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Having just come back from a fortnight in Germany,I have to report that they are not happy, food prices through the roof, clothing prices, through the roof, petrol is £1.70 a litre in the sticks and £2.10 a litre on the Motorway , diesel 20p cheaper than Petrol. The things which cheaper are beer, 90 p a 500 mil bottle in the supermarket but €5.60 in the Pub, hence 25% of Germanise pubs have shut down, and it’s very depressing to see so many lovely buildings going down the pan.I bought a bottle of Scotch (Ballantines) in the Super for €10.90. Looks like Covid killed the pubs, same as here but it’s common to see 3/4 Blokes stood in a town square drinking from a crate of 20 they bought in a shop. They take the empties back in the crate and get 8p refund. Everyone moaning about inflation.Disappointed we left the EEC but I pointed out that they are not as disappointed as the French who have had to increase their pension age due to lack of our handouts!I have been visiting Germany since I was a toddler and I have never seen it so run down. And that’s upsetting for me.
Quote from: Sprotyrover on August 01, 2023, 05:17:49 pmHaving just come back from a fortnight in Germany,I have to report that they are not happy, food prices through the roof, clothing prices, through the roof, petrol is £1.70 a litre in the sticks and £2.10 a litre on the Motorway , diesel 20p cheaper than Petrol. The things which cheaper are beer, 90 p a 500 mil bottle in the supermarket but €5.60 in the Pub, hence 25% of Germanise pubs have shut down, and it’s very depressing to see so many lovely buildings going down the pan.I bought a bottle of Scotch (Ballantines) in the Super for €10.90. Looks like Covid killed the pubs, same as here but it’s common to see 3/4 Blokes stood in a town square drinking from a crate of 20 they bought in a shop. They take the empties back in the crate and get 8p refund. Everyone moaning about inflation.Disappointed we left the EEC but I pointed out that they are not as disappointed as the French who have had to increase their pension age due to lack of our handouts!I have been visiting Germany since I was a toddler and I have never seen it so run down. And that’s upsetting for me.Funny how all the examples you go on about are due to the level of Excise Duties. Which each member state sets themselves, not the EU. Just like we did all the years we were in the EU.
Unlike VAT, what a country decides to charge excise duty on, and at what rate, is down to them not the EU. Therefore the prices of Excise goods in each individual member state has nothing to do with being in or out of the EU, and thus nothing to do with Brexit.
Surely the point is that some countries within the EU are suffering in very similar ways to Britain. Meaning being in the EU might not be the saviour that many like to think it is.
Why it would have been a good idea to have put the negotiated deal to the public rather than simply implementing what no one voted for.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4aVzGAd7bI
Quote from: Not Now Kato on August 05, 2023, 11:37:31 amWhy it would have been a good idea to have put the negotiated deal to the public rather than simply implementing what no one voted for.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4aVzGAd7bIAm still waiting for the public vote on the Maastricht treaty to move us from the eec to the eu…………….
Yes we are saving £ Billions by not having to prop up the French Government retirement funds!
Quote from: Sprotyrover on August 07, 2023, 09:09:23 amYes we are saving £ Billions by not having to prop up the French Government retirement funds!Is this the same France who are a nett contributor to the EU, just as we were, or some other imaginary France you're talking about?
Quote from: Ldr on August 06, 2023, 09:18:24 amQuote from: Not Now Kato on August 05, 2023, 11:37:31 amWhy it would have been a good idea to have put the negotiated deal to the public rather than simply implementing what no one voted for.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4aVzGAd7bIAm still waiting for the public vote on the Maastricht treaty to move us from the eec to the eu……………. Meanwhile, have you come up with any tangible benefits yet?
Quote from: Not Now Kato on August 06, 2023, 11:03:08 pmQuote from: Ldr on August 06, 2023, 09:18:24 amQuote from: Not Now Kato on August 05, 2023, 11:37:31 amWhy it would have been a good idea to have put the negotiated deal to the public rather than simply implementing what no one voted for.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4aVzGAd7bIAm still waiting for the public vote on the Maastricht treaty to move us from the eec to the eu……………. Meanwhile, have you come up with any tangible benefits yet?Yes as I have stated, we are no longer in the mix towards the creation of a European superstate which as you know was my reason for voting
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 07, 2023, 09:20:57 amQuote from: Sprotyrover on August 07, 2023, 09:09:23 amYes we are saving £ Billions by not having to prop up the French Government retirement funds!Is this the same France who are a nett contributor to the EU, just as we were, or some other imaginary France you're talking about?It’s the France that has had to up the retirement age from 62 to 64 due to being short of funding from somewhere , as you well know!
Yes Glynn they the French have had to up their contributions considerably since jumping off the back of the UK’s eU funding.which is why they couldn’t meet their Pension Commitments!
Quote from: Sprotyrover on August 07, 2023, 01:56:50 pmYes Glynn they the French have had to up their contributions considerably since jumping off the back of the UK’s eU funding.which is why they couldn’t meet their Pension Commitments!They pay a fixed percentage of their GDP, just like we did when a member. Their economy does well, their contributions go up, their economy does badly, their contributions go down. Nothing to do with Brexit.But hey, keep whipping that corpse!
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 07, 2023, 10:10:03 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on August 07, 2023, 01:56:50 pmYes Glynn they the French have had to up their contributions considerably since jumping off the back of the UK’s eU funding.which is why they couldn’t meet their Pension Commitments!They pay a fixed percentage of their GDP, just like we did when a member. Their economy does well, their contributions go up, their economy does badly, their contributions go down. Nothing to do with Brexit.But hey, keep whipping that corpse!Their contributions have doubled since 2020 that’s some economic boom they’re having, they must be dodging repairing the 50% of their nuclear power stations which are un serviceable.eh?
No, because although the 2021 amount is the GROSS contribution figure, the 2019 amount is the NETT contribution figure. And you want us to take you seriously?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 08, 2023, 01:39:36 pmNo, because although the 2021 amount is the GROSS contribution figure, the 2019 amount is the NETT contribution figure. And you want us to take you seriously?https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/frances-record-eu-budget-contribution/That took me 5 minutes to find, not five hours!