monkeybarry
Jack Jull
The grey trouser, black shirt combination?Something rather unsettling about this image.
The grey trouser, black shirt combination?Something rather unsettling about this image.
Ah. I thought it was a business-related reason. I misremembered.I did. I was selling and buying a house at the time in order to get my eldest into the right catchment. We only had 6 months in which to sell and buy, so I didn't want anything like that delaying the market.
We exchanged on the deadline day for applications in the end.
Always wanted to leave though, just voted for short term interests.
I wanted to leave to escape pointless regulation and the inevitable car crash that homogenised economic policy will bring.
The obvious solution to increasing drivers' wages is increased supply.
I don't particularly like visa systems - labour should be free to move across borders like all other commodities.Pointless regulation you say…like needing to issue visas especially for truck drivers, fruit pickers, hospitality workers etc.that used to be worked out by a free market,
Or the massive increase in pointless import and export regulations that impact free trade. Suffice to say your desire to reduce regulatory nonsense has backfired. 50,000 new customs pen pushers and more work for importers/exporters [emoji106]
Re. Your second point wasn’t the EU going to have collapsed by now? Yet it’s made it through Covid and all the predictions made by you and others of it’s implosion are so far looking like another Brexit myth. As was your prediction that phone companies would honour EU law on roaming charges. Was there anything you got right? [emoji23]
Sitting on my porcelain throne using glory-glory.co.uk mobile app
Prisoners to fill work shortage in meat processing. Lol... totally normal lads...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-58303679
McDonalds runs out of milkshakes.
Last week, Nando's was forced to close about 50 of its restaurants after running out of chicken.
Rival KFC also warned recently that supply chain issues meant it was unable to stock some menu items.
At the same time, dairy giant Arla has had to cut back on milk deliveries to supermarkets because of a shortage of drivers.
I get many are over the moon with Brexit but wouldn't it be nice to admit it's a bit brick for lots of things too?
Not enough nandos, kfc, or McDonald's is a bad thing?
Not in my world, looking around it would appear to me that quite a lot of folk could do with less of these, not more.
ah there we go, standard response. Yeh, we'll gloss over the troubling scenes in NI since Brexit. Let's ignore the reintroduction of data charges for using phones abroad. Ongoing shortages of supplies in our supermarkets.
See, that's kind of my point. I get people are Brexit fanboys, but the act as if everything is going swimmingly is a bit unicorn dreamland.
Like your glossing over a world wide pandemic, an obesity problem, diabetes running riot, teeth rotting away, but hey i got my dig in about brexit so the world is good.
If peoples priorities are when they can get their next junk food hit from then the world is more fudged up than i believe. voted remain, i still believe that was the correct decision and leaving was a mistake btw, but nevermind you've put me in a nice little pigeon hole to try and force a point.
It's a bit like the Tottenham rebuild....much to iron out, there will be issues, hurdles, things that go wrong and things that go right. Brexit and the pandemic are both big journeys, rather inconveniently running concurrently, they'll be a time when we feel we've reached a destination, a more settled time...and judgements can be made (then).It is probably balanced to say that without the pandemic these shortages would not be a reality and without Brexit these shortages would not be a reality. The combination is probably the thing we need to consider. But politics and echo chambers can make us lose objectivity.
My experience of central and eastern Europe is that they are having precisely the same problems.Er, don't think i've pigeon holed you at all, i said people are ignoring any negatives. Not even sure what the ramble of 'fast food' is, bit of a strawman to take away the points i have raised. There's been little to no criticism of Brexit promises consistently being broken. Not saying we should return or anything, just pointing out some of the glory we're living in is just being wilfully ignored.
To @LutonSpurs point i believe the shortages are exacerbated in UK compared to other countries also dealing with post-Brexit and pandemic. At least based on friends and colleagues in those locations i know in Germany and France.
McDonalds runs out of milkshakes.
Last week, Nando's was forced to close about 50 of its restaurants after running out of chicken.
Rival KFC also warned recently that supply chain issues meant it was unable to stock some menu items.
At the same time, dairy giant Arla has had to cut back on milk deliveries to supermarkets because of a shortage of drivers.
I get many are over the moon with Brexit but wouldn't it be nice to admit it's a bit brick for lots of things too?
I largely agree mate... especially when factoring in who's running the show.@ricky2tricky4city I take your point that things will shakedown and we'll be able to appraise, but it is clear that there is a lot of hassles with Brexit, and few if any upsides thus far? Moreover, no one can identify any clear future upsides. It is possible the UK will gain some regulatory headstart on the rest of the world in pharmacy, renewables, driverless tech, but lets be honest, it is unlikely as most of these things require some global momentum and cooperation. Maybe if no one can identify clear advantages, it is actually because they are none.