Does the EU Really Need the UK? - Brexit Explained

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  • čas přidán 4. 12. 2018
  • CHECK OUT OUR NEW VERSION UPDATED FOR 2020: • Does the EU Really Nee...
    When scrolling through comments you often see people say "they need us more than we need them". So we have tried to respond to that once and for all. We look at if the EU relies on the UK for trade, how the EU budget will cope without the UK and if the EU needs the UK as a security ally.
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @TLDRnews
    @TLDRnews  Před 3 lety +13

    CHECK OUT OUR NEW VERSION UPDATED FOR 2020: czcams.com/video/bvOlKUp1RaU/video.html

    • @johnshrigley8077
      @johnshrigley8077 Před 3 lety

      @Alistair Bolden .

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 3 lety +1

      It's quite pathetic to suggest 27 European countries needs UK... When it's gonna over this arrogant supremacist wave in The UK?
      Why Britain never talks about all the money they got from not paying taxes in the rest of Europe? Why do you think UK is paying 18 billion back to EU? Because the common market cause inequalities that UK takes advantage of it like Germany or France. The biggest economies collect more taxes and keeps more jobs than the smaller economies with this single market. So UK has no reasons to complain since collected far more than 18 billion from other countries.
      They took advantage of it and now tantrums just because Britain does not manage the EU.

    • @benverdel3073
      @benverdel3073 Před 2 lety

      I liked the map at 3.10 of the uk without the eu.

    • @benverdel3073
      @benverdel3073 Před 2 lety

      It's funny to see this video again now in july 2021. It was spot on and a lot of things have evolved over time.

  • @randomzocker8956
    @randomzocker8956 Před rokem +49

    As a European I havent noticed much from brexit.

    • @theultimatewazzer
      @theultimatewazzer Před 11 měsíci +2

      As a brit i have felt it a lot 🤧

    • @dennysteezy139
      @dennysteezy139 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Really that you haven’t noticed much difference until now ?
      Do you think inflation is just because the war in UK and due to Covid ?
      We pay over £0.15 more for each product coming from the EU and we pay much more from countries far away from the EU due to the shipping cost.
      And worse than all of this is the government allowing and providing ViSAS to people from nigiria, India and other poor country’s with no common sense, and I makes my life so hard as I have to keep explaining them that they can do whatever they want at work, they can’t be late, they need to wear uniform, they can’t be sitting down during the working hours etc etc and they are always asking why why and why as they thing they’re back home

  • @zaw408
    @zaw408 Před 5 lety +2181

    Yes please do a video about the EUs agricultural policy!

    • @jirivegner3711
      @jirivegner3711 Před 5 lety +94

      And an overview of EU budget.

    • @crazEgamer201
      @crazEgamer201 Před 5 lety +61

      Bumping this because I too want to know how the EU agricultural policy works and replies to comments helps push them further up to the top.

    • @Healermain15
      @Healermain15 Před 5 lety +16

      Yes! I'd love a video on that topic!

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +16

      @@jirivegner3711 Just google "EU 2018 budget". The budget is public property.

    • @unformedeight
      @unformedeight Před 5 lety +3

      Yesss! Doooo ittt xD

  • @adam108
    @adam108 Před rokem +17

    when I came to the UK, I was surprised by this porpaganda that the whole EU is crying because the UK wants to leave, meanwhile, in the EU somehow it was not talked about much, at least it was not the most narrow topic...

    • @dvidclapperton
      @dvidclapperton Před rokem +2

      Certainly a right wing claim that has been dispelled once again.

  • @CityWhisperer
    @CityWhisperer Před 4 lety +116

    I didn’t know this comment section was a meeting point for economic and trade experts.

    • @thisisaname5589
      @thisisaname5589 Před 4 lety +5

      Just as likely to know what they're talking about as the average unelected bureaucrat.

    • @dave-in-nj9393
      @dave-in-nj9393 Před 4 lety +5

      10 times more knowledgeable than the BBC on such matters as economics and fisheries.

    • @tamasmarcuis4455
      @tamasmarcuis4455 Před 4 lety +5

      Well I am a trade and customs economist. So that would be a trade expert.
      As for most people here....well not so expert.

    • @dave-in-nj9393
      @dave-in-nj9393 Před 4 lety +1

      @@tamasmarcuis4455 : that would make you about 1,000 times more expert than anyone on the BBC regarding trade and customs.

    • @colinyoung3685
      @colinyoung3685 Před 4 lety

      I didn't know recognition from a third party (with the associated financial burden) was a prerequisite for discussing ideas.

  • @livingthebestlife888
    @livingthebestlife888 Před 5 lety +857

    Sad to read some of the comments. I am German, my kids speak Spanish, my friends live in England, France, Netherlands. I feel "European" - what is the point of going back to narrow-minded nationalism. The EU is not always perfect but it has provided us with peace for many years now

    • @cristianpanga9325
      @cristianpanga9325 Před 5 lety +33

      Danke schon

    • @johnny5wd567
      @johnny5wd567 Před 5 lety +36

      I'm right there with you. I have relatives in the UK, in other EU countries and even outside the EU. So yeah...

    • @MeganoOdles
      @MeganoOdles Před 5 lety +82

      NATO is the bedrock of peace in Europe, NOT the EU

    • @johnny5wd567
      @johnny5wd567 Před 5 lety +103

      @@MeganoOdles Militarily as a deterrent against the Warsaw Pact back in the days, yes. But it was the EU (or rather EEC and ECCS) which ensured the peace among its member states by ensuring no one member state has full control over coal and steel, back then the key to armament. Interdependency avoids certain types of conflict.
      Creating a stable environment for businesses and societies to develop, sharing the wealth (which is why some pay in more to the EU and some receive more from the EU), improves life in general and thereby avoid the need for certain type of conflict (like economic reasons or the situation shortly after the first world war). It's a proven fact.
      To preserve the peace, you'll need both. Saying NATO by itself is responsible for peace is an oversimplifocation. Not all EU members are part of NATO and for some time, France was not part of it yet common ground with Germany through EEC and ECCS did ensure there could not be a conflict rising by promoting shared values and shared economic benefits.
      I can't understand all the hostility today. I'm wondering what evil restrictions have been "imposed" that would cause such anger. It's always easier to point a finger to someone else rather than looking to solve one's own self-created problems (UK always had control of its borders, mass immigration is not caused by the EU - the UK parliament agreed and helped create around 95% of the regulations and treaties).
      Just get on with it and do as voted. The rest will get along just fine (at one time the EU was much smaller and that also worked fine).
      Stop complaining and start acting I'd say. No point in bickering about an emotional decision (it certainly looks like that in most cases, rather than based on reasoning given the most of the arguments displayed in these discussions between leave and remain voters).

    • @CornishCreamtea07
      @CornishCreamtea07 Před 5 lety +41

      Not liking the EU is not the same thing as not liking Europe, even if some dislike both.

  • @KingBobXVI
    @KingBobXVI Před 5 lety +570

    "Does anyone _really_ want a video about the UK's farming policy?"
    ...
    ...yes.

    • @marketsolutionsdigital1238
      @marketsolutionsdigital1238 Před 5 lety +6

      It's maybe cos if they did, they would have to explain that the farming industry in the UK is roughly the same size as it was when entering Europe all those years ago, BUT, is in the hands of half as many businesses. So in Britain, since entering the EU, farming in britain hasn't grown whatsoever to this day, and is from what I can gather, dominated by a hand full of big players. Even those are restricted in the number of crops we can produce fairly each year. The number of which was reduced when entering the EU as part of the CAP conditions placed on us, from what I read somewhere. So the British farming industry took a big hit when entering the EU, the main reason we were granted the rebate, so we could afford to subsidise our own industry losses which just had its global competitiveness taken away from it. It heightened competitive and entry barriers to the industry, helping cause oligopolies which then sit with the other elites, which then create trade deals like TTIP. Europe is just another example of elites taking the piss for their own gain. That's why right wing parties are gaining favour in Europe right now.

    • @woodshed1006
      @woodshed1006 Před 5 lety +4

      @@marketsolutionsdigital1238 But leaving the eu would only speed up the process off less land owners as subsidies only slowed down process because smaller farmers had more money to keep afloat tbh there is a lot of issues for farming in the future. And as the management of farming money changes it will probably favour walk ways form town people to accesses the countryside. Not the best for small farmers

    • @Mikellewe
      @Mikellewe Před 5 lety +3

      I would be interested to know how very wealthy landowners get money from the EU. Also how many MPs and Members of the House of Lords are in receipt of CAP money.

    • @woodshed1006
      @woodshed1006 Před 5 lety

      @@Mikellewe I mean I live In Scotland and iknow for a fact lots of eu money gets lost iń Westminster so I can't really help about England and there are lots of factors in play which I don't know about that's all I can help you

    • @borntodoit8744
      @borntodoit8744 Před 5 lety +3

      @@marketsolutionsdigital1238 under investment in UK is purely the fault of UK government not EU policy. That includes argriculture... Don't blame the EU for UK policy not investing in UK.
      Simple analysis, March 2019 GDP figures : UK GDP IS Split 21% industry (goods) and 79% services.. where industry contains all agricultural uk industry (=1% of UK GDP).
      Argriculture ...is nothing compares to financial services (which if lost (and it will) will have the killer blow to UK prosperity within months of brexit as we lose financial passporting to Europe.
      DOWN WITH BREXIT
      UP WITH EU...IS SENSE TO STAY IN EU AND REFORM IT FROM WITHIN

  • @ulfosterberg1979
    @ulfosterberg1979 Před rokem +7

    I guess the question is settled now, three years after....

  • @UchihaDarkForce
    @UchihaDarkForce Před 4 lety +144

    Short answer: no. It's a loss but the EU is strong enough to go without GB

    • @dragospatrascu577
      @dragospatrascu577 Před 4 lety +3

      @Mark Corfield just wait . negociations start in March. This is the "phony war period" . the new type of war, the economic won, starts soon.

    • @dragospatrascu577
      @dragospatrascu577 Před 4 lety +3

      @Mark Corfield I know. all the world saw that. now the dance starts

    • @edoardoturco8780
      @edoardoturco8780 Před 4 lety +11

      J S I’m sorry tho bother you, but...
      Actually , no counties in Europe is currently in recession and I’ll tell you more:
      Lot of them increased better thanUK in the last three years, to show you a comparasion:
      The gdp of Uk increased as much France one’s, a state full of strikes and Et similia

    • @edoardoturco8780
      @edoardoturco8780 Před 4 lety +6

      Giovanni Giova Why?

    • @edoardoturco8780
      @edoardoturco8780 Před 4 lety +10

      Giovanni Giova According to you the smaller economies inside the union should be KO right now... But they are improving better than the bigger state members. I could agree with you on a general concept: small fish eaten by bigger fish... That’s why we created it, to make a stronger fish rather than a group of lonely fishes.
      Understood the analogy ?

  • @akirapunk4883
    @akirapunk4883 Před 5 lety +545

    There are 4 big actors on the global stage: US, EU, Russia
    and China. They have massive territories, and serious political, economic and political weight.
    Do you think it’s a coincidence that both Trump and Putin would rather the EU break up into smaller, more vulnerable chunks?

    • @meandmetoo8436
      @meandmetoo8436 Před 5 lety +95

      Russia is not on par with US/China/EU.
      If anything, Russia is in the same pack as Brasil and India.

    • @TheKrank20
      @TheKrank20 Před 5 lety +36

      @@meandmetoo8436 Military.

    • @meandmetoo8436
      @meandmetoo8436 Před 5 lety +14

      @@TheKrank20 in this case yes.

    • @meandmetoo8436
      @meandmetoo8436 Před 5 lety +12

      @@richardwillford2418 you forgot that they are a big exportator of gas though.
      But yes their economy is not that good AND their population is ageing.

    • @SteveDavies01
      @SteveDavies01 Před 5 lety +3

      Other than their massive nuclear capability. @@richardwillford2418

  • @JamesHardaker
    @JamesHardaker Před 5 lety +684

    based on the fact that UK politicians are panicking and EU politicians are not - the answer is pretty obvious.

    • @GCJNash
      @GCJNash Před 5 lety +18

      Then don't play poker.

    • @dutchuncle3310
      @dutchuncle3310 Před 5 lety +34

      Anon Wibble the EU did not put the backstop in to prevent the Uk from exiting. It wanted the backstop to only apply to Northern Ireland wich would practically have been no more then a slight inconvenience to the rest of the UK. Unless I misread the downplaying by Whitehall of the value of the northern Irish economy to the UK.

    • @dutchuncle3310
      @dutchuncle3310 Před 5 lety +22

      Anon Wibble the bad thing is not that they said it, the problem is the UK really can not afford a hard Brexit.

    • @dutchuncle3310
      @dutchuncle3310 Před 5 lety +27

      shaun muppet finder the countries whose economies are most exposed to the UK appear to think they can. You also have to take into account that even a hard Brexit will not end all trade. Just make it more difficult, it also depends what the exports into consist off. The UK’s biggest exports: cars, car parts and financial services are not indispensable. In fact reducing these may be beneficial to the EU as a whole For instance the Netherlands wich is very exposed to the UK market will lose about 4% off its GDP about two Dillion, painful but not devastating. Also Dutch exports to the UK are mainly fresh vegetables wich will be difficult for the UK to get elsewhere, because the are bulky and have a short shelve life.

    • @stephenhathaway269
      @stephenhathaway269 Před 5 lety +8

      @Anon Wibble how convieniently simplistic you are. It is just plain stupidy i wonder or are you being deliberately disingenuous?

  • @adrianomendola9137
    @adrianomendola9137 Před 4 lety +24

    Would really like a "what does the UK manufacture" video. Excellent idea.

    • @daverevill5577
      @daverevill5577 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes and we know why we've been in the eu far to long

    • @kneedeacon2309
      @kneedeacon2309 Před 3 lety +1

      Adriano Mendola - uk do not manufacture any stuffs now, all been moved to the eu countries by Brussell

  • @wingtaylor141
    @wingtaylor141 Před 4 lety +94

    9:15 "Does anyone really want a video about the EU´s farming policy?" Given that the CAP "still accounts for 37% of the EU´s expenditure", yes, please go ahead...

    • @robinhood5627
      @robinhood5627 Před 4 lety +3

      I said that, like well it's actually significant and really important to this so erm yuh...

    • @Taporeee
      @Taporeee Před 4 lety +2

      Yes we do.
      A fascinating topic.

  • @Struckgold
    @Struckgold Před 5 lety +751

    It's remarkable that you have to explain that the UK needs needs the EU far more than vice versa.

    • @NJ-wb1cz
      @NJ-wb1cz Před 5 lety +64

      @Felix B it won't come back because it never left! The Commonwealth is strong! UK is regrouping to capture those dirty rebels in North America and then conquer the world with combined forces! Combined UK US military will dominate the Earth! Everything is going according to plan!

    • @fburton8
      @fburton8 Před 5 lety +13

      He concluded "slightly more" not "far more".

    • @Chris-xl6pd
      @Chris-xl6pd Před 5 lety +19

      Its remarkable that someone that subscribes to that view didnt pay enough attention to the information in front of them to realise it was "a bit more" not "far more".
      Typical another person that just shits on Brexit and only hears what they want to hear.

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před 5 lety +72

      Christopher Everson
      At the end he said "it looks like we need the EU far more than they need us"
      Who didn't pay enough attention again?

    • @Chris-xl6pd
      @Chris-xl6pd Před 5 lety +5

      @@MDP1702 12:45
      I rest my case

  • @Arka47o92
    @Arka47o92 Před 5 lety +1497

    As a French I have to say that I always wait your video.
    They are full of informations and fact. You do not put any judgment you are just explaining.
    And this is quite interesting imo.
    Keep doing what your doing. Carry on, cause a lot of people are interested in.

    • @anurgaprasad123
      @anurgaprasad123 Před 5 lety +30

      bonjour croissant with snails

    • @magnets1000
      @magnets1000 Před 5 lety +42

      Every source has some bias, and this video is no exception. I can clearly tell where the creators stand on their position on brexit

    • @smogstreaming
      @smogstreaming Před 5 lety +21

      Thank you for learning to speak English. ^_^

    • @davidpower1583
      @davidpower1583 Před 5 lety +20

      As a French man how are you enjoying the riots?

    • @anurgaprasad123
      @anurgaprasad123 Před 5 lety +16

      @@davidpower1583 similar to us back in 2011

  • @yoemeuunitoful
    @yoemeuunitoful Před 4 lety +160

    I'd argue a rational brit is more a patriot than an overly emotional one.

    • @hyndscs
      @hyndscs Před 4 lety +7

      Agreed however getting Brits and EU to stop and analysis is harder than it used to be because they are no longer taught to critically analyse. Btw British and NZ educated

    • @jameswatsonatheistgamer
      @jameswatsonatheistgamer Před 4 lety +1

      Then you'd be wrong. Patriotism is patriotism.

    • @jameswatsonatheistgamer
      @jameswatsonatheistgamer Před 4 lety +4

      @@hyndscs Opinion. Not fact. We voted to leave the eussr and that's that.

    • @hyndscs
      @hyndscs Před 4 lety +12

      @@jameswatsonatheistgamer you have completely missed my point. That fact that we are no longer educated to analyse and critique. The person with the loudest voice is now heard not the person with the correct information or most persuasive arguement.
      And your remark if proof enough of that. I said nothing to the contrary in leaving and yet you have made the assumption that I was supporting the remain arguement.
      That is an exemplification of my exact point.
      You did not critically analyse my post.

    • @jameswatsonatheistgamer
      @jameswatsonatheistgamer Před 4 lety +1

      @@hyndscs We. So you've polled everyone in this country and British abroad. You must have a lot of free time on your hands. It's good that you've spoken to all 100 plus million of us .

  • @MsMinoula
    @MsMinoula Před 4 lety +43

    2:34 you used the symbol the other way round (smaller

    • @susanboyle7085
      @susanboyle7085 Před 4 lety

      I know. It demonstrates wonderfully how inept they are.

    • @CityWhisperer
      @CityWhisperer Před 4 lety +3

      Susan Boyle oo someone isn’t happy with the results 😁

  • @DawryMike
    @DawryMike Před 5 lety +247

    The UK went into a negotiation with no leverage and expected to win. The EU has made it's position clear for the past 2 years, the UK cant get the perks of an EU member with no strings attached.

    • @jirivegner3711
      @jirivegner3711 Před 5 lety +53

      No leverage and no negotiating position. No wonder everyone else thoughts are: WTF are they doing?

    • @adrivensketch3782
      @adrivensketch3782 Před 5 lety +13

      There isnt any perks to the eu except all the trade restrictions they put in place the eu is joke Netherlands will be leaving in the near future aswell and dont be surprised if Poland goes both countries suffering what werve suffered at the hands of the in-elected Brussels seriously hope we leave with a no deal the eu wont function hate tge stubborn lot in Brussels that make sure france and Germany get the best of it a deal woukd be bice but not mays deal or what Brussels has come up with both deals support the un-elected in Brussels i voted leave so we csn control our trade better for the economy

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 5 lety +46

      @@adrivensketch3782 youre so stupid.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +20

      @Mat H Well, triggering a referendum on the EU to solve an internal problem in the conservative party during the most severe refugee crisis in post-war European history wasn't exactly a brilliant idea on his part.

    • @Sjokola
      @Sjokola Před 5 lety +30

      @@adrivensketch3782 A few points. First: please use punctuation. Your comment is really hard to read. Second: I don't think the Netherlands will leave. There is a leave movement but at the moment it's in the far minority. And Third: it's more of a question. Who are the unelected you are talking about? They parliament is chosen and has final say over the commission members. Even the European council are all elected leaders.

  • @RBuckminsterFuller
    @RBuckminsterFuller Před 5 lety +663

    The EU as a whole is a much larger economy than the UK by itself. The impact will be pretty clear. But what's wrong with the basic idea that we all need each other? Two people building a house can do a better job than either one by themselves.

    • @spaceowl5957
      @spaceowl5957 Před 5 lety +56

      RBuckminsterFuller
      I fully agree. Cooperation is arguably humanities biggest superpower. Cooperating benefits all of us

    • @lacasadipavlov
      @lacasadipavlov Před 5 lety +55

      yes... except it's not 2 people. It was 28 people and one left...

    • @vogliounacocacola
      @vogliounacocacola Před 5 lety +72

      Most people, or at least lots of them, don't like to think about complex issues. Most people like simple problems with even simpler solutions, and that's why populists prosper in times when there are big problems. They simplify them and simplify the solution.
      Unfortunately, modern economies and modern states are extremely complex things and as their problems go well beyond national frontiers, the only possible solutions are equally complex and transnational. You can't defeat terrorism, pollution, the economy, the wealth gap and all of these stuff as a single country because they're international problems. But it's much easier to sing Rule Britannia and wave your blue passport. It's simpler.

    • @DeathlordSlavik
      @DeathlordSlavik Před 5 lety +34

      No point in building a house when the EU just lets someone else come in and burn it down then bans speech criticizing the people who burned it down because they are migrants.

    • @Kelmire1
      @Kelmire1 Před 5 lety +23

      You can't build a house with a communist that encourages mass migration and censors both people and all forms of media when said immigrants begin raping European women en mass.
      Cooperation is good when it makes sense. However, blind coopoeration is what led to the rise of Hitler.
      You think most Germans wanted unlimited warfare? They were solddown the river by corrupt politicians that weren't ll that different from EU leaders.
      Okay, think of it this wy... the EU commission is heavily in favor of open borders to mass foreign migration from outside Europe. However progressive a move you may think an ethnic invasion is, think on this: At no point was your consent or the consent of ANY European person's consent sought at any time over this issue. Good or bad, that is NOT democracy. They are fascists by definition.
      You can build a home with them, but I won't. Liberal values still mean something to me and censorship is not liberalism. It truly makes me wnt to cry when I see how brinwashed 21st centory Europeans truly are.
      Part of protecting diversity is ensuring that it exists in the first place - did you ever think of that? Multiculturlism is ultimtely the death of diversity and vriety is the spice of life.
      Your 'why can't we all just get along?' mentality, however noble, is utterly impractical and ultimately, when you really think about it; highly unethical.

  • @ThePkb22
    @ThePkb22 Před 4 lety +36

    Quite simply. NO ONE has ever asked "What deal will the UK give to the EU"?
    It's always the other way round, even when posed by leading Brexiters.
    That, right there, tells us all we need to know about the balance of leverage in these negotiations, and therefore, who "needs" who, to the greater extent.

    • @lippydalips4537
      @lippydalips4537 Před 4 lety +1

      Clever comment Phil lol I'm called Phil too lol haha😁👍

    • @blog251
      @blog251 Před 4 lety +1

      Phil Booket - what exactly do you suggest we give to the EU - apart from £ billions every year? Regarding who needs who? We need each other.

    • @jeanjean59ful
      @jeanjean59ful Před 4 lety +4

      @@blog251 The 350 Millions per week that would go to the NHS after Brexit was a lie. Nigel Farage admitted it after the vote. Also, not paying the EU doesn;t mean you'd save that money, because it could cost way more not to have a deal with the EU. The EU is losing one partner. The UK is losing a group of partners.

    • @ThePkb22
      @ThePkb22 Před 4 lety

      @@blog251 I totally agree. What we're talking about here, is the art of negotiation, and how it has been/should have been applied to these negotiations, from which our future relationship with the EU is likely to be set. It was a crucial part of my trade for 25 years.
      The first step, is to prepare thoroughly. That means assessing what it is you're intending to achieve, how you intend to achieve it, and what you're prepared to pay (which may not just be a financial calculation).
      You cannot do any of the above successfully if you begin by overestimating your leverage, and underestimating that of the other party/parties.
      Successful negotiations are about understanding the purpose of the negotiations, establishing a mutually beneficial relationship, building trust, and demonstrating good faith, throughout.
      Making threats, explicit or otherwise, particularly threats likely to hurt you, more than it will the party you're threatening, undermines all the above, and serves to strengthen the resolve of the other party. As does attempting (as the UK did) to circumnavigate the people with whom you're supposed to be negotiating, to appeal direct to the 'customer' or 'authorising body'.
      The UK's approach from the start has been combative, not co-operative, which only served to unite the other EU nations even further, and therefore make it less likely to get concessions.
      It's that age-old issue of UK politicians being SO concerned with how they come across in the domestic press/public opinion, they approach international diplomacy in strategic straight-jacket.
      My point was, had Leavers stopped to think about what they were saying, they might have been more realistic in their assessment of the consequences of UK's initiative and negotiations may have been more effective as a result.

    • @blog251
      @blog251 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ThePkb22 I agree with a lot of what you say but it was clear that the EU negotiators knew Theresa May was bluffing and I believe that no deal should definitely be genuinely on the table. I believe it is on the table and if it means that it's the ONLY way we can rid ourselves of the EU then we should do it.

  • @wijk89
    @wijk89 Před 2 lety +5

    The whole Brexit thing is emotionally driven and a bit silly.

  • @steves1015
    @steves1015 Před 5 lety +496

    Great video - I like the approach of using facts, not emotions, which is something this whole debacle has been sorely lacking.

    • @haruyanto8085
      @haruyanto8085 Před 5 lety +3

      @@asitpatel1853 "Outsider"? You're already an outsider

    • @steves1015
      @steves1015 Před 5 lety +2

      Asit Patel yeah I agree - I think it is useful for both people living within and outside of the UK.
      To be honest though, as a Brit, I’m mostly sick of hearing about it and want it to be just done with :)

    • @KingBobXVI
      @KingBobXVI Před 5 lety +25

      @bobbi brown - "A free Britian voted overwhelmingly to be free of the EU bureaucrats."
      Facts, man; facts. The UK voted by less than a 2% margin to leave the EU. That is not "overwhelming" by any sense of the word.

    • @DaithXD
      @DaithXD Před 5 lety +2

      @@bobbi brown Please don't forget that EU bureaucrats spare all members to have these bureaucrats themselves. UK will have to stock up with their own bureaucrats in the future.

    • @Coldheart322
      @Coldheart322 Před 5 lety +1

      @@DaithXD Depending on what you mean by bureaucrats, the UK has more than the EU has.

  • @keeyan2166
    @keeyan2166 Před 5 lety +337

    2:32 The greater than sign is the wrong way round...

    • @sebbyh9764
      @sebbyh9764 Před 5 lety +10

      Freudian slip?!?!?!

    • @Haav89
      @Haav89 Před 5 lety +1

      I didn't notice it 😂😂

    • @yannicmodritscher4646
      @yannicmodritscher4646 Před 5 lety +3

      @@sebbyh9764 Or one Mistake.

    • @IIAndersII
      @IIAndersII Před 5 lety +5

      Oh god ... that mistake hurts my eyes.

    • @t1rjb1
      @t1rjb1 Před 5 lety

      No it isn't. Less than sign looks like a tilted L

  • @cerber991
    @cerber991 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you for also including intra-EU trade when showing the portion of EU trade that is linked to the UK. That seems to be the more informative of the two, given the UK's current position as a member state and the fact that a change of said position would alter the trade share.
    And yes, your videos are very informative and comfortable to quote and to self-check for all angles considered, so please make that more in-depth video on UK manufacturing.
    P.S. Would be nice if you do a video covering evaluation of the benefits of EU membership the UK enjoys, since one can see devout Brexiteers quoting the net contributions from payments ballance, yet completely ignore the market access, passporting and competition benefits memership grants them and how these and others blow away the net contributions of the UK by value.

  • @timur900subscribe
    @timur900subscribe Před 5 lety +294

    Start of video: 'I very rarely read comments'. Later in video: 'Leave a comment if you want to see this.'

    • @trampoliiin
      @trampoliiin Před 5 lety +17

      Because comments reflect user engagement that youtube measures and influences the recommendation algorithms with and keeps commenters coming back for more.

    • @timur900subscribe
      @timur900subscribe Před 5 lety +10

      @@trampoliiin You are correct, but I just wanted to highlight the hypocrisy in him saying that he rarely reads comments, but then asks feedback on what video he should make.

    • @StNick119
      @StNick119 Před 5 lety +3

      If CZcamsrs are anything like us, they can select which comments appear first, the most recent or the most highly rated. Generally, the highest-rated comments are less abusive and of better quality than the rest. "Rarely read comments" could also mean "Don't read most of the comments" while still reading top ones. In which case it would be important for people to comment the topics they want so that those topics can be liked and pushed up to the top.

    • @oceanplanet8160
      @oceanplanet8160 Před 4 lety +6

      I'm pretty sure he was talking about other videos. But sure, act like a bitch.

    • @OldTeaMate
      @OldTeaMate Před 4 lety

      That's quite a static perception. You don't regard poster able to keep an eye out for specific comments on a certain video, in which he made two viewer opinion requests within the next couple of days or weeks?

  • @kiruschka123
    @kiruschka123 Před 5 lety +180

    You kinda forget to say that the UK's trade with countries outside of the EU are all happening under trade deals which were negotiated by the EU.
    This said, I would love to see a video if the UK actually could negotiate better deals (more preferable for themselves) with other countries like the USA/China etc. and how these countries could react to Britains main industries (finance, insurance etc.).

    • @gentlemanvontweed7147
      @gentlemanvontweed7147 Před 5 lety +47

      Currently the other major trading blocs want us to go no-deal because that means we'd have no leverage against them and they could analy rape us in any deal negotiations.
      If our leadership doesn't get its act together and start taking Brexit seriously, we can expect TESCO to sport yankee chem-foods and Chinese construction workers renovating our homes.

    • @quoth_raven
      @quoth_raven Před 5 lety +15

      Probably they'll get worse deals because they will have less negotiating power: after Brexit there will be a scramble to set up deals replacing the EU deals, which will be much more urgent for the UK than the other partner ;)

    • @GuusJanssen
      @GuusJanssen Před 5 lety +68

      It's factually *impossible* for the UK to negotiate better trade deals than the EU could. It's so simple, even a three year old can understand. So I'll explain it for the Leave Voters: imagine Brazil has negotiated a trade deal with the UK, and out of the thousands of conditions in that deal there are say 15 better for the UK compared to the EU deal with Brazil, the EU will immediately contact Brazil to renegotiate the EU deal with Brazil. And since there is no way the UK with its 65 million people will be more important to Brazil than the EU with 513 million people, Brazil will never allow the UK to get better terms than the EU. Just for fun I googled the EU - Brazil trade: the EU is Brazil's second biggest trading partner, while Brazil is the EU's 11th biggest trading partner. And the EU is the biggest foreign investor in Brazil. Guess who's afraid of who.
      Also: In the EU - Japan trade deal for instance is a "competition"-chapter that ensures that both sides commit themselves to maintaining comprehensive competition rules and transparency to another. One of the rules is that if (say) Japan is negotiating a trade deal with a third party (say the UK) that could potentially harm the economy of the other party (in this example the EU), Japan is required to provide full transparency to the EU in the Japan - UK negotiations, and the EU has veto rights on the deal between Japan and the EU. *BOOM*

    • @NJ-wb1cz
      @NJ-wb1cz Před 5 lety +11

      @@GuusJanssen you're engaged in Project Fear! Under WTO rules Britain will get flooded with cheap goods and services, so it won't have to produce anything anymore! No production means no exports, no exports mean no problems! There's nothing more anti-globalist than having a global open market inside your borders!

    • @francesco8000
      @francesco8000 Před 5 lety +32

      "Under WTO rules Britain will get flooded with cheap goods and services, so it won't have to produce anything anymore! No production means no exports, no exports mean no problems! "
      Which also means no Jobs....if you don't have to product or export every company in the UK would close you moron.

  • @GCS88
    @GCS88 Před měsícem +2

    As someone from Ireland the main thing I noticed are Brits suddenly moving here claiming Irish passports due to Irish ancestry.

  • @iamhole
    @iamhole Před 4 lety +230

    you never touched on the common fisheries policy.

    • @themodelrailwaymen3649
      @themodelrailwaymen3649 Před 4 lety +39

      No, and its worth ~£2bn to them in my calculations. Never mind the damage done to our marine ecology by their factory ships and the Dutch electro pulse techniques. Who checks their catches? They do.

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind Před 4 lety +21

      Most European countries have given tax payer money to keep fishing boats in business , that includes UK ... have you whined about that much ?
      And then half of all fresh fish that comes to market is thrown away as spoiled goods end of a day ... its the most idiotic system ever .
      First you subsidies with taxes a business that over produce , then you end throwing half of all its products away as trash .and pay for that too .

    • @themodelrailwaymen3649
      @themodelrailwaymen3649 Před 4 lety +7

      @@pete_lind Never happened in the UK prior to '76. Seaside towns flourished also before the 47 year winter.

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind Před 4 lety +13

      @@themodelrailwaymen3649
      Independent , September 2017
      Europe imports about 75 % of the British catch, a cornucopia of 40 species that is too exotic for most domestic consumers .
      The group estimates around 90 % of the cod supply was imported from countries such as Iceland and Norway in 2014, a number not likely to change substantially no matter what terms are agreed on Brexit, especially as the oceans warm up.
      Much of the salmon consumed in Britain is farmed in steel cages off the coasts of Scotland, Norway or Iceland, while tuna are generally caught in the Indian Ocean and imported .
      Get the picture yet ?
      UK catch fish that is exported to EU and then imports fish to UK , from non EU countries , what if EU stops all fish import from UK , when they need to protect their fishermen ?

    • @craighills2977
      @craighills2977 Před 4 lety +10

      @@pete_lind then we dont export the fish we catch.. maybe we eat it instead

  • @TheDarkever
    @TheDarkever Před 5 lety +248

    I work in a large EU company that makes 2 billions € revenues every year and has huge offices in London. In the last few months we have been hastily closing all warehouses in UK to avoid the devastating expenses on customs we would face by shipping from there, and we moved them to EU countries where we won't have to face these issues. Those are hundreds of jobs and tax money for the UK that are gone forever.

    • @MrGraemeb2022
      @MrGraemeb2022 Před 5 lety +22

      I don't know why you worry. The British government ( and Civil service) has no intention of leaving the EU. It won't happen. Democracy is a myth in the face of 'Remain' MPs, an arrogant and incompetent civil service and a mainstream media all of whom are totally opposed to what the democratic referendum result demands. We didn't want to go to war in Iraq, but we ended up there. We didn't want to go into Afghanistan, but we ended up there. We didn't want mass immigration, but we got it thrust upon us. Democracy? Yeah right. In your dreams people.
      Just go and watch 'Bake off' and 'Gogglebox'and let your 'betters' do what's best for you...

    • @eddherring4972
      @eddherring4972 Před 5 lety +10

      Baaaaaaa 🐑

    • @hymatwat9412
      @hymatwat9412 Před 5 lety

      TheDarkever good

    • @danceartist8203
      @danceartist8203 Před 5 lety +41

      @@MrGraemeb2022 Its not solely up to them anymore though. There is a growing sentiment in the EU that we might actually be better off without them. (They never really wanted to play along and have blocked some cool things in the past.)

    • @spidermanrosettastone1834
      @spidermanrosettastone1834 Před 5 lety +22

      @@hymatwat9412 yes but without money, you dont have good education, or healh, coz many pays for that, and If UK get poor your will looe EDUCATION, HEALTH, poor roads... etc etc, coz of the money... it a domimo effect, you will keep your nationalism, a greater cost than just money and jobs... no tax money no social programs... etc.

  • @R0B1NG5
    @R0B1NG5 Před 5 lety +141

    I think I always just assumed the UK was less needed than the EU. Its just a matter of size, population ect. I don't logically see how it could be the other way, unless you have an inflated sense of self importance.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Před 5 lety +49

      If the British are Number One for one thing then it's their inflated sense of self importance.

    • @captainmallard549
      @captainmallard549 Před 5 lety +12

      We have marmite. They don't.

    • @lesserspottedmugwump.363
      @lesserspottedmugwump.363 Před 5 lety +1

      The U.K.s GDP is larger than the smallest 34 EU countries combined.
      There are only 49 countries in the EU.

    • @lacasadipavlov
      @lacasadipavlov Před 5 lety +12

      @@lesserspottedmugwump.363 are you sure? are you positive??

    • @danscutaru7579
      @danscutaru7579 Před 5 lety +1

      Which is just the case

  • @josev1544
    @josev1544 Před 4 lety +66

    just by logic in general, any single entity is usually worse off leaving a group than the group itself. even though both lose out.

    • @Triton1051
      @Triton1051 Před 4 lety +9

      simple logic isn't always preferable when discussing complex issues. a single entity might, just as easily, be far better off leaving the group. a child leaving a dysfunctional family for example. they might even initially miss their family and still be better off in the long run. there will almost certainly be problems at first, but change over time does often actually improve the overall situation.

    • @nissehult7376
      @nissehult7376 Před 4 lety +4

      @nom deplumeone So, the countres in the EU are not part of the WORLD?

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri Před 4 lety +4

      @@nissehult7376
      Countries in EU are small part of the world. Part that has been in decline and isn't competitive on international markets anymore (which is why they support protectionist policies)

    • @DBArtsCreators
      @DBArtsCreators Před 4 lety +2

      Indeed, but the UK and EU are not single entities, and the UK isn't leaving to become a 100% independent isolationist entity. The UK is a conglomeration of millions with connections around the world, and will be joining the world as an equal entity rather than a fragment of another entity.

    • @martins4879
      @martins4879 Před 4 lety

      @nom deplumeone who is keeping UK to trade with the world now? If every Brexiteer in UK is arguing with your logic, I don't need to wonder about anything.

  • @azarjalil
    @azarjalil Před 4 lety +1

    you guys are awesome! Thanks! all he video ideas are excellent. including the farming one.

  • @angelic8632002
    @angelic8632002 Před 5 lety +274

    I'm not sure if you have done a video on this yet, but could you put together a video on how much the common market in Europe boosts its members economies?
    A lot of people seems to fixate on the direct costs of being a member, not realizing the in terms of trade and job creation, that cost is negligible(or at least that's the impression Ive got from a cursory look into it).

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před 5 lety +40

      The problem with that is, it is difficult to know exactly, we know that it boosts the economy quite a lot, but actually calculating is difficult.
      The best way to find out is basically letting the UK crash out and see how that impacts their economy on the short and long term and then compare it to eu nations and the UK before brexit.

    • @dictatoribenevolo8394
      @dictatoribenevolo8394 Před 5 lety +20

      just let the UK crash out, and you'll see the impact hab

    • @sugoruyo
      @sugoruyo Před 5 lety +7

      @@MDP1702 or in a more constructive way we can try to extract data from the experiences of countries that went after it had reached a certain size. Say, looking at the last decade's new members.

    • @angelic8632002
      @angelic8632002 Před 5 lety +3

      @@sugoruyo This, as well as trying to compare other developed economies and how well the banking sector handles loans and investments, as well as tariffs etc.
      Sure its probably impossible to get a somewhat narrow number but we can at least put things in perspective and estimate a ballpark sum.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +5

      @@angelic8632002 Try taking the last 4-5 countries that joined the EU and see how their economies have evolved since joining the EU. That should give you a good starting point at least. For the best data probably only take those that joined in 2004.

  • @jamescbender43081
    @jamescbender43081 Před 5 lety +384

    I'm an American (living in London) and politically I'm a Libertarian. Having said that, I don't get the "George Soros" comment. Granted, I've only seen a few of your videos, but they seem to be pretty objective to me. You're not making up the facts, just reporting them. And you've had some of the most balanced, clear and concise videos on Brexit that I've seen Good job! 👍

    • @faisalkhan786fk
      @faisalkhan786fk Před 5 lety +39

      James Bender if you don't understand something yell 'fake news'. Yell loud enough and it negates the other person's facts.

    • @ecpgieicg
      @ecpgieicg Před 5 lety +4

      I read it as half a joke. I am sure there are lots of petulant rants. But - I have seen - equally so, if not more, are comments expressing real view points and some do delve into their reasoning. Same with comments of comments. Quality videos attract quality comments. Open minded youtuber response further encourages that. Such is the pattern I’ve seen.

    • @MikkelKjrJensen
      @MikkelKjrJensen Před 5 lety +15

      @@faisalkhan786fk Sometimes they do understand, they just don't like the facts being reported.

    • @TheSilence1
      @TheSilence1 Před 5 lety +28

      A good portion of people that support Brexit are of the right-wing. Some are even of the far-right. And to those people, any person or entity that is against isolationism is "an ally of the Jews and their schemes of global domination." George Soros, by the way, is a wealthy Jewish-American media mogul and Holocaust survivor. You see, a large part of Brexit's appeal to the right wing is more control over immigration. For the last two years, right wing elements have been making massive gains in all the major democracies of the world by uniting their people against immigration, and in particular Muslim refugees. For this, right wingers have been criticized by mainstream media and social media as zenophobic, racist, etc. In turn, right wingers criticize MSM as being funded by Soros (read Jews) and followers of social media are his "brainless puppets". You will often see right wingers frame this as a struggle between "nationalists" vs "globalists", but it should be clear to anyone that those are mere code words that can be substituted with conservative vs progressive, white vs non-white, Nazi vs Jew. Take your pick.

    • @boptah7489
      @boptah7489 Před 5 lety +2

      You cannot be a libertarian and think that this channel is balanced. This channel is an EU supporting channel. and so is socialist/fascist in its outlook.

  • @josephbanatlao6461
    @josephbanatlao6461 Před rokem +4

    After 4 years, the answer appears NOT

  • @zachtong5985
    @zachtong5985 Před 4 lety +4

    Very good explanation of a highly complex issue for those of us outside the UK/EU. Other than a small number of very high priced goods there is very little overall interest in the US for UK goods which are often seen as inferior and over priced.

  • @brenorocha6687
    @brenorocha6687 Před 5 lety +115

    Of course I want a video about the EU farming policy!! Please!

    • @coolhandlukeful
      @coolhandlukeful Před 4 lety +2

      Farming and fisheries please.

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 3 lety

      An extra one to check the UK supermarket's shelves after Brexit 🤣

  • @PrawnzHD
    @PrawnzHD Před 5 lety +30

    At 2:30 you did an error. The greater than sign is the wrong way around, so you're saying that UK is greater than EU in the video whilst telling us the opposite in the narration.

    • @AugustusCrosby
      @AugustusCrosby Před 5 lety +5

      glad to know someone else noticed it. this is the first video of theirs ive seen and this mistake seems like a huge oversight and I'm not sure how much of the facts and figures can also be trusted.

    • @PrawnzHD
      @PrawnzHD Před 5 lety +1

      @Percy Harry Hotspur thanks, but that's a grammatical error, not a factual one. The latter tend to be a lot more important as they're misleading whilst what i said was still fully understandable, and did not change the meaning of my point; unlike the greater than sign being the other way around.
      What I'm trying to say is that i don't care about my grammar as long as you 'get me'
      Interesting quote!

    • @jamesc9882
      @jamesc9882 Před 5 lety

      yea lmao

    • @NorthernSystems
      @NorthernSystems Před 5 lety

      So happy that I wasn’t the only person to see this.

  • @acmulhern
    @acmulhern Před 4 lety +7

    The EU farming lobbyists are like James Bond villains. They even look evil! And they're making it very difficult for organic farmers to make a living and for wildlife preservation workers to do yheir jobs.

  • @MervynPartin
    @MervynPartin Před 4 lety +103

    Of course the EU needs the UK- There are still one or two industries left here to be transferred to Europe

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest Před 4 lety +11

      That is how they see us

    • @shaunpmarshall
      @shaunpmarshall Před 4 lety +15

      The EU is done if we stop being a cash cow

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest Před 4 lety +5

      @@shaunpmarshall So be it.

    • @shaunpmarshall
      @shaunpmarshall Před 4 lety +8

      @@Isochest ..just read an article about labour voting students ..if I see that blue EU dictatorship flag one more time I will go mad

    • @tomdoyle6030
      @tomdoyle6030 Před 4 lety +11

      Yup .. sad thing is they were all moved with EU grants and funding so we basically paid to take our own jobs away

  • @anaveragepondturtle886
    @anaveragepondturtle886 Před 5 lety +95

    Yeah actually please do a video on the EU agricultural policy. And the the Netherlands as well

    • @duckpuddles
      @duckpuddles Před 5 lety +3

      As a farmer in the UK I can vouch for the fact that we have been screwed for decades. I visit Germany and France quite a bit and observe farms half my size with equipment and buildings fit for a farm twice my size. On top of that they are all receiving higher prices for their crops and cheaper inputs.

    • @astonm1990
      @astonm1990 Před 5 lety +2

      @@duckpuddles Higher prices? There are now tarrifs between EU countries so how do they get higher prices?

    • @nigelwilliams8191
      @nigelwilliams8191 Před 5 lety

      @@astonm1990 We get short changed by exchange rates and haulage.

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Před 5 lety

      as I thought UK imports a LOT of it's food from the Netherlands, an argicultural video should include as well EU spending on it, as Uk depence on import foods..
      and of course, currect EU countries dependence on UK as a market to sell it's food to..

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Před 5 lety

      @@duckpuddles : for that critic, UK can now stay, under just the threat of UK budget drop, good steps now were made to severely further lessen EU spending on agriculture.
      I'm quity happy with that to, ALL western european countries , for Belgium, the nett contribution is 3 billion euros... seen in comparison to population we pay net a lot more then UK does ... But Belgium was littler and less capable to negotiate a discount like that.. although Belgium succesfully lobbied to lessen the importance of argicultural spending in the EU budget in the nineties.

  • @ciangargan
    @ciangargan Před 5 lety +67

    It's in the EU's best interest to punish the UK for leaving to keep the union strong. If Brexit goes terribly for the UK then no other country will even consider leaving the EU. It's a tough pill to swallow.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Před 5 lety +36

      Nobody is punishing the UK. You cannot leave a club and then ask to use the facilities on terms equivalent to card-carrying members. That would be illogical and to suggest otherwise is disengenuous.

    • @magunra3k
      @magunra3k Před 5 lety +4

      @@BigHenFor you can if that club insists that you keep paying your membership fees for a few more years and gets all salty because you were not happy with the unelected management making choices about what the members can and cannot do

    • @Woffenhorst
      @Woffenhorst Před 5 lety +28

      @@magunra3k You don't get a refund on money you've already agreed to pay. Binding contracts and all that. You're welcome to leave, but you need to hold up your part of the contract anyway.

    • @magunra3k
      @magunra3k Před 5 lety +1

      @@Woffenhorst well we changed our minds about the contract , deal with it.

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel Před 5 lety +20

      @@magunra3k Try to cancel your phone contract today. You will pay until the end of the notice period, not end payments immediatly.

  • @boundertube
    @boundertube Před 4 lety +1

    Was I really being forced to watch a 4min unskippable advert about glue!?!?

  • @BitsOfBen
    @BitsOfBen Před 4 lety

    Aww man, when TLDR news videos were not flooded with junk! Was such a good format and no feature of a podcast to flood the video!

  • @QazwerDave
    @QazwerDave Před 5 lety +300

    The ">" symbol used wrong. Should be "

    • @devtekve1396
      @devtekve1396 Před 5 lety +11

      I though I was becoming crazy

    • @thagor8590
      @thagor8590 Před 5 lety +28

      Difficult to take this video seriously after that.

    • @wimmerlu
      @wimmerlu Před 5 lety +11

      this actually made me browse the comments xD
      so is this fake news?

    • @EyesOfGehenna
      @EyesOfGehenna Před 5 lety +22

      I see especially more and more Brits and Americans make this mistake recently. If that's how they treat their math, no wonder they thought a Brexit would be positive for them :P

    • @ihato8535
      @ihato8535 Před 5 lety +5

      This reminds me of that one science channel that mistakenly put O2H as the water molecule.

  • @ellinmara5997
    @ellinmara5997 Před 4 lety +50

    I gotta say this: From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU, Finland! You guys are beyond awesome.

    • @Doss3332
      @Doss3332 Před 4 lety

      🙃

    • @maurituomisto8007
      @maurituomisto8007 Před 3 lety +1

      You're wellcome, we are also paying Italys budget deficit. 😖

    • @suserman7775
      @suserman7775 Před 2 lety +1

      @@maurituomisto8007 Fexit? Or should we just call it Finish !?

    • @DoubleAAce
      @DoubleAAce Před 2 lety

      my guy finland has a population of 5 mil while UK is 65 mil do u really think finland can do much

    • @ulfosterberg1979
      @ulfosterberg1979 Před rokem +1

      @@DoubleAAce As for security Finland has a bigger and more able army than uk.

  • @fredmidtgaard5487
    @fredmidtgaard5487 Před 4 lety +2

    I am pretty sure that the UK needs Europe more than we need them. It can be sorted out with goodwill on both sides. The worst is the poisonous atmosphere against Europe that many foreigners report on in the UK. Many scientists are leaving the UK for Europe now and scholarships for European students studying in UK institutions will no longer be given after this year.

  • @Rich-zj5xo
    @Rich-zj5xo Před 4 lety +8

    British people want to buy German cars this will not change after Brexit. But they may have to pay more for them and for food. The ordinary person will be poorer after Brexit.
    Would you build a new factory in Britain or Europe ask Tesla. Britain is a small island with few resources which is great for defence but adds costs to exports and imports.
    Europe will see more growth and investment in the next ten years than Britain.
    Brexit will be a disaster for Britain and ordinary British people .

    • @ojlbrickwork8092
      @ojlbrickwork8092 Před 4 lety

      Really lol wouldn't bank on it

    • @neiltitmus9744
      @neiltitmus9744 Před 3 lety

      @Alistair Bolden no c ok

    • @Rich-zj5xo
      @Rich-zj5xo Před 3 lety

      @King Maximus so we can buy food from USA 2000 miles away, Australia, New Zealand and sell our farmers out. Buy Japanese cars there good but the majority of UK people buy German if they can.
      Its all rubbish anyway Boris says we will prosper mightily, just words. I hope we do but ask him if we don't will he go on universal credit. No way will he..

    • @Rich-zj5xo
      @Rich-zj5xo Před 3 lety

      @Alistair Bolden Hi Alistair
      The USA as all countries acts in its own interests. The UK is not special in the USA interests, look at suez.
      Conventional war in Europe is unlikely in the foreseeable future in any major country.
      Who will the west i.e UK, EU USA have to defend its self against in the future. Economically and military probably China.

    • @Rich-zj5xo
      @Rich-zj5xo Před 3 lety

      @King Maximus Yes but Tesla just decided to build mega factory in Berlin not UK. We decided to leave EU. That's fine but its all about a deal. Nothing to do with sovereignty, EU market 450 million UK 65 million.
      USA wants a deal with EU first just using Brexit as a tool to weaken UK and EU.
      UK farmers can't compete with USA or Australia due to land mass and farming practices.
      I don't know of any deal where a smaller company buys at better rates than a larger 1.
      It does not matter what you or I think something will happen it will be good, bad or no change. I hope you are right and Iam wrong.

  • @blameyourself4489
    @blameyourself4489 Před 5 lety +238

    I didn't quite get all those facts TLDR News. Could you talk feelings with me instead?

  • @alignmentsixtrading4200
    @alignmentsixtrading4200 Před 5 lety +156

    Soooo the areas that voted Brexit the most are the areas that will get the massive job losses and negative impact then

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +62

      Basically yes. These are also generally the poorest areas of the UK, and in fact some of the poorest areas in all of Europe, and have gotten large regional support from the EU that will now disappear. So for these areas there will be a double whammy effect.

    • @CloudyDaze
      @CloudyDaze Před 5 lety +38

      So basically the exact same same demographic that brought Donald Trump into office in America.
      Greaaaaat.

    • @jungoogie
      @jungoogie Před 5 lety +20

      @@CloudyDaze The difference is we in America can vote Trump out in 2 years while people in the UK are stuck with this cluster dump for many years to come. Thankfully we got the house back so we have a check on our baby and chief until we can get a competent president again.

    • @tomgjgj
      @tomgjgj Před 5 lety +7

      @@jungoogie I guess ... they could always... have another referendum?
      God, referendums are dumb.

    • @CloudyDaze
      @CloudyDaze Před 5 lety +2

      Tom J I don't think they have the time to. You need a 10 week minimum to announce it and they only have 17 or so weeks before the forced hard brexit

  • @222ferike
    @222ferike Před 4 lety

    Well explained video - I personally agree with the fact that only time and God will be able to say whether this whole arguing was or not for the better for both sides.

  • @woahfarout8793
    @woahfarout8793 Před 4 lety +1

    An important stat to mention here would be what percentage of each economy is dependent of foreign trade to begin with.

    • @TheChill001
      @TheChill001 Před 4 lety

      I know the UK is belgium's third trade partner...but that's apparently dropping fast

  • @RunawayNomad17
    @RunawayNomad17 Před rokem +5

    well 4 years on and it is clear who needs who more 😉

  • @johanwittens7712
    @johanwittens7712 Před 5 lety +185

    Small error in the budget calculations though. The EU will not lose 13% of it's budget, it will lose only 6%. The Eu budget in 2018 was around 160 Billion Euro or 140 Billion pounds. We'll calculate in pounds for the UK to follow the video.
    So if the UK contributes 14 Billion pounds after the rebate, thats only 10% of 140 Billion, not 13% as claimed. Plus the EU will no longer be paying the 6 Billion per year that he UK now gets from the EU. So the net contribution of the UK is not 14 Billion, but only 8 Billion per year. Compared to the whole budget of 140 Billion that is only 5.8% of the total EU budget. Lets make it 6% to be generous.
    Or am i going crazy here?

    • @thompoz7114
      @thompoz7114 Před 5 lety +25

      This video is very inaccurate and poorly made. Just check 2:31. "The EU is larger bloc than the UK" but shows UK > EU.

    • @Wibinable
      @Wibinable Před 5 lety +13

      Also, plenty of money that is "going" to the EU is actually for projects implemented in the UK. Much more so than for other countries. Thus, the gap gets even smaller.

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 5 lety +16

      @@Wibinable Yes but that is part of the 6 billion the uk gets from the eu every year. That is already included in my calculations. So if i didn't miss anything 6% is about right...

    • @pew-pew2224
      @pew-pew2224 Před 5 lety +22

      No and another fact that is missed is that the trade between the EU and the UK might be parts of complete products that is assembled in other EU-countries. This manufacturing could be located some where else in the EU. This will increase jobs and GDP in these countries and thus minimize the loss of buying power for EU as a whole. So it might not even be 6%.

    • @pauladams4886
      @pauladams4886 Před 5 lety +5

      Johan Wittens
      🇬🇧 Great 👍 we can spend it on our people , we voted out and we want out

  • @maelleamand
    @maelleamand Před 5 lety +25

    Thanks a lot for your hard work and clear explanations !

    • @shaunclark425
      @shaunclark425 Před 4 lety +2

      NO - BRITS DONT WANT TO HAVE MILLION MORE POORING IN FROM THE MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA LIKE THE REST OF EUROPE.. THE EU SUPPORTS THIS OPEN BORDER TREASON THAT HAS BROUGHT IN MASS RAPES AND CHILD MOLESTATIONS; NUMEROUS MURDERS, ACID ATTACKS AND TERRORISM; NO GO AREAS .. AND THE UMPTEEN MILLIONS NEED TO BE HOUSED AND LOOKED AFTER (AND THEY ARE PUT INFRONT OF OUR OWN PEOPLE).. S ODONT RY AND DISTRACT PEOPLE WITH MINOR ISSUES SO YOU CAN SUPPOR THE DOWNFALL OF THE WEST....SO YES BREXIT IS A GOOD IDEA..FOR MORE RELIABLE INFORON WHAT IS REALY GOING ON
      SEE LIKE LAUREN SOUTHERN(SEE HER DOCUMENTARY 'BORDERLESS'),RED ICE TV, AND PAUL JOSEPH WATSON..

  • @pinchermartyn3959
    @pinchermartyn3959 Před 4 lety +17

    Can you do a video on the the EU Common Fisheries Policy and how fish stocks have been devastated?

    • @kneedeacon2309
      @kneedeacon2309 Před 3 lety +2

      PincherMartyn - all the countries fish in their own waters, if you want more fish, you buy from one another, so what is the problem

  • @pr4442
    @pr4442 Před 4 lety +1

    Very solid analysis and I agree with your conclusions.

  • @astrolonim2032
    @astrolonim2032 Před 5 lety +69

    YES! I really want a video about the EU’s farming policy. It confuses the shit out of me.

    • @smashing-3291
      @smashing-3291 Před 5 lety +17

      @bobbi brown "No vid is needed
      The EU bureaucrats are free of accountability and are corrupt."
      Wow very informative, we don't need to learn anything anymore. Thanks random stranger on the internet with infinite wisdom on these matters.

    • @achandler6583
      @achandler6583 Před 5 lety

      It's meant to

    • @Lillith.
      @Lillith. Před 5 lety

      From what I can tell it's summed up with work inefficient, get money. Otherwise France wouldn't be the biggest recipient.

  • @tyomkolton
    @tyomkolton Před 5 lety +83

    So in the end of the video you said “it seems UK needs EU slightly more than they need UK”. And then in just 2 sentences you repeat the sentence but instead of “slightly” you use “far more”. When did these words become synonymous?

    • @asdfghyter
      @asdfghyter Před 5 lety +16

      Since UK, sarcasm and understatements.

    • @John-Kuro
      @John-Kuro Před 5 lety +10

      No bias here move along citizen.

    • @quandary1382
      @quandary1382 Před 4 lety +14

      It's almost like some bias crept in....but surely not, they claim to be impartial and just give facts.

    • @roro-mm7cc
      @roro-mm7cc Před 4 lety +1

      clearly sarcasm. you must not be british if unable to detect.

    • @lankhmarowner8105
      @lankhmarowner8105 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, you detected one of the many areas of bias in this video. Remember, while they are pretending to make a "fact checking" video, the video is created by anti-Brexiteers so there is little hope of impartiality here.

  • @robertharneis9506
    @robertharneis9506 Před 4 lety +6

    This video discuses the EU as if it is a homgeous whole but the problem for the EU is that certain member states will suffer greatly from Brexit and others wont suffer much at all.

    • @allymcmoist1484
      @allymcmoist1484 Před 4 lety +1

      @Zannekin We don't need help. We will be free to trade with whoever we like, on what terms suit us. It's called sovereignty.

    • @mgDuckyyy
      @mgDuckyyy Před 4 lety

      @Zannekin Do they?. The majority voted to stay?. But Europeans don't understand that word...Majority...

  • @martinrogers2719
    @martinrogers2719 Před 3 lety +2

    Better question does UK need EU?? the answer is no of course

    • @kneedeacon2309
      @kneedeacon2309 Před 3 lety

      Martin Rogers - if uk needs the eu , why are we desperate to get out- we must be stupid

    • @walterrudich2175
      @walterrudich2175 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kneedeacon2309 Yes - you are.

  • @sarahcardosodesousa8507
    @sarahcardosodesousa8507 Před 5 lety +4

    Thank you for your videos. I always watch them to understand better the Brexit and also to train my listening skills. They best!

  • @moumous87
    @moumous87 Před 5 lety +215

    2:32 the inequality sign is wrong: should be UK < EU

  • @vincentmckenna1755
    @vincentmckenna1755 Před 3 lety +2

    Germany not happy,with a 42% increase in eu payments

  • @evelynb1325
    @evelynb1325 Před 4 lety +5

    I wonder why you didn't discuss the fact that UK trade with many non-EU countries (including US) benefits from the trade deals negotiated by the EU 'block' together - the EU carries considerable weight when developing trade deals, allowing them to demand more favourable conditions. Until now, the UK gains from this.
    But as a single country, the UK can't bring the same weight to the negotiating table. Indeed, post Brexit, our need for trade deals places us in a weaker position ...

    • @jannegrey593
      @jannegrey593 Před 4 lety

      Not to mention that UK doesn't have a trade deal with other countries. So when they leave EU, they will be placed under WTO rules, which mean that until they make trade deal with someone, they will be treated as any other country. Let's say that country A has tariffs averaging 15%. And Trade deal with EU that lessens some of them to 0%, while others remain the same (Let's say average of 8%). Then for the period of negotiations average UK trade will be hit with 15% tariffs from country A, which will decrease it's competition against EU countries - in reality the objects that have 15% tariffs with EU will have the same position as before, while things that EU has deals on (0%) will be far better competition against UK's stuff. And average time to make a trade deal is 5-10 years (depending on how broad it is). UK will have to start negotiations on day 1 with over 40 countries + EU (Yes, if they want a trade deal with EU it will be difficult one and definitely not as good as single market) from weaker position and wait about 5-10 years before these deals are negotiated, to even begin to heal. I would assume that they will be able to do that and they will be back in their position of importance and revenue that they are now in about 30-40 years. That's assuming that everything works out great.

  • @ericbashir7275
    @ericbashir7275 Před 5 lety +9

    When I watch your videos, I learn a lot not just on Global politics, but also on video animation ideas and storytelling. You guys are the best. Can you do a video on education opportunities in the UK for international students? Particularly graduate students. Thanks. This video and the enter e-Estonia video are my favourites so far! Much love, guys.

  • @TheDarkever
    @TheDarkever Před 5 lety +30

    I'd be VERY INTERESTED in a deep economic analysis of the new interactions after a No Deal Brexit. I'm a sucker for this large-scale stuff ;)

    • @alexc664
      @alexc664 Před 5 lety +2

      Yes I'd like to see how UK deals with having to buy at "store" price instead of "supplier" after they lose all the deals EU has with the rest of the world.

    • @dumbdumber7203
      @dumbdumber7203 Před 5 lety +2

      The UK will do just fine and so will the EU.

    • @nerfedgod
      @nerfedgod Před 5 lety +1

      @bobbi brown You really think the UK is something, don't you? Let me rephrase that for you:
      "Brexit does not mean that Brits will not BEG for fair trade deals."

    • @jessepylvalainen2288
      @jessepylvalainen2288 Před 5 lety +3

      As an international investor, I would say that the most severe threat to the UK economy really lies in the Financial sector.
      You might find this odd, because banks do not necessarily play a major role in peoples everyday life, well they do but I don’t think you really think about banks when your swinging your Visa or MasterCard. However when it comes to business and investments, banks practically speaking finance just about all of it.
      Now investments bring jobs as everyone knows, but perhaps more importantly they boost the productivity of given industry which again leads to higher wage growth and better quality of living (not for everyone equally but generally speaking).
      Now, obviously if the access to the EU single market is being restricted then a company that might have EU operations in the UK is forced to ask a question. Is there a better way to continue my business? Car manufacturers are great example of this and thats why so many are already leaving. Not only is there some clouds in the near term future for the sector but also their UK operations were in large part for servicing their EU customers (Exports).
      Anyway back to finance. London is by far the financial center and thats what has allowed a lot of government bond issues throughout the EU to take place in the UK. This brings a ton of indirect income and wealth to the UK and also secures the pounds position as one of the most respected currency in the world.
      Now what if the EU truly would like to play hard ball and started talking about “un fair tax practices in the UK territory”? Cayman Islands, Virgin Islands come to mind right off the bat.
      Now imagine if for example the EU would use this as an excuse to force higher tariffs just like in case of anti-dumping duties on Chinese Steel products. Granted it would be most embarrassing for EU itself as well but it’s a possible scenario.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Před 4 lety

      @@jessepylvalainen2288 Thanks for your perspective. As someone who has experience in finance myself and seriously looked into becoming a City investment banker with research into hedge funds too, the UK is culturally and regulatorially different to Europe and the EU in a way that will still allow the UK to thrive with or without the EU. This includes primarily the free market regulation to create ever more innovative investment products that is different to Europe and in particular Germany even as a member of the EU. The UK market is even more flexible and free than the US market too. This will continue to attract trade if we leave. Most of the European banks trade in and from London and assuming that loose regulation and entrepreneurial culture is maintained, will continue to do so. And that is a factor that is independent of leaving or not, which I believe has a bigger influence over The City than the EU. The biggest threat the UK finance sector and economy in general 15 years either side of 2019 is and was the 2008 crash. Caused by over ambitious risks that didn't come to fruition from a very small and specific part of the Finance sector. So much, that most people in finance didn't know about themselves until the proverbial hit the fan. It was built on fiat money, not based on any tangible or valuable assets. Had a last minute RBS deal not been achieved, it would cause money to freeze, unable to be moved to and from businesses, and consequently individuals. It's like the blood of the economy. If it can't move to pay for goods and services, the economy as we know is dead and soon people to follow as food and fuel etc dries up. Leaving the EU, even in the worst case scenario will allow money, food and goods to move and have non-zero value. It can't compete with the calamity that was averted in 2008!

  • @lateral1881
    @lateral1881 Před rokem +1

    The point of leaving the EU was not about who needed who or more but self sufficiency as a world trader. The EU will need to do this too and it's more about adapting in time rather than short term issue about a long term factored agenda and globalisation on the doorstep.

  • @troywright359
    @troywright359 Před 4 lety +31

    Didn't cover immigration or legal supercession.
    there are three issues here, finance, immigration and legaal.
    You covered 1 of the three. can you please cover the other 2?

    • @Goldigga5
      @Goldigga5 Před 4 lety +25

      Britain had the right to deport EU migrants who don't find work within 3 months. Immigration is a scapegoat and was never an issue if the government actually did use those EU laws to their advantage.

  • @Qddens
    @Qddens Před 5 lety +23

    Please change the greater sign, it's the wrong way around and is such a distraction (~2:35)

    • @MrJonezy541
      @MrJonezy541 Před 5 lety

      Nah I'd say it's the right way around

  • @Tayet4Buri
    @Tayet4Buri Před 5 lety +39

    I'm German and while I agree with you generally, the debates in Germany concerning the car industry oppose your standpoint. Some people threw around job-loss numbers of around 18000, but the car industry is heavyly automated already and constantly expanding into emerging markets like India and other parts of Asia. There were plans in place to move for example space intensive warehouses to cheaper countries, closer to those emerging markets loooong before Brexit. Therefore, the common opinion is that Brexit will not cause that big of a change for us.

    • @alanwalters5304
      @alanwalters5304 Před 5 lety +1

      see yeh lar uk can start manurfacturing asoon as car industries do one

    • @666mrdoctor
      @666mrdoctor Před 5 lety +4

      Great to know. Go Europe go 🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺

    • @mrdcaiken
      @mrdcaiken Před 4 lety

      @@alanwalters5304 why, because everyone's wages have gone down ?

  • @woutervanwijk4369
    @woutervanwijk4369 Před 4 lety +2

    You forget to mention that one of the most important reasons for the Union's hard line is to prevent other countries to follow the UK.

  • @leotran9259
    @leotran9259 Před 4 lety +7

    How the tides have turned recently

    • @Doss3332
      @Doss3332 Před 4 lety +3

      How so?

    • @sorcererberoll4641
      @sorcererberoll4641 Před 4 lety

      Don't take me seriously the eu couldn’t decide on a budget after the uk left

  • @Ariel34134
    @Ariel34134 Před 5 lety +273

    The Brits want to compete alone against the Chinese : what a brilliant idea !

    • @Kiev-en-3-jours
      @Kiev-en-3-jours Před 5 lety +53

      Most Brexiters probably don't even know about China's plans.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 5 lety +3

      Then again the UK may have galvanized the EU to stave of the chinese plan, I fear without them Europe's eternal hunger for trade deals may lead to the accepting the new silk road.

    • @ColonizerChan
      @ColonizerChan Před 5 lety +22

      *opium grows in the distance*

    • @donparkvideos
      @donparkvideos Před 5 lety +1

      @@DaDunge Kinda started already, eh? Didn't the Italians agree to an MOU joining the One Belt, One Road initiative?

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 5 lety

      @@donparkvideos If so then that is discomforting.

  • @tizianae
    @tizianae Před 5 lety +6

    I am Italian. I live in Dublin and I earn my living by using multilingualism. I live a happy life that I wouldn't have had of it weren't for the EU. I do contribute to the development of this country and myself. I'll always be thankful for the mindset I've acquired growing up on a pro-EU mentality.

  • @hyndscs
    @hyndscs Před 4 lety +1

    Could you do videos on UK agriculture and manufacturing as separate videos please

  • @x19kittyboo
    @x19kittyboo Před 4 lety +11

    Well this aged well!😂😂😂

    • @earthone4939
      @earthone4939 Před 3 lety

      Why does literally everyone say this? I have seen this comment at least 4 times.

    • @x19kittyboo
      @x19kittyboo Před 3 lety

      If you can't work that out, maybe you should avoid commenting.🤦‍♂️

  • @dookdawg214
    @dookdawg214 Před 5 lety +137

    You guys brushed over some very important details. You briefly pointed out that EU exports to UK are only about 16% compared to 44% from UK to EU. But when you put that into % of GDP terms, it's even more staggering (I don't remember the exact numbers, but it's something like a 3% hit for the EU vs. a 16% hit for the UK). However, where the EU loses out on trade tarifs and disruption, they gain big on relocation of manufacturers and, above all, financial-service firms. That means new jobs and tax revenues for Europe and net job losses for the UK. In contrast, the UK has very little to gain from relocations. Another point you barely brought up is that, in the case of a no-deal Brexit, the UK loses access to ALL the FTAs they're in through the EU, like with South Korea, Mexico and Canada (and soon Japan and Singapore). All in all, a no-deal Brexit will feel like a broken finger for the EU. For the UK it will feel like a violent car accident. In a game of chicken, the UK loses bigly. And I really hope there's a no-deal Brexit, because I believe it would provide the case study that the EU really needs.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +19

      There are days when I share your cynical view but mostly I try to stay objective and keep in mind that both parties lose. It's better to avoid loss if it can be prevented at all.

    • @kienng4510
      @kienng4510 Před 5 lety +14

      You have to see the big picture: in 50 years the UK will be as wealthy as never before! You just have to throw this and the next generation under the bus. Plus, you can go around and brag about how independent and proud you are as a brit.

    • @dookdawg214
      @dookdawg214 Před 5 lety +25

      @@kienng4510 The UK need look no further than ex-colonial powers like Spain and Portugal. Christ, Portugal used to rule half the west -- now it's a country of cleaning ladies. Aside from speaking English -- and a financial infrstructure that can be easily replaced over time, and probably will -- the UK doesn't have much of anything the world wants or needs. The coutnry is in its final death throes.

    • @astonm1990
      @astonm1990 Před 5 lety +12

      @@dookdawg214 The funny things is that the main EU language is English, not German or French. Many EU regulation is directly implemented from Uk regulation. Why on earth would they UK give up all this influence?

    • @Commentator541
      @Commentator541 Před 5 lety +17

      @@astonm1990 Basically some UK politicians took bribe from Russia. Also, UK wanted to be given the lead of EU, but French and German folk said this is a threesome, so the UK decided to go jerk off on their own.

  • @primotef8863
    @primotef8863 Před 5 lety +25

    UK and EU don't TECHNICALLY need eachother, but separating would be less of a loss for the EU. Both parties still lose quite a bit, though.

    • @biker3762
      @biker3762 Před 5 lety

      yh EU stil has another 27 or how many countries to deal with yes they will loose money a big amount but still run smooth but the uk could loose their whole economy is it worth taking this risk if they can't even leave in 2 years what will they do when they're out with no plans and crazy politicians they better start thinking or they will be on a third world economy margin

  • @TheBigk1964
    @TheBigk1964 Před 3 lety +1

    A manufacturing breakdown would be interesting!

  • @terencefirth616
    @terencefirth616 Před 3 lety +2

    Becoming clearer everyday why the EU wanted the UK to seek an extension and pay into the "pot" without any say. Its not looking good for the rest of the members such as Ireland as the payments to contribute will be based on the 2018 figures (good years)

    • @brunoss.3273
      @brunoss.3273 Před 2 lety

      ""Pay" into the pot without any say" B*tch the UK was a member of the EU and had as much if not more say than most of the other members. Who the heck are you kidding?

  • @JSTONE9352
    @JSTONE9352 Před 4 lety +55

    As an American and an outside observer I find this all interesting and more complex than I realized before.

    • @maxnoerenberg6370
      @maxnoerenberg6370 Před 4 lety

      same here, especially imagining what the US trade deal with the EU and the UK will look like!

    • @kistosable
      @kistosable Před 4 lety +4

      Will be interesting, of course US will support UK, but what about Australia (important military Spanish client) or what about India an important Russian trader?? Maybe the common wealth isn't that big of a deal anymore

    • @maxnoerenberg6370
      @maxnoerenberg6370 Před 4 lety +1

      @@kistosable Germany is also a major trading partner with Australia and Japan ( prob China as well ) ...the famous Berlin streetcars ( trams ) have been spotted in Melbourne....loved that sight ha ha

    • @benjaminbabik8970
      @benjaminbabik8970 Před 4 lety +3

      It has always been this complicated. It is sad that some people were forced to go to vote without knowing all of this.

    • @paulh1679
      @paulh1679 Před 4 lety +2

      @@maxnoerenberg6370 If trump is in power it will only work as long as we don't upset him!

  • @VolkerHett
    @VolkerHett Před 5 lety +53

    Yes please, make a video about what is actually produced in the UK.

    • @JacobPlat
      @JacobPlat Před 5 lety +17

      that's gonna be a short video!

    • @gentlemanvontweed7147
      @gentlemanvontweed7147 Před 5 lety +1

      @@JacobPlat Come on mate, I'll miss your pubs and craft breweries.

    • @paulmackilligin1754
      @paulmackilligin1754 Před 5 lety +5

      Well, that's kind of the point. A single car, for example, will be made in the UK, and Germany, and Spain, and Poland, etc. etc. The supply chains are so tightly integrated these days that you can't say where a car is made, except of course to say it is made in the EU/EEA. Brexit (well, actually leaving the Single Market and Customs Union ) will break that chain. In my own town, BMW have already announced that it will stop production of the Mini for the entire month of April 2019, as they don't know whether the supply chain will still be in place immediately after Brexit happens on 30th March 2019.
      They normally stop production for maintenance, etc. for a period over the summer, so they have just decided to bring that stoppage forward to April because of uncertainty over the supply chain. But it shows how tightly integrated production is these days. The obvious question is, "why don't they just stock pile a month's worth of parts to use in April?" It seems they just can't do that. I guess they don't have the facilities for doing that, and it would be too expensive for them to build those facilities. Ultimately, if we can't retain frictionless movement of goods between the UK and the rest of the EU then car manufacturers like VW will have no choice but to move production from the UK to elsewhere within the EU.

    • @czarzenana5125
      @czarzenana5125 Před 5 lety +3

      I second that, because the only thing I could come up with is whisky and corned beef.

    • @czarzenana5125
      @czarzenana5125 Před 5 lety +1

      @@gentlemanvontweed7147
      Pubs close before midnight in the UK and the stuff they pour into glasses we use for our car engines.

  • @jonsid6628
    @jonsid6628 Před 4 lety +3

    No one "needs" anyone. And no one knows if the UK or EU will be "better " once the UK leaves.

    • @kneedeacon2309
      @kneedeacon2309 Před 3 lety +1

      Jon Sid X- once uk leaves ,we can be better friends, nobody controls anybody, individual countries control themselves.

  • @lippydalips4537
    @lippydalips4537 Před 4 lety +1

    I wonder how many times a year this security gets used by either side each year?

  •  Před 5 lety +14

    The figures for the english economy are artificially inflated by the habit of companies distributing goods from england to Ireland. That's over now we'll have our own distributors or go to France or the Nederlands instead. The free trade agreement with Japan and NZ is real handy because they drive on the same side as the english. So the Germans just have to send those cars east instead of west.

    • @NLTops
      @NLTops Před 5 lety +2

      The only reason Ireland isn't unified today is because of Ye Olde English method of conquest. I'm not trying to give rise to a new IRA but honestly if they feel so English they should feck back off to their own island. As a Dutchman I say, we would gladly assist you with any distribution issues by means of Rotterdam port. The largest port in Europe but I'm sure we can make it bigger.

    •  Před 5 lety +1

      @@NLTops The english contamination will be largely cured by brexit. It'll be great finally getting rid of that disgusting cancer.

    • @tompatrikc
      @tompatrikc Před 5 lety

      @@NLTops They don't feel English? Nor do the Welsh or Scottish...

  • @jjrosenberg4034
    @jjrosenberg4034 Před 5 lety +6

    As someone from Ireland I would actually really like a video on EU common agricultural policy!

    • @sodaking6858
      @sodaking6858 Před 5 lety

      I would to but i would like us to leave the EU more but in time hopefully

  • @greenambles
    @greenambles Před 4 lety +29

    Thanks for that. Excellent, clear, concise, detailed, factual. Some types will feel very angered and threatened by it. Keep it up.

    • @johnhall9476
      @johnhall9476 Před 4 lety +6

      sorry but dont feel threatened by this small bit of information, they have left out lots of what the eu have been doing, read some comments ie fishing policy the sugar situation and these are the tip of the iceberg on how the eu have been screwing the UK over, the farming policy no one wants to hear about that mm wonder why 37% paid to french farmers because they insist on working the land in an inefficient manner, this is to keep their people in jobs while our farmers get screwed over again and again, its not just about the money, we need to take back our economy so farmers can farm the stuff we need and our factories can produce the goods we want, seems to me that there are more countries in the eu that are bankrupt and are expecting the big 3 to bail them out every year while the do nothing to change the way their country works, we need out before those countries bring the eu down and everyone in it.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri Před 4 lety +1

      @@johnhall9476
      They are being paid by EU, what do you expect? They didn't even mention EU army thing, and that most influential and powerful EU bureocrats have been openly advocating for totalitarian superstate.

  • @terencefirth616
    @terencefirth616 Před 4 lety

    In view of the latest economic situation and requests coming from the EU you may wish to update this posting. I think the viewers would find it interesting.

  • @DominicTheG
    @DominicTheG Před 5 lety +9

    TLDR News, I think it would be a very good idea to post your sources in the video description for people that want to double check everything.

    • @PaulAlexander-tokyomagic
      @PaulAlexander-tokyomagic Před 5 lety

      They did. Right. At. The. Beginning.

    • @DominicTheG
      @DominicTheG Před 5 lety

      @@PaulAlexander-tokyomagic Sorry, but what do you mean?

    • @HendraYunan
      @HendraYunan Před 5 lety

      @@DominicTheG They mentioned the sources already. Not very detailed, but it was indeed already mentioned.

  • @flexwinggpipi
    @flexwinggpipi Před 5 lety +51

    Ultimately, Brexit isnt all about the money

    • @anurgaprasad123
      @anurgaprasad123 Před 5 lety +18

      "Damn the economy will be worse off and Britain will be losing money, time to post 'Brexit isnt all about the money' comment" - You

    • @lifeyoushouldtryit
      @lifeyoushouldtryit Před 5 lety +14

      @@anurgaprasad123 the remainer projection that everything anyone says is damage control and manipulation is laughable, try having principals and believing in something more than money, like sovereignty.

    • @Spedley_2142
      @Spedley_2142 Před 5 lety

      I think it is - all that money stored in the Cayman Islands.

    • @tomlaptain646
      @tomlaptain646 Před 5 lety +3

      @@lifeyoushouldtryit And that's how the Nazi's happened.

    • @spaceowl5957
      @spaceowl5957 Před 5 lety +6

      Tom Laptain I agree with you and the guy you responded to.
      I think it really isn't about money and the economy for many people - it's about tribalism.
      ...Which is how the nazis happened

  • @barrywebber100
    @barrywebber100 Před 4 lety

    I don't see how you could be more open minded or fairer in your arguments.
    This certainly is refreshing when compared to the anger and name calling which seems to emanate from many Brexiteer minded people in place of logical discussion.
    Thanks for posting.

    • @susanboyle7085
      @susanboyle7085 Před 4 lety

      You think this is fair and open minded? You need to read more. This is even more biased than the BBC! Its figures are selective and often wrong. It does not complete its own arguments. Its arguments are incomplete.

    • @barrywebber100
      @barrywebber100 Před 4 lety

      @@susanboyle7085 Lol! Thank you for your opinion.

  • @AlistairKiwi
    @AlistairKiwi Před 16 dny +1

    The UK joined the EU in 1973. Not a founder. But it became a most important & powerful part of the EU. Also, while in the EU, the UK was the country the US turned to for US matters.

  • @OzWannabe
    @OzWannabe Před 5 lety +181

    Losing 50% of trade = we need them slightly more that they do. hahahahahahahahahaha.

    • @konraddrexler3659
      @konraddrexler3659 Před 5 lety +10

      Yeah that was weird af

    • @Sjokola
      @Sjokola Před 5 lety +26

      Well the UK won't lose 50% of trade. It's not like there won't be any trade after brexit. No matter how hard a brexit it'll be

    • @konraddrexler3659
      @konraddrexler3659 Před 5 lety +27

      @@Sjokola Yes but it's simply implying that any future deals with the EU will affect ~50% of their trade, which means than any extra costs can have a major impact on certain sectors' income and profit.

    • @jontmusiteur55
      @jontmusiteur55 Před 5 lety +8

      @@Sjokola I don't think anyone's seriously arguing that there won't be any trade after Brexit, only that it'll be slower, and more complicated, bureaucratic and expensive, and many companies on both sides will suffer. Since UK companies obviously trade with more customers or suppliers in the EU than the other way round, UK companies will be affected more than their EU counterparts. The knock-on effects will be worse for UK companies too, as they can't switch to another market as easily. That will affect companies that JRM says don't trade with the EU as they will trade with companies that do somewhere up or down the line.

    • @bernhardlangers778
      @bernhardlangers778 Před 5 lety +3

      About eight months ago some analysis was floating around predicting a net 10% decline in British economic growth. And I really had to explain a Brexiteer that those are hype recession numbers. ...

  • @Passonator11
    @Passonator11 Před 4 lety +92

    Short answer, no.
    And that whole part about security is just nonsense. UK is leaving EU, not NATO.

    • @gregs3845
      @gregs3845 Před 4 lety +10

      Longer answer: no, but it won't exactly be painless for the EU.

    • @HarryScutt
      @HarryScutt Před 4 lety +18

      @@gregs3845 this is the most accurate summary. This video isn't a win for the EU or for the UK, we both get hurt by leaving the EU, just that in the short term the UK will be hurt more.

    • @theBagheera22
      @theBagheera22 Před 4 lety +8

      @@HarryScutt Short term being at least 7 - 10 years

    • @mobiuscoreindustries
      @mobiuscoreindustries Před 4 lety +9

      If the UK leave, no one win. In the short term the EU is hit but will quickly recover because of all the businesses fleeing the UK for more economical stability, and would eventually either recover or be slightly better of. The UK would be hit massively but would recover in time. Problem being that it would no longer be the "core EU member with massive advantages" that made it so appealing for investors.
      Those who got the brexit ball running were those with a lot of wealth in the UK that wanted to make the country a fiscal paradise so they could not pay taxes on what they own, but even if that was the case, then the UK has to compete with other fiscal paradises that don't have to worry about actually being a country, which would make the UK very had at being the only thing it could be after brexit. Overall a bad move for finances and a VERY BAD move for everything else.

    • @samjacobs7508
      @samjacobs7508 Před 4 lety +4

      @@mobiuscoreindustries I don't agree with that. It's wealthy people that want to remain. Working class people won the referendum and have been let down. How can anybody dispute that?

  • @georginapallent1783
    @georginapallent1783 Před 4 lety

    Very well executed and presented explanation. However, please could you do another video on the common agricultural and fisheries policies. Does the EU really need the UK more in these areas?

  • @kasper7203
    @kasper7203 Před 3 lety +1

    1 year later.. The answer is a resounding "NO!".. The UK has consistently failed to adhere to deadlines and promises. The uncertainty and delays now almost costs the EU more than a simple no deal Brexit would have. Enough is enough. Cut off Britain..

  • @woutervanr
    @woutervanr Před 5 lety +128

    Short answer: No
    Long answer: Nooooooo

    • @shaunclark425
      @shaunclark425 Před 4 lety +6

      BREXIT IS VERY SIMPLE - 1/ WE BUY MORE FROM EUROPE THAN THEY DO FROM US AND
      THEY WONT DESTROY THEIR TRADE - SO THEY ARE IN NO POSITION TO DEMAND ANYTHING.
      2/ BREXIT MEANS WE WILL SAVE COUNTLESS MILLIONS SPENT ON SUPPORTING THE BULLY
      BOYS OF BRUSSELS. 3/ MOST IMPORTANTLY WE WILL BE ABLE TO SHUT OUR BORDERS TO
      OUR PART OF THE INVASION FROM THE MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA THAT THE E.U. SUPPORTS
      THIS HAS BEEN MULTI MILLIONS FOR ABOUT A DECADE AT LEAST).... NOT WANTING YOUR
      COUNTRYTO BE INVADED DOESNT MEAN YOU ARE A ENOPHOBE/RACIST/NAZI -OR ANUY OF THE
      OTHR LIBERAL LEFT LIES THAT THEY USE ON A REGULAR BASIS. THIS INVASION HAS
      BROUGHT MASS RAPES, CHILD MOLESTATIONS, VILENT ASSAULTS (IE ACID ATTACKS) AND
      MURDER (KNIFE CRIME AND TERRORISM)... EVEN IF THEY WERE ALL DECENT WE NEED TO
      STOP IT. YOU NEED SECURE BORDERS FOR THE SAME REASONS YOU HAVE DOORS ON YOUR
      HOME: TO STOP PEOPLE COMMING IN AND TAKING/DESTROYING/STEALING YOU STUFF,
      SQUATTING, OR THREATENING/BEING VIOLENT TO YOURFAMILY... AND INTHE SAME WAY
      UNINVITED GUESTS SHOULD BE KICKED OUT..EVEN GUESTS ARE THERE DUE TO YOUR GOOD
      NATURE AND HAVE NO RIGHT TO BE THERE ...WE NEED TO DEPORT ALL THE INVADERS FROM
      AFRICA AND THE MIDDLE EAST..FOR MORE RELIABLE INFOR ON WHAT IS REALY GOING ON
      SEE LIKE LAUREN SOUTHERN
      (SEE HER DOCUMENTARY 'BORDERLESS'),RED ICE TV, AND PAUL JOSEPH WATSON.. BREXIT IS VERY SIMPLE -
      1/ WE BUY MORE FROM EUROPE THAN THEY DO FROM US AND THEY WONT DESTROY THEIR
      TRADE - SO THEY ARE IN NO POSITION TO DEMAND ANYTHING. 2/ BREXIT MEANS WE WILL
      SAVE COUNTLESS MILLIONS SPENT ON SUPPORTING THE BULLY BOYS OF BRUSSELS. 3/ MOST
      IMPORTANTLY WE WILL BE ABLE TO SHUT OUR BORDERS TO OUR PART OF THE INVASION
      FROM THE MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA THAT THE E.U. SUPPORTS THIS HAS BEEN MULTI
      MILLIONS FOR ABOUT A DECADE AT LEAST).... NOT WANTING YOUR COUNTRYTO BE INVADED
      DOESNT MEAN YOU ARE A ENOPHOBE/RACIST/NAZI -OR ANUY OF THE OTHR LIBERAL LEFT
      LIES THAT THEY USE ON A REGULAR BASIS. THIS INVASION HAS BROUGHT MASS RAPES,
      CHILD MOLESTATIONS, VILENT ASSAULTS (IE ACID ATTACKS) AND MURDER (KNIFE CRIME
      AND TERRORISM)... EVEN IF THEY WERE ALL DECENT WE NEED TO STOP IT. YOU NEED
      SECURE BORDERS FOR THE SAME REASONS YOU HAVE DOORS ON YOUR HOME: TO STOP PEOPLE
      COMMING IN AND TAKING/DESTROYING/STEALING YOU STUFF, SQUATTING, OR
      THREATENING/BEING VIOLENT TO YOURFAMILY... AND INTHE SAME WAY UNINVITED GUESTS
      SHOULD BE KICKED OUT..EVEN GUESTS ARE THERE DUE TO YOUR GOOD NATURE AND HAVE NO
      RIGHT TO BE THERE ...WE NEED TO DEPORT ALL THE INVADERS FROM AFRICA AND THE
      MIDDLE EAST..FOR MORE RELIABLE INFOR ON WHAT IS REALY GOING ON SEE LIKE LAUREN
      SOUTHERN(SEE HER DOCUMENTARY 'BORDERLESS'),RED ICE TV, AND PAUL JOSEPH WATSON..
      NOW DO YOU UDNERSTAND THE MOST IMPORTANT THING??

    • @FoxTrotteur
      @FoxTrotteur Před 4 lety +26

      @@shaunclark425 Your shift key is broken.

    • @antonijaume8498
      @antonijaume8498 Před 4 lety +5

      @@shaunclark425 You're a parody, ain't it?

    • @benowen8321
      @benowen8321 Před 4 lety +6

      @@shaunclark425 Could you copy that into word and uncapitlise it and then re-post it.

    • @shaunclark425
      @shaunclark425 Před 4 lety +3

      HA HA HA BEN OWEN.. I DO AS YOU KNOW.. BUT WHEN THE LIBERAL LEFT GLOBALIST RELENTLESSLY LIE AND DO ALL THEY CAN TO DESTROY THE WEST ... THE RESPONSES TO EXPOSE THESE SATANIC FILTH NEEDS TO BE RELENTLESS TO BALLANCE IT OUT. UNDERSTAND??

  • @nathanav1634
    @nathanav1634 Před 5 lety +31

    My Nan moved to Spain in the 90s and lived there as a UK ex pat for 20 years enjoying everything Spain had to offer... Yet she voted Brexit... I just can't reconcile with such stupidity. How is it the older generation are so misinformed about the benefits of the EU?

    • @tralfamadorian5270
      @tralfamadorian5270 Před 5 lety +2

      Yea, and considering the great age gap in support versus opposition to the eu and the slim margin of the result, how would the referendum turned out had it been held as little as two or three years later.

    • @RawReadyGaming121
      @RawReadyGaming121 Před 5 lety +9

      The older generation know a lot more about the EU than us younger generation. They were around when all the so called experts were telling them how dreadfull not being part of the Euro would be to the UK economy. Look how that turned out. My parents live in Spain too, and have worked with EU companies and have experienced it all first hand, and voted to Leave. Of course the EU has its benefits, but there are a lot of problems that are building up and eventually I believe the EU will crumble. We certainly won't be the last country to leave, and in us leaving, it provides us a with a great opportunity to trade globally with far faster growing economies, rather than being part of the EU where we have to put up external trade tariffs.

    • @Luca-sz5uy
      @Luca-sz5uy Před 5 lety +5

      @@RawReadyGaming121 I would be happy to see a No Deal "against" the UK. As a German who is annoyed by the EU's inefficieny (which is largely to its small actual power over its members) I think it would really help to have a disruptive event that enables reforms and more focus on the future. Also I'd really like to have a enemy the Europeans can oppose together. We could see in Britain that a few propaganda slogans really convince the idiots of anything (I only say bus) and we Europeans should use that to our benefit.

    • @maltager5106
      @maltager5106 Před 5 lety +3

      The point isn't that the EU hasn't any benefits, it is whether the benefits outweigh the costs. Of course, if you want to live in Spain, and you can do so, why not? But when you want to weigh the benefits and costs of the European Union, you cannot just say "I can live in Spain!" and that's all. You have to also counter balance the costs which may be more than the benefit of living in Spain.
      I am not saying that the costs outweigh the benefits, just that you cannot dismiss her line of thinking just because she enjoyed the benefits while they were available.

  • @kolinsin23
    @kolinsin23 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome video, excellent points on both sides backed with tangible data. When will you take over the houses of parliament?