's comment to a question re soft or hard Brexit...
Mr. O, I’d expect to see an agreement indicated by an aspect connecting the Sun, the significator of the UK government, with Venus, the ruler of the seventh house and thus the significator of the EU. Since no such aspect exists, it doesn’t look like an agreement will be in place, or if an agreement is reached it may not be worth much (and may not be followed). I’d have to study the ingress charts for the second half of this astrological year (the Libra ingress in September and the Capricorn ingress in December) to be sure, but my impression is that it’s going to be a hard Brexit — not least because the EU, in its inimitable fashion, continues to act as though the only possible compromise is one that gives it everything it wants.
Its clear that there are two options on the table, realistically speaking, as we head towards the deadline.
May is committed to leaving and has prepared a semi-soft deal which hasn't been vetoed yet by the EU. They will discuss it at the next EU council on 20th September, apparently.
Barnier and the Commission hate her proposed plans as per Politico...
https://www.politico.eu/article/europea ... -billions/
The U.K.’s proposal to free itself from Brussels regulations on services would save British businesses billions of pounds a year, according to a briefing for EU27 diplomats by Michel Barnier’s negotiating team.
The EU’s chief negotiator made clear his aversion to the U.K. proposal in an op-ed published earlier this month, arguing that it would “undermine� the EU’s single market. But in a closed briefing for EU27 diplomats in Brussels a day before the Chequers meeting and before the full plan was formally presented as a white paper, Barnier’s team laid out their objections to what they expected from the British scheme in far more detail.
The Commission quoted an internal study, which estimated that if the U.K. is freed from just seven unspecified EU regulations, it would provide savings for British businesses of €6 billion a year, according to two EU officials.
More interestingly, a large bloc of EU member states think May's plan are a non-starter, including Ireland (which would be most affected by a hard Brexit).
Barnier’s team was adamant that if Britain formally put forward the plan then it should boycott the talks altogether, according to two officials. A third official said that the Commission representatives objected to the U.K. proposals, but in less dramatic terms.
The representatives of Denmark, Germany, France, Austria, Ireland, Belgium, Hungary, Italy and the Netherlands agreed that the U.K.’s proposal was “a nonstarter.� But the Dutch, supported by the Belgians and the Hungarians, also said they were content to see how Britain delivered the message, said one of the officials. They convinced the Commission representatives not to give May’s plan an all-out hostile reception.
So, to summarise, a crunch point is looming within 4 weeks. Either the EU will compromise and go with May's semi-soft plans or they will reject her proposals leading to a hard brexit outcome.
Peace always has been and always will be an intermittent flash of light in a dark history of warfare, violence, and destruction