BREXIT thread

imagine if the sun was running polls about irish issues, mick the muldoon would go ape, keep the fuck out of our affairs paddy, the way Ireland is treating Britain at the moment will come back to bite the bastards in the arse yet

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We should be advising them what to do given the brilliant state of our health service , housing policy , policing etc .

God you really are awful dim.

:roll_eyes:

Britain is our biggest and best friend, that poofter Varakdar would want to start treating us with respect, this will end badly for paddy eventually

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Well snowflake list all the terrible effects this will have, a real open goal for a bit of virtue signalling for you, go nuts

Hard Brexit will unquestionably have a pretty big impact on Ireland in the short term.

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Lots of small to medium Irish business will be severely damaged, this will disproportionately affect the regions. Dimwit.

Total bullshit bluffer answer, nothing factual or opinion from our resident little signaller

A long way from actually happening though

Yeah I don’t think hard Brexit is happening, but it is a concern tbf.

It is but theoretical and as in no ones interest unlikely. I want to know what negative outcomes, set in stone now, will negatively affect ireland. The bedwetter was signalling away, dont give him a dig out let him stand up for himself, so far all he has is that businesses will be severely damaged (how?) and that some undefined thing will disproportionately affect the border region, in some unquantifable way. Just great debating

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Well if we disregard trade and seemless supply chains and take them as sorted in a soft Brexit, we’d still be damaged. Mostly through losing a close partner at the EU table- we have been striking out elsewhere to look for that but it isn’t the same. Though I suspect that Glas is more of the Franco German persuasion than Anglo American capitalism so don’t think it could be that.

Most small to medium business that export send the overwhelming majority of their product to Britain. The food industry in particular. Most of these businesses are in regional areas. Most of these businesses have very thin profit margins and are extremely vulnerable to a dip in sterling. The government has done a pretty good job at getting businesses “brexit ready” I think. Funds provided to prepare for brexit and work has gone in to help businesses diversify product lines and export markets.

Still, a hard brexit will disproportionately affect small to medium enterprises outside Dublin, with an obvious knock on effect on jobs. Any brexit at all will probably see a dip in sterling and do a lot of damage to these businesses and jobs anyway.

That’s just one very obvious negative effect for Irish people/people in Ireland.

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Corbyn has put down a motion of no confidence in the PM.

So the severe damage you stated is definitely coming is all theoretical, depending on a hard brexit, which is very unlikely, or a possible currency change, which might happen, or might go the opposite way. So you were shrieking over nothing concrete, and nothing that will in any way matter to you.

Vote tomorrow

Is Brexit getting much discussion in Poland ?

Look kid, you’re a dimwit, so if you think brexit won’t negatively affect Ireland or Irish people, carry on. It’s not important to me to convince you otherwise.

A bit.

It is a more real possibility than it has been at any point up to now, government more actively preparing for it now.