The Brexit Thread

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Remoaners can't help but mah brexit for everything UK related... no coincidence they're the same that mah trump for everything US related too... same mentality as the mah apartheid folks here :ROFL:
 
Remoaners can't help but mah brexit for everything UK related... no coincidence they're the same that mah trump for everything US related too... same mentality as the mah apartheid folks here :ROFL:

Thank you for your insightful, intelligent and erudite comment.

You are indeed the genius amongst us.
 
Remoaners can't help but mah brexit for everything UK related... no coincidence they're the same that mah trump for everything US related too... same mentality as the mah apartheid folks here :ROFL:
Even worse than your US politics posts, impressive in an odd kind of way..

Don't worry, am sure Tim Pool and the bathrobed Satanist will start commenting on Brexit soon, then you won't need to think or post anything original at all..
 
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Remoaners can't help but mah brexit for everything UK related... no coincidence they're the same that mah trump for everything US related too... same mentality as the mah apartheid folks here :ROFL:
Yeah, can't be Brexit.

The government is rolling back visa regulations put in place by Brexit, to help fix the problem.

Totally not Brexit at all.
 
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driver%20shortage%20survey%202021%20unsatisfied%20demand_1.png

The driver shortages have been affecting the global road freight market for around 15 years. The issue comes as the pool of truck drivers is contracting but demand for transport is rising. The COVID-19 pandemic has further exacerbated the already alarming issue of driver shortages as new drivers have been unable to train and take their tests and Covid restrictions make the job even less attractive.

Even before the pandemic a serious cause for concern in the industry, the lack of drivers in the road transport industry was at an all-time high
with many of its underlying issues being long-term challenges. Factors such as an aging workforce and insufficient numbers of new recruits, due to working conditions and image issues of the profession, have been plaguing the industry for many years.



reeeeeebrexit.jpg
 
image-34.png

driver%20shortage%20survey%202021%20unsatisfied%20demand_1.png

The driver shortages have been affecting the global road freight market for around 15 years. The issue comes as the pool of truck drivers is contracting but demand for transport is rising. The COVID-19 pandemic has further exacerbated the already alarming issue of driver shortages as new drivers have been unable to train and take their tests and Covid restrictions make the job even less attractive.

Even before the pandemic a serious cause for concern in the industry, the lack of drivers in the road transport industry was at an all-time high
with many of its underlying issues being long-term challenges. Factors such as an aging workforce and insufficient numbers of new recruits, due to working conditions and image issues of the profession, have been plaguing the industry for many years.



View attachment 1154450
Tell me about the fuel shortages in Poland and Germany?
 
Meanwhile, using tdser math and logic, biden has created a trucker shortage in US and is now stealing our drivers #thanksbiden #buildbackbetter #proudlysouthafrican
LOL, some of the SA truck drivers don't even need to be taught this, they already do it every now and again

"The only thing we need to do is teach them to drive on the right side of the road, and they’re good to go," one US transport company says.
 
Michel Barnier’s new book helps explain why Britain ended up being comprehensively out-negotiated over Brexit and saddled with a flawed withdrawal agreement and a deeply disadvantageous future relationship, both of which will cause us major problems for decades to come. This is therefore an important account.
First, the EU side was professional and properly prepared, whereas the UK was not.
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Second, Barnier says it was the unity of the 27, “so unexpected for the British, that forced them to finally agree to pay their full share”.
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Third, the EU knew what it wanted and stuck to it. The British government spent a year negotiating rancorously and publicly with itself, which allowed the EU to take the initiative, set the agenda and frame the negotiations as it wished.
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The fourth reason for British failure was that Johnson made the disastrous tactical decision to try to provoke the EU in the hope it would be shaken, even briefing it as “the mad man strategy”. Barnier spotted this straight away. In the face of “threats and unpredictability” he decided to remain “calm, confident and solid” and just keep going. The British approach backfired spectacularly.
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Finally, the EU used deadlines effectively to get its way, whereas the UK walked into a series of traps. May unnecessarily triggered Article 50, which started a two-year stopwatch, without a clear vision of what she wanted. When Davis tried to hurry Barnier up, his response was that “[Davis] is mistaken. We have time on our side”. Barnier may be unreasonably proud of his catchphrase – “the clock is ticking” – adopted right from the beginning, but he is right that the British set a time limit that worked against themselves.
The fact is, the die was cast from the beginning. The EU set the framework and the UK was unable to escape. As Barnier writes: “I still think it is insane that a great country like the UK is conducting such a negotiation and taking such a decision … without having any clear vision of it or a majority to support it.” His conclusion, with which I agree, is that: “There is most definitely something wrong with the British system … every passing day shows that they have not realised the consequences of what is truly at stake here.” There ought to a be an inquiry into why, when we pride ourselves on our diplomatic prowess, we were so comprehensively defeated at the negotiation table, but this diary is probably the closest we will get.
 
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