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seahawk wrote:Sounds a bit like wishful thinking by the Brits, as English is and will be the working language of the EU, as most people do speak it.
olle wrote:seahawk wrote:Sounds a bit like wishful thinking by the Brits, as English is and will be the working language of the EU, as most people do speak it.
But this English will probably be closer to American English and a more simple version of ENglish. UK English will not be official any more.
UltimoTiger777 wrote:Why would the UK change its version of English when you consider the main differences between British and American English are very small?
BobPatterson wrote:UltimoTiger777 wrote:Why would the UK change its version of English when you consider the main differences between British and American English are very small?
The differences when written may be small, but when spoken are considerably greater.
seahawk wrote:Sounds a bit like wishful thinking by the Brits, as English is and will be the working language of the EU, as most people do speak it.
prebennorholm wrote:I would have had bigger language problem if I didn't speak German, for instance Finland (mostly elderly people), Estonia, Czech Republik, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia. And of course Austria, Switzerland, and even in north-eastern Italy they talk some German dialect rather than Italian, better German the "worst" Swiss-German dialects. Most Dutchmen also happily switch to German when relevant. I regret that I never learned French language properly, now it's too late.
It was a suggestion I made to the Dutch minister for European affairs, Anne Mulder. Was it time, I asked, for the Netherlands and other influential EU nations to offer the UK more concessions, given all would suffer from a breakdown of talks?
The Dutch have a reputation for politeness, and I was expecting a reply laden with diplomatic euphemism. What I got was a surprisingly pithy denunciation of Britain's politicians, and their approach to the Brexit negotiations:
"Some of them are unrealistic, they are not rational… they are always saying the ball is in the EU's court. Well there's a great big ball in their court, but they don't want to see, because they are blind."
And what about the claim that the EU needs the UK just as much as the UK needs the EU?
"If you want to dream, do it at night," he suggested.
When it comes to those UK-EU negotiations, it seems the current betting here is on failure.
British Prime Minister Theresa May’s visit to the European Parliament later this month was canceled on Wednesday only a day after it was announced.
May was scheduled to meet with the Conference of Presidents — the president of the Parliament and the leaders of the political groups — and not rank-and-file MEPs on Friday, November 24. Details of the meeting only emerged Tuesday.
But in a snub to the embattled British PM, the assembly has already canceled, formally because many of them won’t be in Brussels that day, two Parliament officials told POLITICO.
“A number of group leaders weren’t able to rearrange their agenda at such short notice,” a Parliament official said. “On Fridays they are scheduled to be in their constituencies or capitals.”
Most MEPs and Parliament staffers do not work in Brussels on Fridays.
Russian Twitter accounts posted more than 45,000 messages about Brexit in 48 hours during last year’s referendum in an apparently co-ordinated attempt to sow discord, The Times can reveal.
More than 150,000 accounts based in Russia, which had previously confined their posts to subjects such as the Ukrainian conflict, switched attention to Brexit in the days leading up to last year’s vote, according to research for an upcoming paper by data scientists at Swansea University and the University of California, Berkeley.
Russian activity spiked on June 23, the day of the referendum, and on June 24 when the result was announced.
UltimoTiger777 wrote:So we've blamed it on racism, stupidity, poverty, dislike of the Cameron government, now we're going to try blaming it on Russia too?
par13del wrote:Why would there have to be facilities just for UK trade, are they now building facilities for Canada trade different from what s used for the USA and China for example?
LJ wrote:par13del wrote:Why would there have to be facilities just for UK trade, are they now building facilities for Canada trade different from what s used for the USA and China for example?
If your company currently exports to the UK and other EU countries you don't have to divide your warehouse in an EU part and a non-EU part. After a hard Brexit you do have to do this. If your company already does business with non-EU countries your problems are less, but still the volume of non-EU trade may go up and that can't be mingled with goods destined for the EU.
BobPatterson wrote:LJ wrote:par13del wrote:Why would there have to be facilities just for UK trade, are they now building facilities for Canada trade different from what s used for the USA and China for example?
If your company currently exports to the UK and other EU countries you don't have to divide your warehouse in an EU part and a non-EU part. After a hard Brexit you do have to do this. If your company already does business with non-EU countries your problems are less, but still the volume of non-EU trade may go up and that can't be mingled with goods destined for the EU.
What is the rationale for needing separate warehouses?
Why can't a manufacturer or wholesaler serve the entire world from a central facility?
LJ wrote:If your company currently exports to the UK and other EU countries you don't have to divide your warehouse in an EU part and a non-EU part. After a hard Brexit you do have to do this. If your company already does business with non-EU countries your problems are less, but still the volume of non-EU trade may go up and that can't be mingled with goods destined for the EU.
Dutchy wrote:BobPatterson wrote:LJ wrote:
If your company currently exports to the UK and other EU countries you don't have to divide your warehouse in an EU part and a non-EU part. After a hard Brexit you do have to do this. If your company already does business with non-EU countries your problems are less, but still the volume of non-EU trade may go up and that can't be mingled with goods destined for the EU.
What is the rationale for needing separate warehouses?
Why can't a manufacturer or wholesaler serve the entire world from a central facility?
This is a warehouse in the harbor, some goods will go outside the EU so customs etc. and part will stay in the EU, no customs. After the Brexit the goods heading to the UK will move from one part to the other part, so structural stranges have to be made.
BobPatterson wrote:What is the rationale for needing separate warehouses?
Why can't a manufacturer or wholesaler serve the entire world from a central facility?
BobPatterson wrote:
In the USA cigarette manufacturers must apply tax stamps to each pack of cigarettes, depending on the State to which the cigarettes are to be shipped. One warehouse with goods clearly marked easily handles everything. There is no need for 50 different warehouses or divisions within a single warehouse.
tommy1808 wrote:You are correct, and this is pretty much, just done electronically for the most part, aside of, you may have guessed it, cigarettes, that do have stickers.
But the analogy doesn´t work after Brexit. The EU can be compared with the US in many ways, actually it should be the US conservatives wet dream (small "federal government, that doesn´t have the right to levy taxes, unlimited "state" rights, no armed forces or law enforcement of its own, "federal court" pretty much only handles state-on-state, state-on-"feds" issues, and so on and so forth) and that is why it normally does work pretty much as you describe.
But after the UK left, this isn´t like a warehouse shipping to all 50 states anymore, this is a warehouse on Haiti exporting into the United States, you need separate warehouses, at least logically, or in effect a customs border in your warehouse.
As nice and simple VAT/ImportVAT is, it does lead to some bureaucracy when items move across lines between different VAT zones.
BobPatterson wrote:There is a bit of mention on that page of "Free Trade Zones", one of which exists just a few miles from where I live. Within the zone there are export/import firms and companies that process products prior to final shipment to wholesalers/retailers..
tommy1808 wrote:BobPatterson wrote:There is a bit of mention on that page of "Free Trade Zones", one of which exists just a few miles from where I live. Within the zone there are export/import firms and companies that process products prior to final shipment to wholesalers/retailers..
Same here, but getting in/out is quite the hassle. We have a couple of customers in Bremerhaven free harbor and getting in and out with a sample already sucks, the cost benefit situation has gotten so bad that tax free zones pretty much stopped existing. Hamburg Habor gave its own one up just a few years ago, and that is a big international harbor.
best regards
Thomas
Brexit is having a serious impact on the UK constitution. Nowhere is this more marked than in the existential threat that it poses to the United Kingdom. Although the EU referendum was held as a UK-wide vote – with no “quadruple lock” requirements for majorities in each of the constituent nations – the result proves that the UK is divided, with Scotland, Northern Ireland and London voting in favour of remaining, and England and Wales voting to leave.
One of the main arguments for the referendum was that of democracy – that the will of the people should be respected. But perhaps it is the will of the peoples on which we should focus – the peoples of the four nations of the UK, whose desires to leave or remain in the EU should be respected, but distinctly.
But how can Scotland remain within the EU, if the UK acts on the referendum vote? One possibility is that Scotland (and Northern Ireland, London, Gibraltar?) might remain within the EU somehow, even though England and Wales leave.
UltimoTiger777 wrote:That article is an attempt to legitimise what some see as an attempt by the EU to annex places like Northern Ireland and Gibraltar by stealth.
ElPistolero wrote:As a Brexiteer, I have no doubt that you accept the importance of respecting the "democratic" choice of the people inhabiting those regions.
par13del wrote:...but that cuts both ways, under the systems that are currently legal in the UK, the majority of persons voting elected to Leave, somehow no one seems to want to respect that democratic choice, the system is majority of the nation. What is funny about the article is that it appears after a region in Spain had a vote to leave Spain. I guess additional traction can also be gained by saying that the EU nationals who have built the UK economy did not get a chance to vote in the referendum so that should invalidate the vote or even force a new one, and since the TM government seems to have caved in to give EU citizens the right to vote in local elections after Brexit (saw it in an article need to confirm) how can they refuse.
par13del wrote:I guess additional traction can also be gained by saying that the EU nationals who have built the UK economy did not get a chance to vote in the referendum so that should invalidate the vote or even force a new one, and since the TM government seems to have caved in to give EU citizens the right to vote in local elections after Brexit (saw it in an article need to confirm) how can they refuse.
UltimoTiger777 wrote:So we've blamed it on racism, stupidity, poverty, dislike of the Cameron government, now we're going to try blaming it on Russia too?
mmo wrote:par13del wrote:I guess additional traction can also be gained by saying that the EU nationals who have built the UK economy did not get a chance to vote in the referendum so that should invalidate the vote or even force a new one, and since the TM government seems to have caved in to give EU citizens the right to vote in local elections after Brexit (saw it in an article need to confirm) how can they refuse.
Not quite true. I am a ROI citizen and at the time living in the UK, as such I was allowed to vote in the non-binding referendum. Citizens of the ROI, who live in the UK, are allowed to vote in all UK elections.
AeroVega wrote:Any predictions how Brexit is going to end? Here's mine:
The UK is leaving the EU without the trade deal they want
[*] The Irish border will be closed
[*] The UK is not paying anything to the EU
[*] The EU will not allow UK companies to provide financial services in the EU until the UK fulfills its financial obligations.
[*] The UK becomes a tax haven
Olddog wrote:AeroVega wrote:Any predictions how Brexit is going to end? Here's mine:
The UK is leaving the EU without the trade deal they want
I agree as the deal UK wants is against the EU core.[*] The Irish border will be closed
I doubt that. I guess they will finally make a border in the sea, between UK or NI or between RoI and EU.[*] The UK is not paying anything to the EU
The UK will pay until it leaves and the RAL and pension will be recovered ,directly or thru taxes. UK will prolly refuse to pay for the project and the EU will cut fund going in the UK for theses.[*] The EU will not allow UK companies to provide financial services in the EU until the UK fulfills its financial obligations.
I guess so but when it is settled, financial services should have been relocated in the Euro zone.[*] The UK becomes a tax haven
UK could try that and be put on the EU blacklist....
Dano1977 wrote:[*] The UK becomes a tax haven
UK could try that and be put on the EU blacklist....