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  • Originally posted by swaledale View Post
    Me thinks your taking rA's comments out of context! he certainly wasn't claiming its a massive inconvenience, just an added bit of cost, trouble that wasn't there before. Of course add in things like the 90 day limit on stays in the EU, and other hassles and for some people, its certainly not a benefit of Brexit to have more complicated arrangements.

    The impact on business, especially those that sell direct to the consumer from the Uk is much more severe, exactly why i was advising such firms to set up subsidiaries within the Eu, or even relocate their HQ's there, despite some questioning that the Uk would be dumb enough to agree a deal which saw such added extra costs.

    My response was simple - theres a reason arch Brexit supporters like the Dyson's and Rees-Moggs are shifting their HQ and business operations abroad! Sure enough it has come to pass. of course I feel sympathy for the lost jobs and lost revenue to the UK, even more for the millions we will lose in services, but hey ho apparently we voted for that!
    Thank you, Swale...he is...and deliberately so.
    It was a throw away comment about yet another negative impact of Brexit upon, not just me but, millions of UK travellers and visitors.
    The point of the post was that...in my own tiny way I experienced today my first firsthand frustration of a negative impact of Brexit.
    A task that had previoussly been no more complicated than posting a package somewhere in the UK has suddenly become more expensive and much more complex in terms of form filling.
    Didn’t think I’d have to explain it twice...but imagine how difficult that is for people from MA to those who depend on cross border trade.

    P.S. Andy...tbh I had never been on a plane until five weeks after 9/11. Been on hundreds since but air travel was prohibitively expensive and all our family trips involved ferries and cars...I still look on with genuine amazement at old films with people casually smoking on board.
    Imagine you’re referring to the impact of terrorism and the extra time one has to spend in airports as a result. I’ve never known anything different but I imagine it must be annoying for you.
    It’s also essential imo...as will be the likely Covid vaccination checks...and that’s the difference, hold ups for reasons of safety are entirely necessary. Hold ups and other travel complications brought about by Brexit taking us back to the red tape of 1950’s are entirely self inflicted.
    Last edited by ramAnag; 28-01-2021, 03:33 PM.

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    • SWALE: Absolutely thats exactly the answer if you are a big organisation that has the knowhow and finance to do it. I saw it all the time in the three years leading up to brexit as (not just paper) EU companies were set up in UK insurance company groups to accommodate doing EU business.

      But the small businesses are the ones to suffer, especially those that trade B2C online, with costs rising and the problem that has come to light with returned goods - being cheaper to burn the returns rather than pay the costs of reimporting. This mostly will hit mom n pop type "facebook businesses" who export but also intermediate sized ones that perhaps are doing it for more than pin money.

      The 90 day limit on stays in EU is interesting - I wonder if it will mean the forced repatriation of Spain's costa del crime residents or whether they can/will apply for EU nationality of convenience? There never was going to be any benefit in brexit for the "house in the sun" brigade - legal or extradition avoidance - but those who have such places are amongst your "new elite" and allegedly deserve to suffer for the common good of keeping Romanians and Poles out

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      • Originally posted by ramAnag View Post

        P.S. Andy...tbh I had never been on a plane until five weeks after 9/11. Been on hundreds since but air travel was prohibitively expensive and all our family trips involved ferries and cars...I still look on with genuine amazement at old films with people casually smoking on board.
        Imagine you’re referring to the impact of terrorism and the extra time one has to spend in airports as a result. I’ve never known anything different but I imagine it must be annoying for you.
        It’s also essential imo...as will be the likely Covid vaccination checks...and that’s the difference, hold ups for reasons of safety are entirely necessary. Hold ups and other travel complications brought about by Brexit taking us back to the red tape of 1950’s are entirely self inflicted.
        I wasn't JUST referring to the impact of terrorism, although it was the single biggest 'hit' on the carefree days of the 80s and I do find it difficult to argue against folk who give 'clearly South Asian' folk a wide berth, even now. But there's the general move towards risk-averseness, the reduction in behaviour/increase in entitlement of passengers and obsession on the part of Airports and airlines with squeezing every last sheckle out of a captive audience that all impact negatively on the enjoyment of the flight experience. I agree that Brexit will add to it for EU trips but its just a small part of the mix

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        • Originally posted by Andy_Faber View Post
          I wasn't JUST referring to the impact of terrorism, although it was the single biggest 'hit' on the carefree days of the 80s and I do find it difficult to argue against folk who give 'clearly South Asian' folk a wide berth, even now.
          Really? I honestly can’t quite believe you’ve said that.
          God help you if you ever find yourself sitting next to a catholic on a Ryan Air flight, or are they somehow different?

          Any particular ‘clearly South Asian folk’, or are they all to be avoided?

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          • Originally posted by ramAnag View Post
            Really? I honestly can’t quite believe you’ve said that.
            God help you if you ever find yourself sitting next to a catholic on a Ryan Air flight, or are they somehow different?

            Any particular ‘clearly South Asian folk’, or are they all to be avoided?
            I didn't say I did it rA, just found it difficult to argue against folk who did/do. Who am I to moralise with people who are just exercising risk averseness? It happened to me last night, a number of folk gave me a miss during my evening walk for no other reason than I was wearing a borrowed dappy hat and black puffa jacket, making me look (I now realise) a thug.

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            • Do ‘thugs’ wear ‘dappy hats’? Wouldn’t have thought so...maybe it was something else.

              Not moralising...but I wouldn’t find it at all difficult to ‘argue against’ people who give ‘South Asian folk a wide berth’. Why would they?

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              • Originally posted by ramAnag View Post
                Do ‘thugs’ wear ‘dappy hats’? Wouldn’t have thought so...maybe it was something else.

                Not moralising...but I wouldn’t find it at all difficult to ‘argue against’ people who give ‘South Asian folk a wide berth’. Why would they?
                OK I looked a stupid thug. Impressed you know what a dappy hat is

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                • Originally posted by Geoff Parkstone View Post
                  SWALE: Absolutely thats exactly the answer if you are a big organisation that has the knowhow and finance to do it. I saw it all the time in the three years leading up to brexit as (not just paper) EU companies were set up in UK insurance company groups to accommodate doing EU business.

                  But the small businesses are the ones to suffer, especially those that trade B2C online, with costs rising and the problem that has come to light with returned goods - being cheaper to burn the returns rather than pay the costs of reimporting. This mostly will hit mom n pop type "facebook businesses" who export but also intermediate sized ones that perhaps are doing it for more than pin money.

                  The 90 day limit on stays in EU is interesting - I wonder if it will mean the forced repatriation of Spain's costa del crime residents or whether they can/will apply for EU nationality of convenience? There never was going to be any benefit in brexit for the "house in the sun" brigade - legal or extradition avoidance - but those who have such places are amongst your "new elite" and allegedly deserve to suffer for the common good of keeping Romanians and Poles out

                  Hang on a minute! Not so long ago you were claiming the average millionaire (albeit on paper) in this country with an average pension and detached house was an ordinary person. Now apparently these same people are amongst the new elite - make your mind up both propositions can't be true.

                  In any case many of the people who went to live or work abroad are far from any elite as you describe them, many are average working people who saved up and bought a home abroad to make use of in their retirement or even to retire to or those who work abroad, enabled by the UK's membership of the EU.

                  You'd struggle to describe any of these people whose dreams, hopes and lives have been affected as part of the new elite, but it shows the extent of your self centred narrow perspective that you have described them as such, without actually knowing anything about them!

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                  • Originally posted by Andy_Faber View Post
                    I didn't say I did it rA, just found it difficult to argue against folk who did/do. Who am I to moralise with people who are just exercising risk averseness? It happened to me last night, a number of folk gave me a miss during my evening walk for no other reason than I was wearing a borrowed dappy hat and black puffa jacket, making me look (I now realise) a thug.
                    I think they were more scared of catching Covid--19 than anything else but may be your ego thinks otherwise!

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                    • Originally posted by Geoff Parkstone View Post
                      SWALE: Absolutely thats exactly the answer if you are a big organisation that has the knowhow and finance to do it. I saw it all the time in the three years leading up to brexit as (not just paper) EU companies were set up in UK insurance company groups to accommodate doing EU business.

                      But the small businesses are the ones to suffer, especially those that trade B2C online, with costs rising and the problem that has come to light with returned goods - being cheaper to burn the returns rather than pay the costs of reimporting. This mostly will hit mom n pop type "facebook businesses" who export but also intermediate sized ones that perhaps are doing it for more than pin money.

                      The 90 day limit on stays in EU is interesting - I wonder if it will mean the forced repatriation of Spain's costa del crime residents or whether they can/will apply for EU nationality of convenience? There never was going to be any benefit in brexit for the "house in the sun" brigade - legal or extradition avoidance - but those who have such places are amongst your "new elite" and allegedly deserve to suffer for the common good of keeping Romanians and Poles out
                      B2C - I highlighted how it affects the small seller yesterday and you are right GP

                      Costa del Crime - I'm not sure of the precise regs in Spain but they aren't dissimilar to those here in NL or other EU countries. Namely, UK expats were given regular notice over the past 4 years of negotiating as to what they needed to do to be able to remain a resident in their chosen EU home. That gave them the chance to apply for resident status, which doesn't require the need to apply for citizenship and the possible giving up of their British nationality. Those with resident status in, for instance, Spain, can come and go between the UK and Spain as often as they like. That freedom doesn't extend to other EU countries though. On other EU countries they would still be subject to the 90 day rule.

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                      • Originally posted by MadAmster View Post
                        B2C - I highlighted how it affects the small seller yesterday and you are right GP

                        Costa del Crime - I'm not sure of the precise regs in Spain but they aren't dissimilar to those here in NL or other EU countries. Namely, UK expats were given regular notice over the past 4 years of negotiating as to what they needed to do to be able to remain a resident in their chosen EU home. That gave them the chance to apply for resident status, which doesn't require the need to apply for citizenship and the possible giving up of their British nationality. Those with resident status in, for instance, Spain, can come and go between the UK and Spain as often as they like. That freedom doesn't extend to other EU countries though. On other EU countries they would still be subject to the 90 day rule.
                        MA pretty much nails it there for espania, Mrs F and I had fair warning and progressed through stage 1 (the stage before 'residencia') and were going to go for residencia which offered the benefits described by MA until we decided to sell up. Any of the stages also avoid the need for an EHIC or equivalent (Mrs F's mum broke a hip in Mallorca and the treatment was top-notch with no expat-related forms to fill). Going back to the rA point about travel, yes there will be some buggeration, but we'll soon learn to 'suck it up buttercup'

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                        • The EU are treading on some very dangerous grounds with their threats against the pharmaceutical companies, to cover for their bureaucratical inadequacies. Their actions could lead to big international companies either pulling out of or not choosing to have production plants in the EU.

                          This is a perfect example of what us Brexiteers wish to get away from. A sloth like bureaucratic mess and when things go wrong, they come in heavy handed over everyone. It's simple too big and too diverse an organisation to work properly.

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                          • Originally posted by Ram59 View Post
                            The EU are treading on some very dangerous grounds with their threats against the pharmaceutical companies, to cover for their bureaucratical inadequacies. Their actions could lead to big international companies either pulling out of or not choosing to have production plants in the EU.

                            This is a perfect example of what us Brexiteers wish to get away from. A sloth like bureaucratic mess and when things go wrong, they come in heavy handed over everyone. It's simple too big and too diverse an organisation to work properly.
                            Except what we are seeing is politicians doing what politicians everywhere do, ours especially, which is a lot of hot air, designed to distract from the fact that they are unable to deliver their promises. So its not peculiar to the EU, I mean its something Farage tends to do almost everyday, waffle a lot of hot air about something that when one delves beneath the detail isn't actually true.

                            If we get away from the ill informed and incorrect Brexit side issue, the cold facts are this. The delay to the Eu in delivering the vaccine isn't going to make much difference, it will still be mid summer at the earliest before vaccination is going to impact generally on lives.

                            The Uk isn't going to benefit in the medium term by non cooperation, before life in the UK returns to something like normal, all of the EU and a great proportion of the rest of the world are going to have to have the vaccination as reinfection and more importantly new mutants will keep coming in from outside.

                            So if the world is going to defeat this virus, it needs to work cooperatively in order to ensure very country gets the vaccine.

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                            • Originally posted by swaledale View Post
                              Except what we are seeing is politicians doing what politicians everywhere do, ours especially, which is a lot of hot air, designed to distract from the fact that they are unable to deliver their promises. So its not peculiar to the EU, I mean its something Farage tends to do almost everyday, waffle a lot of hot air about something that when one delves beneath the detail isn't actually true.

                              If we get away from the ill informed and incorrect Brexit side issue, the cold facts are this. The delay to the Eu in delivering the vaccine isn't going to make much difference, it will still be mid summer at the earliest before vaccination is going to impact generally on lives.

                              The Uk isn't going to benefit in the medium term by non cooperation, before life in the UK returns to something like normal, all of the EU and a great proportion of the rest of the world are going to have to have the vaccination as reinfection and more importantly new mutants will keep coming in from outside.

                              So if the world is going to defeat this virus, it needs to work cooperatively in order to ensure very country gets the vaccine.
                              Couldn’t agree more with every word of that. Well put.

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                              • Except it isn't all equal is it?
                                The EU preaches the unity of the 27, yet the vaccination figures alone( even llowing for the EU **** up), shows seniority being applied with Germany/France/Italy/Spain

                                The smaller ones don't seem to be getting a good deal out of this unified stance.

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