Originally posted by cloughie
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Trade Deal, or No Deal...
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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leaving the EU especially on the terms we did was in my opinion the greatest mistake since the refusal to deal properly with German militarism post WW1 - it will probably take another 50 years or so to recover both commercially but more importantly 'spiritually' in terms of outlook, cooperation etc. It is true that most of the fault here is with the Tory party but also with their supporting mass media - the UK continued to send sceptics and self serving wreckers to the European parliament, Labour under Corbyn ensured that the torrent of misinformation spewing out of the Tory press was not challenged but, and it's a big but, the federalists in the EU totally misread what was acceptable to the UK given the previous 2 centuries of fighting, at enormous cost, the European 'menace', first of all Napoleon, then Prussian militarism, which twice defeated France, and finally German fascism (a somewhat milder but equally nasty was still around in Spain + Portugal and is some respects in the theocracy of Ireland) until the 70s
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Yes, factually correct except I'm not sure that it was so much a mistake of the EU, which in terms of its 'federalist' aspirations had moved on from the wars of the past, to believe that the UK would still be stuck in that past, mistrusting the Germans, and the French, well, bof! The UK was right to paint itself as a very important trading economy, but that was the very reason the EU wasn't going to allow it to have favourable terms (in spite of Mr Farage's assurances): out of the EU the UK was competition: it had unilaterally sown the seeds of a trade 'war'. The EU's estimation was that the UK stood to gain more from the EU than they did from the UK - German cars and all the rest of the things the UK spent their millions on notwithstanding. And it turned out that the German car manufacturers preferred the strict preservation of the Single Market than bending the rules for the UK.
Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postleaving the EU especially on the terms we did was in my opinion the greatest mistake since the refusal to deal properly with German militarism post WW1 - it will probably take another 50 years or so to recover both commercially but more importantly 'spiritually' in terms of outlook, cooperation etc. It is true that most of the fault here is with the Tory party but also with their supporting mass media - the UK continued to send sceptics and self serving wreckers to the European parliament, Labour under Corbyn ensured that the torrent of misinformation spewing out of the Tory press was not challenged but, and it's a big but, the federalists in the EU totally misread what was acceptable to the UK given the previous 2 centuries of fighting, at enormous cost, the European 'menace', first of all Napoleon, then Prussian militarism, which twice defeated France, and finally German fascism (a somewhat milder but equally nasty was still around in Spain + Portugal and is some respects in the theocracy of Ireland) until the 70sIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postwelcome to the 4th Reich - it will I think soon be the case that a total trade blockade with the EU will be on the cards before European manufactured red tape kills most trade - the Guardian article gets it in one - there will be no rational discussion with Brussels for many years to come and we will need to totally alter our trading situation.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostYes, factually correct except I'm not sure that it was so much a mistake of the EU, which in terms of its 'federalist' aspirations had moved on from the wars of the past, to believe that the UK would still be stuck in that past, mistrusting the Germans, and the French, well, bof! The UK was right to paint itself as a very important trading economy, but that was the very reason the EU wasn't going to allow it to have favourable terms (in spite of Mr Farage's assurances): out of the EU the UK was competition: it had unilaterally sown the seeds of a trade 'war'. The EU's estimation was that the UK stood to gain more from the EU than they did from the UK - German cars and all the rest of the things the UK spent their millions on notwithstanding. And it turned out that the German car manufacturers preferred the strict preservation of the Single Market than bending the rules for the UK.
Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postleaving the EU especially on the terms we did was in my opinion the greatest mistake since the refusal to deal properly with German militarism post WW1 - it will probably take another 50 years or so to recover both commercially but more importantly 'spiritually' in terms of outlook, cooperation etc. It is true that most of the fault here is with the Tory party but also with their supporting mass media - the UK continued to send sceptics and self serving wreckers to the European parliament, Labour under Corbyn ensured that the torrent of misinformation spewing out of the Tory press was not challenged but, and it's a big but, the federalists in the EU totally misread what was acceptable to the UK given the previous 2 centuries of fighting, at enormous cost, the European 'menace', first of all Napoleon, then Prussian militarism, which twice defeated France, and finally German fascism (a somewhat milder but equally nasty was still around in Spain + Portugal and is some respects in the theocracy of Ireland) until the 70s
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Co-founder of Cheshire Cheese Company told by environment minister to look at US and Canada markets rather than EU
Would this be the same Prentis (sadly, she was my MP when I lived down that way!) who was busy at a Nativity Play and admitted that she didn't really read through the details of the deal?
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Posthttps://www.theguardian.com/politics...-export-advice
Would this be the same Prentis (sadly, she was my MP when I lived down that way!) who was busy at a Nativity Play and admitted that she didn't really read through the details of the deal?
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI wonder how many French retailers and restraunteurs are totally peed off with EU now that their UK sources have bureaucratically stoppedIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, as de Gaulle said: "How can you govern a country which has 246 varieties of cheese?" So they'll probably survive without UK cheese at least.
"Charles de Gaulle once bemoaned the difficulty of governing a country that had 246 varieties of cheese. Theresa May is no doubt sympathetic as Britain now produces more varieties than France. More than half of the 5,000 cheeses entered in this year’s International Cheese Awards, held in Nantwich, Cheshire, were from Britain, a country whose contribution to European gastronomy was derided by the former French president Jacques Chirac as amounting to nothing more than mad cow disease. Britain has moved to the top of the international league table of cheese producers. As of 2014 the UK was producing 700 varieties of cheese, 100 more than France, despite the French eating twice as much."
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... time to move on from that old duck. Way back in 2016 -It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostPerhaps 'famous' cheeses, and there may be more by now - de Gaulle died over 50 years ago. I'm sure there are lots of UK farmers that make their own artisan cheeses but how many of them could you name? Somerset brie anyone? Shambembert vegan cheese?
They are not poor imitations either, and in some cases may be better than the generic foreign version. When I worked on a supermarket deli counter we always had President brand brie and some of the customers would be very sniffy about the presence of Somerset and Cornish versions. Their loss, the "genuine french"(ie President) version was the cheese equivalent of Stella Artois beer - made for the UK market and maximum profit. It never matured properly, just went hard, at which point we had to cut it into wedges to put in the prepack chiller and hope to sell it through to those who insisted it was worth buying . The somerset was better and often no more expensive and made a good stab at maturing from crumbly to soft, and the cornish was excellent at all stages.
I did manage to get one or two customers to change their minds.As a way of keeping the British dairy industry going and paying more than lip service to the concept of food miles and sustainability the proliferation of artisan cheesemakers has its merits.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostWhat is perhaps more relevant, especially in these difficult times, is not so much whether we can name specific makers' cheeses but the fact that to all intents and purposes the very many types of cheese from abroad can be made here, and in many cases using the 'correct' milk, whether goat, sheep, buffalo, in addition to all the standard British types such as Cheddar.
They are not poor imitations either, and in some cases may be better than the generic foreign version.
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... lymeswold
( ... I am not being serious)It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Posthttps://www.theguardian.com/politics...-export-advice
Would this be the same Prentis (sadly, she was my MP when I lived down that way!) who was busy at a Nativity Play and admitted that she didn't really read through the details of the deal?
(December 2017) https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-42249854
(March 2021) https://www.theguardian.com/politics...of-brexit-deal
I seem to remember , perhaps from the "Brexit behind closed doors" documentary that the EU had started work on theirs in 2016, pre-referendum result.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhat was relevant was how far French restaurateurs would be wringing their hands at being unable to get hold of genuine Cheshire.
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