How do people feel about Brexit three years on? - BBC Newsnight

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  • čas přidán 30. 01. 2023
  • The Brexit referendum of 2016 divided the UK. For some Brexit was an exhilarating opportunity, for others a self-inflicted wound.
    It led to the immediate downfall of former prime minister David Cameron, the tormenting and eventual toppling of his successor Theresa May, and along the way it raised questions about the durability of the United Kingdom.
    So three years after the UK left the EU, how are people feeling in Westminster, and in Sunderland? - the place where results first indicated that Brexit was on the way.
    Newsnight’s political editor Nick Watt has been assessing the political mood.
    Please subscribe HERE bit.ly/1rbfUog
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    Website: www.bbc.co.uk/newsnight
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    #Newsnight #BBCNews

Komentáře • 10K

  • @francisbasker4722
    @francisbasker4722 Před 10 měsíci +2545

    It's kind of funny that the Brits can no longer blame the EU for their problems

    • @GCS88
      @GCS88 Před 9 měsíci +97

      That's where You are wrong

    • @bg3841
      @bg3841 Před 9 měsíci +193

      ​@@GCS88hahaha hahaha. Yes. We still blame French border control for not letting us into their country quick enough.

    • @andyetheridge
      @andyetheridge Před 9 měsíci +102

      @@GCS88 I live in France and did so before Brexit and wasn’t allowed to vote but soon after was eligible to apply for a WARP resident permit. There are now people in Spain, France and Italy that travelled back to the UK and voted leave and now are only allowed to stay in their ‘dream homes for the allowed 90 days.
      These are the ones now moaning about Brexit, i as a french resident can travel across Europe with no problems, i can leave France for up to 5 years before it affects my residency. I returned to the UK last year to work, showed my passport and as expected it was not stamped.
      The people that lived abroad and voted leave only have their selves to blame

    • @Cervando
      @Cervando Před 9 měsíci +6

      ​@@bg3841Even though the Dover Port Authorities asked for ten extra custom booths years ago as they foresaw the problem of all the extra checks taking far longer and BoZo granted them a tenth of what they asked for.
      Furthermore, BoZo bragged about recruiting 500 Custom clerks, despite a previous White Paper saying we needed many thousands to deal with all the goods entering and leaving the UK from and to the EU. In comparison , Rotterdam alone took on 800, just to cope with goods to and from one city to country.

    • @ct5625
      @ct5625 Před 9 měsíci

      I'm a Brit, I never blamed the EU for our problems.
      And sadly, the Brexit cultists are in fact still blaming the EU for our problems.
      They will never accept responsibility for their own choices, ever. The EU will always be a big scary scapegoat for the Tories while they rob the people blind.

  • @DanielBrotherston
    @DanielBrotherston Před rokem +1588

    "We wanted the benefits of membership without the costs."
    These people are adults right?

    • @lenawagenfuehr53
      @lenawagenfuehr53 Před rokem +99

      No, apparently not! We tried arguing with them, trying to make them understand they would lose benefits and a voice (kept using allegories of a divorce, of leaving a gym membership) but they would not listen...

    • @Demetri450
      @Demetri450 Před rokem

      Nope, they're political cultists just like americans

    • @LonnieHalouska
      @LonnieHalouska Před rokem +15

      Two-shayyyyyy!

    • @kanedNunable
      @kanedNunable Před rokem

      i want a divorce but i still want to shag my wife every weekend.

    • @Britannia.
      @Britannia. Před rokem +1

      '@@lenawagenfuehr53 'WE tried arguing with them'!!?? ha ha ha , Weve not lost our voice we've just got it back . You can take your corrupt, greedy, power mad dictatorship & stick it where the sun dont shine!!! The UK will be around well after the hated bloc is gone and forgotten .

  • @crossknight1490
    @crossknight1490 Před 5 měsíci +372

    Politicians: "If we get out of the EU, all the money we send them can be used here to improve our country!"
    UK citizens: "Cool. Now that we made it out of the EU, where are the millions of dollars we were supposed to be saving after the brexit?"
    Politicians: "What money?"

    • @a5cent
      @a5cent Před 4 měsíci

      This is it basically. Lies.
      Politics and economics are complicated. Not everyone has the education, desire or time to really look into these things. We all need to defer to other people's expertise, and we all underestimated the extent the Brexiteers were out to deceive. Farage knew we didn't send 350 million to the EU every week, and he knew leaving the EU would not bring those 350 million into the NHS. But many Brits believed those lies. What they wanted was a good thing. They were just deprived of a meaningful vote, because all the dishonesty made it impossible for us to really know what we were voting for or against.
      There needs to be repercussions for this sort of thing. It undermines democracy itself and until people like Farage suffer some personal consequences, such deceptions will continue.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 Před 3 měsíci +28

      Who would have believed something so silly however, it was far cheaper to have more centralized processes. Efficiency saves money.
      The UK left the EU for two reasons the first a segment of their society is sorely lacking in education and overall knowledge as to how the world runs and
      secondly they bought into hate towards others being a problem and that immigrants somehow took something from them.
      It’s sad and pathetic and shameful.

    • @StephenSeabird
      @StephenSeabird Před 3 měsíci +10

      @@lijohnyoutube101 And most people claiming benefits are actually English. Truthfully, the proportion of migrants relying on unemployment or disability benefits is very small in comparison. Fact. They want a job - even if to send money back home.

    • @johnsmith-rs2vk
      @johnsmith-rs2vk Před 2 měsíci

      Millions sent to Rwanda is just one example .

    • @playingpianoathome2022
      @playingpianoathome2022 Před 28 dny

      Don't blame the politicians. It was a choice of adult voters to accept the known uncertainties for the greater good. They consciously decided to "take back control".

  • @niklas603
    @niklas603 Před 3 měsíci +58

    I got a bunch of British friends, all between the age of 22-30.
    Every single one of them is so upset about Brexit and how it not only caused a crisis within the UK but also completely fucked up their opportunities to live, work and move in the EU.
    They're all trying desperately to get an Irish passport through their Irish nan/grandfather...

  • @ale99bigsoos23
    @ale99bigsoos23 Před rokem +3622

    I like how the brexiteers describe it as "the best decision we ever made" but still aren't able to describe a single tangible benefit from leaving the EU.

    • @opencommentsbbcnewsnight1704
      @opencommentsbbcnewsnight1704 Před rokem

      The EU is a failing "project" and the UK is better off being free of the wreckage when it all comes crashing down.

    • @Micfri300
      @Micfri300 Před rokem +33

      The uk though is being compounded by the fact that its people allowed for multinational companies to dominate and let small businesses die which isn't the case in France Germany or Italy.
      Had France Germany or Italy its economy would be performing better than the UK right now.

    • @happyjonn9242
      @happyjonn9242 Před rokem +46

      We aren't in the EU.

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master Před rokem +368

      @@happyjonn9242 Oh great that will help me feed my kids

    • @wolfder6661
      @wolfder6661 Před rokem +37

      We don't have to listen to the EUs annoying ass rules is the biggest benefit of Brexit if Norway can manage to survive Britain shoulda been able to but the government as expected failed to sort it

  • @fukuokakusuo2391
    @fukuokakusuo2391 Před rokem +2681

    I feel so sorry for the youth in Britain. They've lost numerous opportunities that other countries in EU have.

    • @locn
      @locn Před rokem +71

      Like what?

    • @GRFC1872
      @GRFC1872 Před rokem +70

      I feel sorry for them because of the internet,we had fk all growing up in the 80s but our lives were far richer ,and famous people were famous due to talent

    • @andrew300169
      @andrew300169 Před rokem +443

      They had the right to education courses across the EU cheaper than the U.K. the right to work in places like Ibiza, Chamonix, for summer and winter which are jobs they no longer have opportunity for. Older people had the right to retire to the sun without needing to be wealthy.
      All Brexit did was make us poorer and less free

    • @jahsonlion
      @jahsonlion Před rokem +77

      @@locn You’ll never know now!

    • @annab9994
      @annab9994 Před rokem +212

      @@locn To start with free university exchange programs like Erasmus.

  • @jwebbnature
    @jwebbnature Před 9 měsíci +602

    I am 26 and British and brexit has more or less ruined several job oppurtunities for me, made my relationship with my EU partner difficult, and has made my day-to-day living in an EU country incredibly stressful. When the brexit vote came out I deattached myself from the UK, but I am still living with the consequences of other people's short-sightedness to this day. What I lost was tremendous, and will scar my life forever. I am not a refugee fleeing violence and unrest, so I understand not everyone is completely sympathetic to people such as myself, but I am an immigrant who has had my open rights to life, love, and employment withdrawn without my consent

    • @PCP1992
      @PCP1992 Před 9 měsíci +26

      Well-articulated bro. Same here. Sad times :( I won't ever get over this to be honest. It feels like the same as when my Mum died. LIke, I knew it was true, but part of me was hoping "what if maybe she'll come back?"

    • @kurbads74
      @kurbads74 Před 9 měsíci +8

      I am soo happy for your struggles. You sound like a Russian wife complaining about her hubby dead in a ditch and complaint is about her not even receiving the promised pennies.

    • @jwebbnature
      @jwebbnature Před 9 měsíci +59

      @@kurbads74 Um, what? I really don't understand your metaphor. But even if I did, what? I voted and wanted to remain...

    • @PCP1992
      @PCP1992 Před 9 měsíci

      Weird answer@@kurbads74

    • @kennethfribert6074
      @kennethfribert6074 Před 9 měsíci +51

      ​@@kurbads74sounds like.a silly troll that struggles with the long words.

  • @kferg3029
    @kferg3029 Před 6 měsíci +326

    as an Australian this decision just seemed insane at the time and most of us laughed at it including all the people I know who are from the UK thought it was totally stupid

    • @pablosskates7067
      @pablosskates7067 Před 6 měsíci +29

      As an Australian, almost all our nearest neighbours are about 8-10 hours away on a plane. Our options are limited. To be a train ride away from a huge list of countries to work, live and play sounds like a dream. The Brit’s should have come and lived here for a while to understand what it’s like to have close to zero easy options.

    • @kferg3029
      @kferg3029 Před 6 měsíci +9

      @@pablosskates7067 well the stupid thing was they wanted they expected the benefits of being in the EU to stays but what they considered the negatives to stops and now they are what.do you mean I need to pay to get a entry visa into the EU LOL

    • @clarkpalace
      @clarkpalace Před 5 měsíci

      Stupid trumpers , but english. America hasnt ruined Canada yet, but it will happen

    • @larryc1616
      @larryc1616 Před 5 měsíci +1

      What's more stupid, brexit or electing Trump president? #Can'tFixStupid

    • @Hiforest
      @Hiforest Před 4 měsíci +6

      Most of the uk knew it was stupid. I know lots of elderly people who didn't bother voting because they thought it was a load of nonsense. They were shocked by the result. It was obviously a con, I feel sorry for the people who got suckered.

  • @Demetri450
    @Demetri450 Před rokem +1068

    I think it's funny that the UK thought they could keep all the benefits of the EU without paying to be a member of the EU.

    • @occamraiser
      @occamraiser Před rokem +100

      The UK didn't think that. The Brexiteer little-Englanders believed that.

    • @jasonkingshott2971
      @jasonkingshott2971 Před rokem

      @@occamraiser ...and the majority of the Welsh, the 30-40% of Scots?...you're a clown.

    • @RandomShart
      @RandomShart Před rokem +4

      The interesting question now would be what individual benefit would come from joining the EU? For the majority very little about everyday life has changed as a direct consequence of leaving the EU, and very little would change as a result of rejoining.

    • @jasonkingshott2971
      @jasonkingshott2971 Před rokem

      @@RandomShart Think you need to take your head out of the sand.

    • @lawsonj39
      @lawsonj39 Před rokem +62

      @@RandomShart Look at the shelves in grocery stores. I guess you like the idea of substituting turnips for tomatoes--only there aren't enough turnips, either.

  • @ajcgolf69
    @ajcgolf69 Před rokem +2960

    The lady with the dog really sums it up with how brexit got voted in, starts off by saying “it hasn’t really made a huge difference to my life” and follows that up with “I still think it was a good idea”
    No thought put into it, no reasons given, just a decision made on a whim

    • @Demetri450
      @Demetri450 Před rokem +143

      Sounds like an american

    • @patrickmccutcheon9361
      @patrickmccutcheon9361 Před rokem

      @@oldstix perhaps but someone should tell her that the ‘wogs’ keep coming. Brexit stopped the flow of migrants from the EU. It did not and could not affect migration from outside the EU which the UK could have and could control if it wanted to but did not. The Brexiteers have pulled a cunning stunt. Question is has anyone benefited. Outside the EU and not applying procurement rules, the Johnson government handed out juicy contracts to its friends.

    • @oddcharacter6891
      @oddcharacter6891 Před rokem +46

      @@oldstix - by reducing immigration from white majority EU countries?

    • @smokeango
      @smokeango Před rokem +11

      AJCgolf: Did you get a vote on joining the EU in 1992?

    • @ajcgolf69
      @ajcgolf69 Před rokem +37

      @@smokeango why is that relevant?

  • @educatingfool216
    @educatingfool216 Před 4 měsíci +14

    If anyone in the UK believes that the worst has passed, you better hold to something solid, because this is just the beginning of a downfall.

  • @loooongtimeago
    @loooongtimeago Před 4 měsíci +73

    They forgot they no longer have an empire😂

    • @3takoyakis
      @3takoyakis Před měsícem +3

      They keep remembering their glorious day lmao

    • @3takoyakis
      @3takoyakis Před měsícem +5

      Glorious days of colonialism.

  • @hannahmurray3782
    @hannahmurray3782 Před rokem +299

    “We’d be a rich country”?? We cut our ties with our biggest trading partner and this man thought it would make us rich? What planet is he on?

    • @Winecone
      @Winecone Před rokem +12

      Sadly he’s the guy in charge lol

    • @lunoxyajpw2679
      @lunoxyajpw2679 Před rokem +8

      Mars apparently

    • @simulationl279
      @simulationl279 Před rokem +1

      no country is an island alone. cut yourself off from the world, means the world cuts itself off from you.

    • @bfc2155
      @bfc2155 Před rokem

      You realise they were the biggest trading partners because of all the tariffs they put on to trade outside of it don't you? The EU block the uk from a trade deal with China worth billions to the economy when Cameron was in charge.

    • @bfc2155
      @bfc2155 Před rokem

      @@lunoxyajpw2679 you people 😂 seriously the EU blocking British trade was only 10 years ago you can't be that dopy

  • @user-ex2yt1pl6u
    @user-ex2yt1pl6u Před rokem +913

    It's like when you leave your partner thinking you can do better only to realize you were wrong, but now you are too embarrassed to beg them to take you back, so you start pretending it's all good.

    • @MiniM69
      @MiniM69 Před rokem +73

      And said partner has moved on and got a hair piece that’s working for them

    • @expatingermany7685
      @expatingermany7685 Před rokem +37

      Perfectly put. Expats didn't get a vote althought in my case I still am a serving member of the britisch Army Reserve but live in Germany. An old Army friend contacted me this week asking to get him German showergel because he can't buy it in the UK anymore and he's prepared to pay the 20-25 pound Post and package.....he voted to get out.

    • @Harry-TramAnh
      @Harry-TramAnh Před rokem +1

      @@expatingermany7685 I’m an expat (have lived in SEA for over 10 years) and I voted, why weren’t you able to?

    • @Julieb210
      @Julieb210 Před rokem +13

      ​@@Harry-TramAnh 15 years was the threshold.

    • @expatingermany7685
      @expatingermany7685 Před rokem +3

      @@Harry-TramAnh apparantly althought i was a serving member of the britisch Army i hadn't been a Resident of the UK for over 7years.

  • @TheRealSnakePlisken
    @TheRealSnakePlisken Před 5 měsíci +43

    You are so on point. The decline in US democracy is following suit, with a large portion of Americans not understanding the principals of governance, economy, and social balance. Perplexing is the human existence.

    • @jtcorey7681
      @jtcorey7681 Před 5 měsíci

      America is sleepwalking into dictatorship and decline. Heartbreaking.

    • @philipslighting8240
      @philipslighting8240 Před 4 měsíci

      USA has never had democracy Money buys the US votes always has.

  • @Blue_3rd
    @Blue_3rd Před 9 měsíci +24

    So many people had very strong opinions about things they didn’t fully understand. They got what they voted for and still don’t realise it.

  • @CarlosGarcia-gs1wd
    @CarlosGarcia-gs1wd Před rokem +639

    In Europe almost no one mentions BREXIT, it is a past issue and of course no one considers that the United Kingdom could return, since Brexit everything works better in the European Union and even the extreme right parties no longer talk about leaving. Farange, Johnson and others have done the European Union a great favor4

    • @davidalons0
      @davidalons0 Před rokem +42

      Absolutely agre

    • @dimiathan
      @dimiathan Před rokem +101

      We had so many EU exit loud voices in Greece before 2020 and now that the UK has officially left, everyone has been quiet

    • @aw2584
      @aw2584 Před rokem +73

      ​@@dimiathanyep same in Poland. It was a riddiculous idea to begin with considering how much Poland benefited from EU and the support for it was marginal (Poland had and perhaps still has the biggest support for EU out of all members), but after Brexit it disappeared completely.

    • @Llkc60
      @Llkc60 Před rokem +43

      Looks like everybody is happy except for the majority of UK voters. Oh well, this is democracy

    • @fryfrysk
      @fryfrysk Před 11 měsíci

      Brexit even brought EU more together !
      Brexit and its consequences is seen as a pure UK topic and no mainland paper writes even a single letter for months ( reading dutch, french ,german papers on a daily basis )

  • @franceskronenwett3539
    @franceskronenwett3539 Před rokem +820

    As a Brit living in an EU country I was horrified at Britain's decision to leave the EU. The British people were tricked into leaving by blatant lies by Farage and Johnson. Many people seem to have forgotten the fact that Britain received a lot of money from the EU for various projects. This fatal decision could eventually lead to devolution if Scotland becomes independent and the United Kingdom will cease to exist. Absolute lunacy.

    • @happyjonn9242
      @happyjonn9242 Před rokem +27

      What does it have to do with you? you don't live here anymore. We don't tell you or your country what you should do so don't tell us what to do.

    • @JwayT
      @JwayT Před rokem +27

      It wasn't EU money it was OUR money.

    • @seekingthemiddleway4048
      @seekingthemiddleway4048 Před rokem +112

      @@happyjonn9242 Gobsmacked by your post. All the rights of expat Brits in the EU ripped away overnight, and most of them didn't even have a vote on it.

    • @seekingthemiddleway4048
      @seekingthemiddleway4048 Před rokem +75

      @@happyjonn9242 What Brexit benefits would you miss if we rejoined the EU?

    • @PeligroOCallahan
      @PeligroOCallahan Před rokem

      @@happyjonn9242 brexitter to the core you nasty POS

  • @joshuamatkin8306
    @joshuamatkin8306 Před 10 měsíci +20

    It’s like putting up a wall around yourselves so you feel safer and then expecting everyone outside the wall to try and come in.

  • @Martin-tn5lm
    @Martin-tn5lm Před 9 měsíci +18

    It's no longer a question of whether Britain may rejoin the EU but a certainty that it won't be allowed to rejoin.

    • @elmercy4968
      @elmercy4968 Před 5 měsíci

      German government will take them back any time.

    • @miguelmota5980
      @miguelmota5980 Před 2 dny

      Nah. It will be allowed to return, but there will be no special treatment anymore.
      They had a banger deal.
      Now that will no longer be in the table and joining the euro will be required, like everyone else.
      Also, guarantees that there won't be more flip flopping.

  • @renebosselaar2198
    @renebosselaar2198 Před rokem +1291

    How shameful and disgusting it is to see people celebrating 'the best decision we ever made' ruining so many people's lives.

    • @bennyboy2079
      @bennyboy2079 Před rokem +91

      Worst decision ever

    • @capri2673
      @capri2673 Před rokem +34

      People seem to be forgetting that two of the richest countries in the world, Switzerland and Norway are NOT are in the EU.

    • @renebosselaar2198
      @renebosselaar2198 Před rokem +149

      @@capri2673 Not complete members, but closely related. Do not compare apples with oranges

    • @Leo-gt1bx
      @Leo-gt1bx Před rokem +1

      You are oblivious to reality

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Před rokem +69

      @Capri yes, but are closely aligned and absolutely nothing like the UK..

  • @KlausT
    @KlausT Před rokem +350

    I find it amusing that the UK thinks that the EU would welcome them back with open arms...

    • @dantetre
      @dantetre Před rokem +61

      If they come back this time no "opt out".
      They have to joint the Euro, they have to join Schengen zone.
      And all the other things that other members are willing to sacrifice for playing in a team!

    • @ems4884
      @ems4884 Před rokem +65

      The EU would accept Britain back at some point in the future, but definitely not now. They have no interest in working with the Tories after the way they bungled Brexit. And now that Britain is out, it just isn't that important anymore. There are bigger issues for the EU to handle.

    • @herlandercarvalho
      @herlandercarvalho Před rokem +77

      Brexit actually benefit the EU... lots of business moved out of the UK to France and other countries, and due to the clusterf*ck that Brexit revealed itself to be (unsurprisingly), decreased the "leave" sentiments from other EU states. I don't see why would the EU accept the UK back. I just hope that Scotland manages to get independence, and I'm certain the EU will receive them with open arms.

    • @michael1345
      @michael1345 Před rokem

      @@Christian-ut5um I give Britain less. Far less and why the BS name. Typical xenophobe.

    • @patrickmccutcheon9361
      @patrickmccutcheon9361 Před rokem +4

      @@Christian-ut5um bigger issues like energy security or falling further behind the US with technology and being overtaken by China…

  • @theparisdream
    @theparisdream Před 5 měsíci +23

    It's interesting that they interviewed a lot of older individuals. I am curious to hear how people under 40 feel about things, and what they hope for in the future (which is moreso their future than those interviewed in this segment).

  • @hauskalainen
    @hauskalainen Před 10 měsíci +6

    I'm fed up of hearing COVID and Ukraine war in the context of Brexit. The rest of Europe experienced these but only Brexit was negative for the UK and what Britain lost the EU has gained. 90% the size of the German economy down to 70%. Brexit has been a disaster for the country and the conservative party.

  • @leangrypoulet7523
    @leangrypoulet7523 Před rokem +362

    Woman in Sunderland. “Don’t think it’s made a huge difference to my life. I thought it was a good idea at the time and I still think it was a good idea”. There’s Brexit logic for you. Meanwhile the country crumbles and anyone who traded anywhere further afield than a miserable beach in Sunderland has seen their businesses adversely impacted. 🙄

    • @kevinwillis6707
      @kevinwillis6707 Před rokem

      wilfully ignorant old codgers made up a large proportion of the leave vote, older people scared of change were more likely to vote leave. harking back to a rose tinted past that never exsisted.

    • @hblock8361
      @hblock8361 Před rokem +8

      Mackems have never been a bright bunch

    • @lestrem11
      @lestrem11 Před rokem +2

      No they haven’t, name all the business’s affected?

    • @peterburry2531
      @peterburry2531 Před rokem +22

      @@lestrem11 All business's trading with the EU face reams of paperwork and costly delays.

    • @leangrypoulet7523
      @leangrypoulet7523 Před rokem +45

      @@lestrem11 Well, I live in France and I can tell you numerous businesses that I used to trade with in the UK (building, construction, automotive etc), no longer trade with Europe as their economies of scale wouldn't allow it to cover the extra expense/hassle/paperwork.
      Just last summer I placed an order with a UK company worth €9k. One order. The order took just one week to ship, but was diverted to Germany, returned to the UK, then made it to France where it was held by customs until all duty was cleared. Three months. Company stated they'd never trade with the EU again.
      I also worked as European sales director for a UK firm that worked in construction. Prior to Brexit, 30% of its total sales £20m+/year, was to the EU. They closed their European arm because of post Brexit paperwork and I was made redundant.
      What's more, I live in an area of France with a very high percentage of expat Brits with businesses. As was allowed by EU rules at the time, many had their companies in the UK not France.
      As their tax status was British, they had no right to stay in Europe (only fully tax resident foreigners could) and they were forced to return to the UK.
      As their businesses were entirely based on tourism (B&Bs, cycling holidays, skiing etc) within this region, they had to shut down. No opportunity to keep the business open and run it from the UK. People who'd worked for YEARS setting them up, establishing a client base, a network of local contacts etc. Small, independent businesses.
      I heard from the local chamber of commerce that in one town alone, 30% of these types of business closed.
      And families (and employees) many of whom had been here quite legally under EU law for years (kids at school etc, networks of friends, possibly home owners) for as much as two decades, had to leave.
      And some were friends, this is not some kind of mythical story. And this was repeated across France, Italy, Spain and all other regions with large expat communities trying to make a go of things, and likely at a very bread and butter level.
      Also my main role since I moved to France 17 years ago was in real estate sales and as the British/Anglophone specialist. I can tell you that the number of Brits buying property in France has dropped, by a lot and did so over night. There is absolutely no other reason they wouldn't still be buying in this region otherwise.
      Brits used to account for 50% of buyers, now it's closer to 15%.
      Finally, we used to buy a lot of stuff from the UK for personal reasons. For example I have a classic car I maintain personally. Parts from the UK were more abundant and cheaper. Now they're vastly more expensive and as per my example above, I risk all kinds of problems with customs etc.
      So I no longer buy from the UK. Simply not worth the aggro. I can guarantee that that is replicated thousands of times over across the EU (whether expats or Europeans) who used to buy from UK suppliers and no longer do so.
      Perhaps they've not gone bust, but many will have suffered some loss of revenue to a greater or lesser degree.
      So I no longer trade with the UK, friends no longer trade with the UK, I have friends who were forced to close their independent businesses and leave the EU, I have seen a net drop in UK buyers in my sector directly as a result of Brexit regs (3 month rule) and finally a company I worked for closed its European arm, and I was made redundant directly as a result of Brexit.
      Is that enough examples for you?

  • @kokliangchew3609
    @kokliangchew3609 Před rokem +1779

    I'm a Malaysian working in Singapore. Both countries are in the Commonwealth and have millions of investment in the UK, but most if not all of them were prior to Brexit. This was due to the familiarity of the language, laws, culture and much more due to being former colonies of the British. In short, we were used to the British and found it easier to invest in the UK because of that, and as a gateway into the EU. Post-Brexit, businesses here are concentrating on investments in the EU directly, and bypassing the UK, despite the different legal systems and languages. Oh, and Malaysia and Singapore are part of ASEAN (Association of South-East Asia Nations), which aspires to integrate their economies like the EU.
    As for the Brexiter's dream or aspiration of becoming a Singapore-on-Thames, well, Singaporeans are more pragmatic and realistic than Brexiters. They had to be in order to create the modern and successful Singapore that Brexiters want to emulate. Ask them if they want to exit ASEAN or exit the EU if they were part of it, the answer would be a resounding NO.
    Almost everybody here that I talked to about Brexit thought that it was financial and business suicide for the British. And most if not all, put it down to the UK harking back to the days of the British Empire. It wasn't helped by the fact that many Brexiter politicians and businessmen thought that the Commonwealth and the World would gladly trade with the UK on an individual basis. Why should they? And what advantage is there to trading with the UK when it is not a gateway into the EU? Business is business, and it would always look at the bottom line. Brexiters seemed to have forgotten that, or totally ignored it altogether. And with the recent news from the IMF that the UK is the only major economy expected to shrink in 2023, as well as to do worse than Russia (which is heavily sanctioned by the world and fighting a war in the Ukraine) in 2023, well, so much for Brexit!

    • @djtaylorutube
      @djtaylorutube Před rokem

      Everything that you wrote was so blindingly obvious to anyone with a brain yet even smacking a Brexidiot in the face with a length of 2x4, trying to explain this, they'd metaphorically be lying there, bleeding and saying "but sov'rinty init?" Or "furriners out".
      I wish them all the worst outcome ever, absolutely zero sympathy.
      I just wish I wasn't trapped here on shithole prison Island along with 17.4 million morons.

    • @T0MT0Mmmmy
      @T0MT0Mmmmy Před rokem +95

      So true!

    • @mrthai-rg9nv
      @mrthai-rg9nv Před rokem

      ohh another fake account from a layabout labour supporter , nice try now uck off to the eu and dont come back

    • @Kj16V
      @Kj16V Před rokem +306

      You absolutely hit the nail on the head. Brexiters genuinely thought everyone would want to trade with Britain simply because Britain is Britain.

    • @alicjakowalski3552
      @alicjakowalski3552 Před rokem

      I VOTED BREXIT TO STOP MORE EASTERN EUROPEAN FREE LOADERS & CRIMINALS GETTING IN WHEN THEY JOINED IN 2004 5.7 MILLION FLOODED IN 68,000 BABIES BORN 4,5 BILLION IN SOCIAL SECURITY ETC NOW PRISONS ARE FULL OF MIGRANT CRIMINALS ALL EUROPE SEND BRITAIN IS ILLIGALS MIGRANT CRIMINALS & FREE LOADERS

  • @noyo1444
    @noyo1444 Před 5 měsíci +11

    Play stupid games……win stupid prices!🤷‍♂️

    • @DCTag
      @DCTag Před měsícem

      Prizes*

  • @johnconlon2207
    @johnconlon2207 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I am Irish. I think the EU would not be particularly interested in having UK back. More trouble than they are worth.

  • @Yukiwodashite
    @Yukiwodashite Před rokem +1604

    Honestly the woman with the dog's response has become the standard of many modern conservatives. Being "It hasn't personally effected my life in any capacity, and I do not fear it impacting my life, so I am fine with it."
    No sense of broader country or community, simply, me and my family are fine, and that's all I really care about at the end of the day.

    • @marekkac7046
      @marekkac7046 Před rokem +14

      It's literally what labor does all the time. Ironic comment.

    • @Yukiwodashite
      @Yukiwodashite Před rokem +191

      @@marekkac7046 such nonsense. Labor: Hey let's make sure immigrants are treated with respect. Tories: Nah I wanna worry about me. Labor: hey let's make sure the minimum wage is a fair price so that people don't have to struggle. Tories: nah, I don't make minimum wage I don't give a shit. Labor: We are part of Europe there is a reason we are in the EU we need to stand together. Tories: nah fuck Europe.
      Must I go on?

    • @reddragon3163
      @reddragon3163 Před rokem +101

      It's why I lmao every time they pretend they're patriots. Everything is "me, me, me" but at the same time "I love my country, I want what's best", yeah best for themselves.

    • @reddragon3163
      @reddragon3163 Před rokem +56

      @@marekkac7046 yeah makes sense. Labour raise the tax rate so they can improve national infrastructure, no care for the country in that regard.
      Seethe. Cope harder.

    • @spinnetti
      @spinnetti Před rokem

      Exactly! selfish pricks.

  • @Rig0r_M0rtis
    @Rig0r_M0rtis Před rokem +533

    "Yeah it's been a shitstorm but I still think it was a good idea because I have no brain and admitting that I was wrong hurts me more than my worsening economical situation."

    • @robhendrikx2198
      @robhendrikx2198 Před rokem

      I honestly think most people are too stupid to even realize they were wrong.

    • @alfilkemper9240
      @alfilkemper9240 Před rokem +9

      😂

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před rokem

      What is funny you say brexiteers don’t have a brain yet you still live in the uk and cannot leave without fom. Really I wonder who does not have a brain as if you did and it was that bad why have you not left.

    • @z3onix
      @z3onix Před rokem +4

      Lmao

    • @dech9570
      @dech9570 Před rokem

      Lol, still sulking?

  • @tomwilliam9810
    @tomwilliam9810 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Freedom of movement was awesome, it was one of the best things that the UK citizens ever had, rights to your entire continent. Such a loss.

  • @thtecc
    @thtecc Před 9 měsíci +9

    i have studied in England and lived there for about 5 yrs; I would say i was always of the opinion that in general the British never liked continental europe or europeans, and as such I don't believe that they will ever change their view on other european countries; my impression has always been they they don't consider themselves as europeans, but equally they don't like americans or us; i dont know any other country in europe where locals have a nickname for every single european country; so they did well to go

    • @jesusbermudez6775
      @jesusbermudez6775 Před 5 měsíci +1

      You are right, the British have nicknames for everyone.

  • @geoffsiddle9547
    @geoffsiddle9547 Před rokem +46

    I was born in 1962 a post war child. Like many other people of my generation we wondered how the German people were taken in by Hitler.
    Now we know.

  • @AlanSmith88888
    @AlanSmith88888 Před rokem +515

    As someone from outside of the UK, you can only laugh at the idiots who persuaded their citizens to commit financial and business suicide.

    • @chilesauce7248
      @chilesauce7248 Před rokem +6

      You obviously do not have the full information. The UK never adopted the Euro, ask why! Business wise, the UK has more trading partners now than it did in the EU, financially much better of in the medium to long term without the shackles of the EU.

    • @TheSteve_1992
      @TheSteve_1992 Před rokem +47

      ​@@chilesauce7248 oh that is the famous British copium.

    • @UPPERKEES
      @UPPERKEES Před rokem +33

      @@chilesauce7248 more trading partners? You lost the EU. The US also didn't jump in to fill the void. So who are you talking about? Or are you mistaking inflation percentages with economic growth? Because then the UK is the winner indeed.

    • @mihailchehlarov2720
      @mihailchehlarov2720 Před rokem +17

      @@chilesauce7248 Why don't you call yourself just England and leave Scots out of it?

    • @boitmecklyn4995
      @boitmecklyn4995 Před rokem +13

      @@mihailchehlarov2720 Me thinks the UK shouldn't have dragged down Scotland, wales, and NI. Let England go at it alone.

  • @liamoconlocha3264
    @liamoconlocha3264 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Have they forgotten the hardships before they joined the EU

  • @CitroTeam
    @CitroTeam Před 9 měsíci +3

    Many Britons voted for Brexit without realizing the implications of that decision. Greed blinds the greedy.
    One girl said that she voted for Brexit jokingly because she thought that Brexit would be defeated in a landslide as it was a stupid mistake to leave the EU. And the next morning when she heard the result of the referendum she panicked.

  • @einundsiebenziger5488
    @einundsiebenziger5488 Před rokem +725

    It's just sad that in a country where over 99 % of the population are literate and have access to all kinds of information, so many fell for the silly idea that "EU only takes our money and all we get in return is rules, and as soon as we have left the EU, there will be absolutely no more problems."

    • @maxcyber
      @maxcyber Před rokem +39

      Cameron refused any influence of the EU in the media to explain the benefits of the common market, freedom of movement, etc. It was so poorely prepared that incompetence can't explain it all. I am pretty sure a few have hugely benefited from this whole mess, and therefore, pushed for it.

    • @-_James_-
      @-_James_- Před rokem +75

      Being literate and being stupid are not mutually exclusive.

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 Před rokem +19

      @@-_James_- Correct. I meant it in the way that most literate people do not use that ability to acquire knowledge but insist on their "right to be stupid" and go for the simple, convenient (i.e. usually stupid) answer.

    • @philipvjones397
      @philipvjones397 Před 11 měsíci

      Around 25% of the UK population are functionally illiterate. 50% can't manage 5 GCSEs.

    • @ocean_kp
      @ocean_kp Před 11 měsíci

      That's assuming that those people who are literate are actually intelligent, therein lies your mistake. As a Brit who voted remain I've now left the country, as have so many other people I know. The attitude of the average Brit is just too nasty and negative and bigoted to want to deal with on a daily basis.

  • @Stephen.Bingham
    @Stephen.Bingham Před rokem +131

    People find it very difficult to admit they were wrong, even in the face of overwhelming evidence. Today’s example is Liz Truss’s delusional account of her downfall.

    • @rb1062
      @rb1062 Před rokem

      Yup, Remoaners are childishly stubborn!

    • @dan.k4317
      @dan.k4317 Před rokem +3

      @Fetch! you haven't made a single point

    • @dan.k4317
      @dan.k4317 Před rokem

      @Fetch! all your comments are about people 'crying'. Not a single point made about brexit. Grow up

    • @superlight7654
      @superlight7654 Před rokem

      Maybe people were sick of immigration which was letting anyone in. Desperate times...

  • @liamoconlocha3264
    @liamoconlocha3264 Před 9 měsíci +6

    There is opportunity...but which ones? ...nothing!

  • @kennethdimaano
    @kennethdimaano Před 9 měsíci +4

    They deserve to suffer the consequences of their own choices.

  • @davidruiz8689
    @davidruiz8689 Před rokem +306

    She really said with her whole chest “I’m so happy I lied to people about brexit and I’m still happy about it “

    • @stephenfarthing3819
      @stephenfarthing3819 Před rokem +2

      You may be happy of that! I - for one - remain pragmatically disappointed with the situation and decision! It's cost many vulnerable communities in Britain hugely. Setting things back by 47 years for those vulnerable communities. I could - theoretically say worse of what you have said! But for the consideration that it might not make much difference at all. Not for another quarter century, at least!

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před rokem

      We won, every thing went amazingly well.
      You lost, rekrain is a disaster.

    • @AlfaGiuliaQV
      @AlfaGiuliaQV Před rokem +21

      @@richardgallagher4880 What apparently didn´t go amazingly well was your ability to spell.

    • @mark-ish
      @mark-ish Před rokem +15

      She's happy because she collects a govt. salary no matter what happens.

    • @stephenfarthing3819
      @stephenfarthing3819 Před rokem +2

      @@AlfaGiuliaQV Indeed! And perhaps he is one of those who reside in the one part of the British Isles which believes that Brexit was still a good idea. Most now do not! I have some suspicion of this fellow.. I suspected that he could have been something else. To a degree. I still do. His poor spelling of something ' remain!' for instance. Demonstrates a possibility.. I can't explore why! A suspicion is not sufficient without co-oberative fact or proof! I only have a suspicion! It's a possibility but can go no further than that!

  • @zossua7375
    @zossua7375 Před rokem +418

    Politicians always blame others for their own mistakes. They never take responsibility. Never.

    • @brubeker12
      @brubeker12 Před rokem +8

      Was it the late Nigel Lawson rip who voted leave but lived in France and applied for French residency

    • @friedrichjunzt
      @friedrichjunzt Před rokem +11

      It was not politicians who voted leave, it was people!

    • @minidreschi2
      @minidreschi2 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@friedrichjunzt ye but who manipulated them? politicans and bigots...

    • @friedrichjunzt
      @friedrichjunzt Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@minidreschi2 they could have easily educated themselfes about this topic but All they wanted to hear was "no Polish people here anymore! No 80 Mio Turks migrating to glorious UK!!!"

    • @hawkswell59
      @hawkswell59 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Cameron and Johnson should be charged with treason! .

  • @nairobi203
    @nairobi203 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Now live with the consequences.

  • @tara.melina173
    @tara.melina173 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Genius move cutting yourself from your largest trading block.

  • @guydreamr
    @guydreamr Před rokem +82

    One of the most egregious examples of a country shooting itself in both feet this observer has ever seen.

    • @M0UAW_IO83
      @M0UAW_IO83 Před rokem +7

      Shooting ourselves in the feet is pretty mild, I think we amputaed everything below the knees.

    • @dr.davidenglish778
      @dr.davidenglish778 Před rokem +2

      Yep. Oh how the mighty has fallen.

  • @pvught390
    @pvught390 Před rokem +491

    Three years after Brexit, the British are still waiting for the benefits.
    Greetings from the Netherlands

    • @sidneypedroso3415
      @sidneypedroso3415 Před rokem +46

      @New Moon what craZy guy, ahahahahahah

    • @majorskies7091
      @majorskies7091 Před rokem +21

      I wish I was both Dutch. I love your country and that you can cycle everywhere.

    • @Patmofar
      @Patmofar Před rokem +72

      @New Moon The Yanks won't sign any free trade agreement with the Brits. Are you punishing them? Why? And if you think that the EU is solely Germany and France as you claim then you are just a typical ignorant Yank. It's like saying California and New York are the US of A.

    • @hugogrilo9742
      @hugogrilo9742 Před rokem +45

      @New Moon what? Lol what are you talking about mate? As an American you don't even understand how democracy works, nevermind the EU and Brexit consequences. But please explain your sentence

    • @HazyWave1974
      @HazyWave1974 Před rokem

      @New Moon Thank you for once again demonstrating that Americans are the dumbest people on the planet.

  • @shahjehan
    @shahjehan Před 8 měsíci +3

    Imagine voting against your own self interests

  • @philliprees7704
    @philliprees7704 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Used to drive around Europe in a truck delivering or picking up goods You dont realise how much it has cost us with Bexit Until you see how much is imported into Britain and how much we depend on it as well

  • @gohumberto
    @gohumberto Před rokem +307

    It's almost as if Boris was lying and the experts knew what they were talking about.

    • @ednawelthorpe5578
      @ednawelthorpe5578 Před rokem

      LOL remember Gove telling the morons that it was time to ignore "experts" - that's the first thing the far right come for - the intellectuals.

    • @lenawagenfuehr53
      @lenawagenfuehr53 Před rokem +6

      And yis wouldn't listen...

    • @solarmaru49
      @solarmaru49 Před rokem

      Democracy doesn’t work when the population is retarded and the leaders exploit it

    • @clairewiseman-cq8ct
      @clairewiseman-cq8ct Před rokem

      STOPPING ANOTHER 5.7 MILLION EASTERN EUROPEANS FLOODING IN WE PAY 4 BILLION A YEAR IN BENEFITS 15 MILLION A YEAR KEEPING THEM IN PRISON & 970,000 BABIES BORN COSTING BILLIONS IMMIGRATION IS ONE WAY TRAFFIC UNDER 1 MILLION BRITISH IN ALL OF EUROPE

    • @snsn7251
      @snsn7251 Před rokem +16

      N Farage. People seem to forget he was a part of the gang of liars.

  • @KingCollossuss
    @KingCollossuss Před rokem +1097

    I’m British and have been dealing with the decision for the last 7 years and I still struggle to understand the attitudes of those that voted for it. It was always obvious that it would destroy the economy, the Brexiteers at the time seemed to understand that but felt ending free movement was worth it. I still don’t understand why you would want to live in a worse country just to reduce immigration but the fact that some of them seem surprised that the economy has struggled is baffling, it’s like they’re all primary school children that just make decisions for purely emotional reasons and don’t have the most basic understandings of the country they live in or the EU and the MASSIVE impact Brexit would have. It’s embarrassing but it feels at times that people in this country are very immature and really need to grow up.

    • @saturday1066
      @saturday1066 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ml8022 ask it

    • @saturday1066
      @saturday1066 Před 11 měsíci +70

      my guess:
      - I heard endless that "sovereignty" (aka ending free movement) was worth being poorer
      - also that remainers were lying and UK wouldn't be poorer
      - some claimed "sovereignty" would mean 'Second Golden UK Age" (never mind there wasn't a first one for "UK")
      - and too: EU will allow UK to cherry-pick the good bits bc EU "needs" UK so much "to survive"
      - 'hull vs heath': lower income people knew/suspected that it would screw UK and welcomed it - "Gov has already screwed me so NOW you can see what it's like"
      (meaning, some people didn't see a change from their current circumstance ... and thought it good if the whole country dragged down to understand how they lived)
      I'm not agreeing with ANY of that. just repeating what I've read.
      also, fwiw, "I didn't think it would pass, I just voted for it *_TO SEND A MESSAGE_* (to someone)"
      number one google search in UK, morning after brexit vote: "what is the EU?"
      as far as I can tell, they were voting with their lizard brain (except for the uber rich pushing this bc EU was about to out their hidey-holes)

    • @hendrik8953
      @hendrik8953 Před 11 měsíci +8

      oh, it´s easy to understand, once you think a society as being formed by classes where some classes can be conviced other class to do their bidding. lack of "class conscience" or something. like when you are a miserable employee that sucks to the boss.

    • @abdulsufan3325
      @abdulsufan3325 Před 11 měsíci

      U vastly underestimate how racist this country is...remember what brexiteers really want.. no more brown people!! (From europe lol )

    • @lloydnaylor6113
      @lloydnaylor6113 Před 11 měsíci

      Destroyed economy, what are you on about?

  • @bartosz6003
    @bartosz6003 Před 3 měsíci +4

    maybe im naive but living in united Europe with free trade and travel is a big deal for me. I know there will always be some arguments between countries on many issues regarding EU, but at the end we should reach an agreement and work together.

  • @Happin3ess
    @Happin3ess Před 10 měsíci +3

    No one in 7 years of heated and mindless debates have even mentioned Trade or trading relations. Not heard it.

  • @darkflighter100
    @darkflighter100 Před rokem +719

    This is what happens when you make the public vote on a decision which takes economists and policy analysts years to understand the consequences to.

    • @jaaksavat7916
      @jaaksavat7916 Před rokem

      "Divide and rule" Julius Caesar.
      Stepping out of the European economic union, based on lies and xenophobic fearmongering was imbecilic, and those spreading the lies, hate have no accountability for the consequences thereof

    • @carlosgarcao2847
      @carlosgarcao2847 Před rokem +1

      They have study a lot to do this shit.

    • @jvananderson2610
      @jvananderson2610 Před rokem

      Totally agree the country is so much poorer it is so obvious that Brexit only works for the few and not the majority.

    • @AllinOne-wv1mp
      @AllinOne-wv1mp Před rokem +27

      voting in general, shouldn't be for everyone. that's why Socrates's point of view about it got him executed. it should be for experts and people who wouldn't vote based on intuition or emotion.

    • @Gerishnakov
      @Gerishnakov Před rokem +39

      @@AllinOne-wv1mp Or maybe our education system should be geared towards producing individuals capable of this, rather than mindless drones for the economy.

  • @ReadySteadyDESTROY
    @ReadySteadyDESTROY Před rokem +689

    Truly impossible to not be embarrassed by it

    • @GRFC1872
      @GRFC1872 Před rokem +11

      If you voted yes then defo

    • @christophermoorhouse8828
      @christophermoorhouse8828 Před rokem +11

      @@GRFC1872 How's those 'sunlit uplands'?

    • @danielbentham758
      @danielbentham758 Před rokem +4

      @@beautifulempatheticliberal5204 NPC

    • @michaelparker7331
      @michaelparker7331 Před rokem +2

      AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD

    • @PincheBrayan101
      @PincheBrayan101 Před rokem +4

      @@beautifulempatheticliberal5204 hella NPC

  • @otockian
    @otockian Před 7 měsíci +2

    As a business who has been trying to get a VAT ID for 6 months I can 100% say the government isn't handling it well at all.

  • @Chr1st0ph
    @Chr1st0ph Před 9 měsíci +6

    I hope I will still live long enough to see the UK re-join with a new spirit. The EU is not perfect, but it is a long process to shape it to common benefit, and it is absolutely worth it for peace and stability in Europe...

    • @tre641
      @tre641 Před 5 měsíci

      I dont think that the eu would let them even if they want. They cost us billions even before they left, because they always wanted their special treatment and then they cost us even more billions with this s*it show.

    • @geertstroy
      @geertstroy Před 19 dny

      America is perfect!

  • @Lowdenjim
    @Lowdenjim Před rokem +698

    In 1965 I joined a highly successful machine tool company selling 80% in the UK market and 20% in Export markets - mainly in Europe. Our Export admin and sales teams were double the number of those on Home sales, essential because of the complexities involved - not least of which was the mountain of documentation relating to movement of goods across various borders. Processing an order from a UK customer meant handling a single piece of paper; processing an export order meant getting to grips with a substantial portfolio. The term "red tape" was so nebulous really and didn't shed any light on the reality of the work and cost involved. Joining the EU changed all that, and exporting was so much smoother, easier and costs were reduced dramatically. Brexit brought those nightmares back for businesses who had no idea what was about to hit them. I knew, but obviously Farage, Johnson and the other charlatans didn't have a clue.

    • @M0UAW_IO83
      @M0UAW_IO83 Před rokem +94

      Oh they knew, but that's not where they make their money so didn't care, but they're now terrified that people are beginning to realise they were conned.

    • @truthtotell7583
      @truthtotell7583 Před rokem +2

      @@investmystonks7048 Uneducated? - Well, clearly this guy doesn't have a clue what he's talking about!

    • @commonsense31
      @commonsense31 Před rokem

      @@investmystonks7048 I’m sorry but you seem to be a member of the uneducated group.
      And frankly pretty ignorant!
      I don’t think you work in the export department. Especially with your attitude that you think that it’s the EU being difficult that are the problem!
      My bet is that you are a janitor of that company!

    • @marcd6897
      @marcd6897 Před rokem +3

      @@truthtotell7583 who is “this guy” ?

    • @olearyma57
      @olearyma57 Před rokem

      @@investmystonks7048 You are right - you would recognise an educated fool of uncommonly low intelligence. JIT manufacturing philosophies are dependent upon total unimterrupted flow of materials and data/ information across national boundaries. Disrupt logistically effective supply chains and a whole dimension of globally competitive companies simply disappears leaving them to wither on the Vine. Intra EU movement has no non value added beaureacracy and can pass the savings onto customers in a competitive 'stand off' wit UK companies. UK death by slow asphisyation and nose diving purchasing power of the pound in your pocket... you Brits are an uncommonly low intelligence lot YOU WERE TOLD THIS BY PEOPLE WHO REALLY KNOW. If a Frenchman has a good lover and a nice bottle of wine why should he leave the house early to convenience a country outside the EU - they are sovereign as well you know!.

  • @padfootfan123
    @padfootfan123 Před rokem +593

    When remain lost the vote, I desperately hoped that my fears around Brexit would be proven wrong. Unfortunately, it is far worse than I feared. No sympathy for those who voted leave and now regret it. The signs were there clear as day, and now we'll all suffer the consequences probably for decades to come.

    • @kevinsullivan7831
      @kevinsullivan7831 Před rokem +16

      how sad must you be to wish you were subjigated by a foreign power

    • @k-doggy1762
      @k-doggy1762 Před rokem +72

      @@kevinsullivan7831 much better to be subjugated by the leeches in Westminster 🙄

    • @kevinsullivan7831
      @kevinsullivan7831 Před rokem

      @@k-doggy1762 you are being eaten alive by illegal immigrant parasites

    • @shelleylyme6402
      @shelleylyme6402 Před rokem

      Doggy likes to be subjugated 😄

    • @happyjonn9242
      @happyjonn9242 Před rokem +6

      @@k-doggy1762 why would having two bosses be better than having one?

  • @BELBOG666
    @BELBOG666 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I'm from the collapsing EU and somehow this video jumped out at me, I'm surprised that this topic still exists, no one has been interested in it for years. I have the impression that the only people who are traumatized by this are the British, live your life and don't talk about the EU, you haven't been part of us for years.

    • @sharknado623
      @sharknado623 Před 10 měsíci

      They have never truly being part of EU.

  • @jenspetersimonsen4235
    @jenspetersimonsen4235 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I'm baffled that so many brexiteers keep doing the 'Lord Nelson' on the state of their country. It's in the numbers, people!

  • @sarangistudent8614
    @sarangistudent8614 Před rokem +577

    Well they believed Johnson, that paragon of honesty and truth 🤣🤣🤣

    • @MontyCantsin5
      @MontyCantsin5 Před rokem +1

      Stupidity knows no bounds.

    • @sebastianguerre6868
      @sebastianguerre6868 Před rokem

      I can't wait until the government puts forward legislation to get us out of EU laws so that we can be independent country and exploit international opportunities. I'm not sure after all these years why we're still tied to these EU laws that discourage investment in the UK. Having said that remainers were right, food prices did go through the roof after brexit particularly in France.

    • @Iazzaboyce
      @Iazzaboyce Před rokem

      Don't be stupid - people understood the issue - they didn't want to be part of a federal Europe. We now know the big lie was 'project fear'. You don't think it's strange that the UK government leaflet stated _"We will not join the euro"_ and not a single pro-EU activist in the UK complained or argued the UK joining the euro would be a good idea? That's right! The single currency is a flagship mandatory policy of the EU - and not a single person in the UK said a word to the UK electorate about ever joining. Is this because they never wanted/planned to join - or because they are sneaky liars?

    • @paulgibbons2320
      @paulgibbons2320 Před rokem +1

      Nobody believes ANY MP's.

    • @Number9s
      @Number9s Před rokem +10

      My uncle has complete faith in him, "Good old Boris, he'll get it done".

  • @Jericho642
    @Jericho642 Před rokem +425

    The most heartbreaking thing about this whole episode is how utterly predictable it was. All of this mess was predicted. All of it. Every lie was pointed out as a lie at the time. Every promise was predicted to be false. None of this is a surprise. It’s reassuring to see people turning around on this, but its way too little too late. People who voted for Brexit can rightly claim they were misled and lied to, but have to also accept that they closed their eyes and ears to the “remainers”; they didnt want to hear the truth, and placed their trust in KNOWN liars. What has been done to this country since 2016 will eventually be investigated in a formal commission and hopefully, people will go to jail.

    • @tech9803
      @tech9803 Před rokem

      People who continue to vote for charlatans and liars are not victims, but accomplices.

    • @Moyopheus
      @Moyopheus Před rokem +11

      Hear hear!

    • @franciscouderq1100
      @franciscouderq1100 Před rokem +18

      The only problem is that alas for over 40 yrs no one was really promoting EU or explaining what it is to the Brits . EU has always been poor at promoting advertising it’s assets and other positive deeds and the Tory lies among others went freely hammering the so called EUSSR stuff and how bad it all was the the UK.

    • @evgeniynagornyak1150
      @evgeniynagornyak1150 Před rokem

      The same with the virus and tests, vaccination. Lies globally. The BBC should be on investigation list.

    • @jabt2023
      @jabt2023 Před rokem

      The first person to go to jail should be Daniel Hannan. He spouted more lies and bullshit then even Johnson and Gove

  • @mattinterweb
    @mattinterweb Před 9 měsíci +2

    "we'd take a hit for two years, and then we'd return a rich country". Making it harder to trade with your neighbours and most successful trading block in the world won't make you richer. I'm still amazed how people didn't at least try and learn this (if it wasn't completely obvious in the first place) before voting.

  • @Derguz
    @Derguz Před 8 měsíci +1

    What I don't get is: What makes GB believe that the EU would be interested in getting GB back into the fold? GB is not a dependable partner.

    • @sharknado623
      @sharknado623 Před 8 měsíci

      Not even as important as they think they are, they are just a tiny island with weird economy and even weirder politics.

  • @giamartube
    @giamartube Před rokem +329

    It’s really amazing how, after all that has passed, people in the UK still think it’s only about them and what they want. And the rest of the world has to simply comply. Well, you’ll need to open your eyes; you might want to rejoin, but we don’t want you back in the EU. Not until you understand the concept of equal countries working together and that respect goes both ways. The Empire has gone, we are not colonies. Once you get off the high horse, come back and we can have a conversation based on mutual respect.

    • @mik7564
      @mik7564 Před rokem +16

      Well put, but pride is hard to break, especially when it's built in your identity. Looking back through history, total destruction (not annihilation) is how some civilizations came to humility.

    • @robw7676
      @robw7676 Před rokem

      Not wanting to be told what to do by a globalist cabal in Brussels is not the same as wanting to tell anyone else what to do.
      Have fun with the cabal, they are all yours now.

    • @rgp1976
      @rgp1976 Před rokem +15

      British expat here. I think there is a good chance Great Britain / UK will split up: a united Ireland (already in the EU), Scotland (overwhelmingly wants to be in EU), England and Wales. These small countries will have about as much in common with the Great Britain Colonial Superpower of two centuries ago as modern Italy does with the Roman Empire. They will need to join the EU as much more junior and compliant partners to have any chance of prosperity. I think the British military and nuclear power as we know it today could well cease to exist, consigned to history within 20 years. The British military support of the Ukrainian fight for freedom is probably their last hurrah.

    • @miscellaneousvideos8879
      @miscellaneousvideos8879 Před rokem +16

      I am English, and unfortunately this is a side to the country I am embarrassed by. I think it was also fuelled by sensationalist media and certain political personalities playing into people's vulnerable economic situations for decades, baselessly putting blame on EU membership and external affairs for the problems in more deprived and segregated parts of the UK. Before Brexit, I didn't particularly mind saying I was English, but since then, I suppose I have become more aware of the problems of this identity. It will take a few generations maybe, for the delusion of being a 'global power' to become more diluted as a part of the identity

    • @loosilu
      @loosilu Před rokem

      They followed the example of Trumpers. It;'s all about ME, everyone else can eff themselves.

  • @colinthompson3111
    @colinthompson3111 Před rokem +308

    I hope future generations see Andrea Leadsom in this video. Her explanation of her support for Brexit reminds of Neville Chamberlain waving a piece of paper.

    • @elipa3
      @elipa3 Před rokem +26

      She doesnt have to care about the cost of living. And she probably will have no responsibility, as she will tell you in coming years. She will blame Bojo.

    • @quwipyui6519
      @quwipyui6519 Před rokem +15

      she has a lot of money so she doesn't care for the youngest

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Před rokem

      Chamberlain was desperately trying to avoid ravaging the country by going to war. Leadsom campaigned and voted to ravage the country by choice.

    • @bbcisaids6727
      @bbcisaids6727 Před rokem +3

      You can move to Ireland and enjoy the eussr

    • @guleiro
      @guleiro Před rokem +29

      @@bbcisaids6727
      I grew up in a communist country.
      In what way is the EU communist?...

  • @jakey4683
    @jakey4683 Před měsícem +2

    Imagine being able to live anywhere in 27 countries, from the coasts of Spain, to the vineyards of Italy, to the tech center of Berlin, to the islands of Greece and the French countryside....No questions asked, no visa or job needed... and preferring to instead limit yourself to a cold, rainy, northern Atlantic island, with a dying health system, about the size of Wyoming, never able to leave again and thinking as you sip tea in your damp overpriced terrace house that "no one is taking away your jobs anymore and you've taken back control from Brussels" with no change to your daily life other than negative impact. LOL
    There literally hasn't been a more stupid choice known to man.

  • @tatienouorest3358
    @tatienouorest3358 Před 9 měsíci

    That first shot summarized it all
    They feel nostalgia of the good old days

  • @thedadmeister6392
    @thedadmeister6392 Před rokem +306

    How ordinary intelligent British citizens did not see the economic implications of Brexit is mind-blowing to me. Classic example of when democracy fails. Large swathes of people in most civilised nations do not always necessarily understand what is beneficial for them. Politicians prey on this ignorance for their own gain.

    • @Xune2000
      @Xune2000 Před 11 měsíci

      Roughly 72% of the eligible electorate voted, of which 51% voted leave. We left because 37% of the country are racist idiots and 28% couldn't be arsed to vote.
      Stupidity and laziness is what caused this problem.

    • @fijapopovic5335
      @fijapopovic5335 Před 9 měsíci +13

      I think Ricky Gervais made a good point about why you shouldn't ask average people important questions.

    • @mr.thegreat557
      @mr.thegreat557 Před 9 měsíci

      Screw the economy. I couldn’t care less about woke multi billion pound companies. 👍🏻

    • @Tourist1967
      @Tourist1967 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@mr.thegreat557Nobody cares what you think, boomer. More than 10 per cent of those who voted to leave are dead now, you know. Another five years, it'll be closer to 25 per cent.

    • @showoff59
      @showoff59 Před 9 měsíci +16

      ​@@mr.thegreat557The thing is the multi billions companies are doing just fine.

  • @Ruth-wq7lr
    @Ruth-wq7lr Před rokem +112

    Leadsom being made a Dame after what she and her party have done to the country is utterly disgraceful

    • @BarryWaterlow
      @BarryWaterlow Před rokem +3

      *Ah, but she’s a high-priced political “madam.”*

    • @danarose6314
      @danarose6314 Před rokem

      Many pathetic disgraceful people are being made dames and lords. They are everywhere. Seems like a royal buyout to help preserve the crown.

  • @mortenfrosthansen84
    @mortenfrosthansen84 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Some people in the airport, were quite sad that they now have to stand in the "Outside of Eu" line...
    The line where you get a thorough check for contraband of luggage and body, so it takes forever and is uncomfortable

    • @manhoosnick
      @manhoosnick Před měsícem

      Gives them more time to admire the blue passport then.

  • @lanamack1558
    @lanamack1558 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Blaming ruzzia's invasion of Ukraine for the consequences of UK's brexit is the epitome of arrogance and stupidity

  • @jumbodoener2235
    @jumbodoener2235 Před rokem +141

    Some speakers suggest that the cost of living crisis, ukraine and covid have all made brexit harder. But in this day and age, such crisis should be anticipated. And you know what really helps in dealing with any such crisis? Being part of a bigger group and supporting each other. Delegate some tasks to a higher entity and focus on your own problems on the ground...but oh well

    • @markoshea6833
      @markoshea6833 Před rokem

      nonU.K countries will have to wrest back their fate/destiny from their past erroneous decisions, to join it. Ireland and Spain are continuing to drive off of cliffs.

    • @michaeljohnangel6359
      @michaeljohnangel6359 Před rokem +10

      I agree: essentially, these idiots are saying that Brexit would have worked if only the world were different from what it actually is.

    • @ednawelthorpe5578
      @ednawelthorpe5578 Před rokem +6

      Covid and then Ukraine were convenient and lucky in a way, for the tories and leavers. They can't hide behind it because EU have had the same stresses and still thrive... Look at Ireland. We look like a third world country now, compared to Ireland.

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před rokem

      @@ednawelthorpe5578
      They've got the same inflation as us.
      Caused by remain now you mention it.

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před rokem

      We did anticipate ukř.
      That's why any sane person voted brexit because we didn't want the same thing to happen here.
      Did you?

  • @StephaneSeveneant-lj6qk
    @StephaneSeveneant-lj6qk Před 11 měsíci +126

    Even if the UK wanted to rejoin it would have to convince Europe to accept… One thing is certain the UK will never regain the advantageous position it had when it left.

    • @ct5625
      @ct5625 Před 9 měsíci +12

      I think in maybe 10-20 years the EU will be ready to welcome the UK back, but we definitely won't be in a position to make any demands. Our economic position has declined dramatically, we're no longer the primary banking and trading hub we were and that's going to decline further in the years to come. By the time we're begging to be let back in the EU could demand all kinds of things and we'll be happy to oblige.

    • @karlmylnere5712
      @karlmylnere5712 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@ct5625not entirely sure that we would ever apply to rejoin , nothing is certain in this world , I speak as someone who , all those years ago voted to join , and later voted to remain, I am at an age where I can , with hindsight remember many things that were forecast as certain but ultimately were turned upon their head . The doom merchants may , in fact be proved right , certainly in the short term , as I indicated nothing is certain , Britain along with its people has a long history of overcoming dire adversity, this may or may not be the case in this instance but with the passage of time who knows ? There are rumblings within the EU itself and absolutely nothing lasts forever not even that organisation , nothing is as constant as change that applies to the UK and the EU ,things may ,as has been said get steadily worse or by the same token improve , I would sincerely hope so but , unfortunately I more tha probably will not be around to witness it.

    • @jkbonn1
      @jkbonn1 Před 6 měsíci +13

      We don't want the UK back.

    • @daijirokatoh3769
      @daijirokatoh3769 Před 5 měsíci +10

      We don't want the UK back because we need to be united, we should make an example of them

    • @snorkypigny1
      @snorkypigny1 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Doesn’t need to WE LEFT GET OVER IT.

  • @cageli
    @cageli Před 6 měsíci +1

    Well i hope everyone remembers that the UK can't cherry pick a new agreement with Europe. This will be harder before it gets better, if it gets better

  • @badabing8884
    @badabing8884 Před 9 měsíci +2

    It was too complex a Question to have put to one referendum to an electorate who were lied to again and again which couldn’t be reversed. The result should have been reviewed by a Royal Commission and detailed facts then presented to the public to save itself from a decision it did not have a clue on.

  • @dnguyen9747
    @dnguyen9747 Před rokem +79

    American here. This is a warning to us that when it is time to step down from being a super power, to not be deluded into thinking that we're still "an empire". I'll be dead by then, but something tells me that Americans will not be any wiser when it is our time to step aside. I see similarity between Brexit and Russia. Both, dreaming of past glory days. Turkey is beginning to show signs of the same as they look back to their Ottoman Empire.

    • @frankie_lanaro
      @frankie_lanaro Před rokem +9

      I agree with you, but at the same time there are also deep rooted reasons for the attitude of the English: their policy always had been to fight against a united europe, and they were trying to sabotage it from the inside. Now that they are out, we can have a shot at it, if the French and the Germans keep being on good terms with each other. As the USA influence fades from europe, we will maybe be able to finally be arbiter of our own destiny.

    • @COMEINTOMYWORLD
      @COMEINTOMYWORLD Před rokem +1

      Maybe if you explain to an American that if your President Biden declared a free trade agreement and freedom of movement agreement with Canada and then twenty years later all 35 countries of the Americas have joined it then come and express an opinion here. Would people in the USA tolerate a new superior parliament in Beunos Aires, headed by unelected presidents, making laws that supplant the Capitol in Washington DC? Would the people of the USA be happy that anyone in the Americas had the legal right to move to the USA and live there and be housed at your expense? Would you be happy for the USA to not be able to have its own foreign policy but only one that the 35 countries of the Americas had ALL agreed on? Would you be happy to ditch the US dollar and accept a universal Peseta that had the same value in the USA and basket economies like Venezula? No, don't think so...

    • @lenawagenfuehr53
      @lenawagenfuehr53 Před rokem

      It's already happened. USA is cut off from reality. I highly recommend going to a "third world country" and seeing how much more infrastructure, education and healthcare there is than in the US. I went through the US on the way to Nicaragua 6 years ago... don't understand how the US can claim to be a "superpower"

    • @dnguyen9747
      @dnguyen9747 Před rokem

      @@COMEINTOMYWORLD So, you believe that UK is still a great power compared to the rest of Europe? That's my point. When we're no longer a superpower, I hope we., the USA, recognize it. Currently, we're still the only superpower so we're behaving like a superpower. UK is no longer the Great British Empire. Clearly, you and many others Brits can't accept this reality. That's my point. Yes, one day, America will no longer be a superpower. We will slide down in the ranking. I don't know when or how this will happen. But when it does, these future Americans will most likely behave the same as the Brits do now. Or the same as the Russians do now, or Turks do now. Past glory haunts are peoples who came from Empire.

    • @dnguyen9747
      @dnguyen9747 Před rokem

      @@lenawagenfuehr53 Definition of a superpower. If your claim that Nicaragua is a higher ranked country than the US, then it would be clear in how other countries treat the US and Nicaragua. Nicaragua domestic and foreign policies would be discussed and followed and studied more than the US because countries would feel that what Nicaragua does will impact them more than what the US does. I'm sure that countries all over the world are closely monitoring events in Nicaragua.

  • @PEdulis
    @PEdulis Před rokem +50

    "I still have not learned one thing, so I am still passionate about doing the wrong thing and turning the UK into the sick man of Europe again!" Fixed that for you.

    • @Felix-rising
      @Felix-rising Před rokem +1

      The uk has always been the sick man of Europe. No “again” about it

    • @PEdulis
      @PEdulis Před rokem

      @@Felix-rising The situation had improved though while it was a member of the EU. Just look at how sick the UK now deals with its sewage which would not be possible under EU regulations - and also how much the UK's GDP lost through Brexit, not only a pound that is worth 20% less but also at least 4% less GDP which results in every Briton being 1000 pounds per year poorer, hence the increased taxation to somehow get a substitute for the lost tax revenue.

  • @Jin420
    @Jin420 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Brexit (imo) seems comparable to a state leaving the union in the US.
    I can't see how there could or would be many benefits from leaving EU...
    It's like a state losing all federal benefits in the US.. (they wouldn't/ couldn't survive on their own). But as a whole union there are much greater & favorable benefits..
    Not only does(and is) hurt the travel, but work & trade. UK is on their own with no agreement.
    How was that a good idea??
    Granted I'm new to UK politics but having left the EU just doesn't make sense.

  • @rascha7869
    @rascha7869 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Many Europeans are also very happy about Brexit in the case of the constantly annoying and dissatisfied British complainers... the EU is now significantly stronger than before !

  • @Abieee4725
    @Abieee4725 Před rokem +248

    People need to be educated not just drive decisions based on pride and ego

    • @vice.nor.virtue
      @vice.nor.virtue Před rokem

      I think a successful assasination attempt on Rupert Murdoch wouldn't hurt either. The amazing xenophobic output of that media mogul combined with the arrogant isolation of the country which was responsible for the planet's largest Empire were a truly toxic combination. Everyone was duped and now the many stooges stare at the desolate wasteland of the UK making the shocked Pikachu face and asking how this all could have possibly happened.

    • @RiffRaff-mb7hh
      @RiffRaff-mb7hh Před rokem

      People need to be educated?? What's your surname sugar titz Mao?

    • @toddnorman1343
      @toddnorman1343 Před rokem

      ... and racism and xenophobia. There are going to be millions of climate refugees... Including England when it gets flooded, it behoves you to be nicer to emigrants because you will be one soon.

    • @RiffRaff-mb7hh
      @RiffRaff-mb7hh Před rokem

      @@toddnorman1343 ...'Todd the tinhat', oh my not the rising sea levels and all those beastly racists!! Next you'll be telling me some women have a penis...

    • @user-FUCKYOU18
      @user-FUCKYOU18 Před rokem +2

      Just like Ukraine?

  • @nigelwest3430
    @nigelwest3430 Před rokem +13

    Why would anyone believe that in a world full of huge trading blocks that the UK would thrive on it's own ? A ridiculous decision by people who were incapable of thinking for themselves.

  • @giulianapizzi8054
    @giulianapizzi8054 Před 9 měsíci +3

    It Is quite interesting that all the reasons mentioned to justify the challenges UK Is facing (COVID, Ukraine war, Energy crisis, inflation, etc) are the same for every Country in the world... Yet other regions/areas are reacting better and adjusting faster. It Is a difficult era, therefore isolation Is not the answer because of the complexity of the problems each government has to address and solve.

    • @jesusbermudez6775
      @jesusbermudez6775 Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, the chap is blaming factors that other EU countries have had to contend with. As always blaming something else.

  • @aryastark772
    @aryastark772 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As a remain voter. The vote was almost split 50/50. So half the country was very angry and sad at the result. Many like me still are. It was the most idiotic decision ever made

    • @TheEvilpot
      @TheEvilpot Před měsícem

      I still don't understand how a 50/50 vote can be considered democratic. Even a 49/51 vote shouldn't be considered as reflecting the view of the British people, votes that are as important as Brexit should have at least 60-70% of the population in favour imo.

    • @susanwaite1187
      @susanwaite1187 Před měsícem

      ​@@TheEvilpot Absolutely

  • @thierryparte2506
    @thierryparte2506 Před rokem +230

    Well Brits, I feel sorry for you I really do but something positive did happen out of this
    No EU member will be dumb enough to leave the block now

    • @HonestMan112
      @HonestMan112 Před 8 měsíci +8

      We were the guinea pigs unfortunately. The EU was so good for this country and some fools still dont see it

    • @shzarmai
      @shzarmai Před 8 měsíci +1

      yep unfortunately

    • @Weareeverything2023
      @Weareeverything2023 Před 8 měsíci

      Technically true, Britain is the first to leave the EU, but Greenland and French Algeria both left the EEC, the EU’s forerunner.

    • @_jpg
      @_jpg Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@thetruth9210They won't (un)fortunately. They get far too much money from the EU, so they would never risk a referendum like in the UK. It's all bark, no bite.

    • @elmercy4968
      @elmercy4968 Před 5 měsíci

      That remains to see. Marine Le Pen who is against EU is quite popular for example. AfD the German nationalist party is very successful atm.

  • @Glasstable2011
    @Glasstable2011 Před rokem +515

    As a remain voter, it’s often pointed out to me that the EU wasn’t perfect. It’s large, bureaucratic and unwieldy. I didn’t vote to remain because I thought the EU was a perfect institution. I don’t think there such a thing as a perfect institution. But I think being a part of the EU is a damn sight safer and more beneficial than being apart from it. So if you’re a leave voter and you’re going to point out all the deficiencies in the EU, that’s fine. I get it. It makes no difference to me that the EU has its faults. Still better to be in than out as far as I am concerned, and the current state of the U.K. economy vs the rest of Europe appears to validate my vote.

    • @chucky2316
      @chucky2316 Před rokem +9

      They shouldn't have dumped loads of eastern Europeans here.

    • @Glasstable2011
      @Glasstable2011 Před rokem +108

      @@chucky2316 and here was me thinking there was more to the average leaver voter than xenophobia…

    • @chucky2316
      @chucky2316 Před rokem +5

      @@Glasstable2011 except its not, why were we not asked. Don't you think it gets people's backs up

    • @chucky2316
      @chucky2316 Před rokem +6

      @@Glasstable2011 xenophobia ROFL 😂

    • @Glasstable2011
      @Glasstable2011 Před rokem

      @@chucky2316 I’m sure it gets people’s backs up. In the same way the Spanish are furious that some of their seaside resorts are now inundated with tangerine-coloured British pensioner expats who refuse to learn the language or eat the local cuisine. That’s how immigration and emigration work.
      But don’t worry, the process of moving elsewhere in Europe to work or retire is now much more complicated so we’ll have to stay where we belong. On OUR island. That WE have a GOD GIVEN right to, and NOT those mucky mucky foreigners who WEREN’T BORN HERE and SHOULD JUST ALL LEAVE NOW. God save the King. amiright 👊

  • @jessehatred3667
    @jessehatred3667 Před 2 měsíci +2

    As an American, I can see the tree isn't so far from the apple lol

  • @mikaeldk5700
    @mikaeldk5700 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Please, Never stop the Brexit debate. Instead of the depressing climate, virus and Ukraine news, the Brexit debate in the UK is the joke that keeps on giving 🤗

  • @knightsnight5929
    @knightsnight5929 Před rokem +93

    The real issue here is that any vote to rejoin is mute, simply because the EU would never have us back. The block is doing very well with a queue of countries eager to join, when we were in all we did was cause trouble, they are well rid of us.

    • @annab9994
      @annab9994 Před rokem +12

      100% true

    • @thunderstorm4074
      @thunderstorm4074 Před rokem +1

      Where there's a hope , there's a way. Britain will emerge stronger.

    • @jakewright4394
      @jakewright4394 Před rokem +1

      ​@@thunderstorm4074 we always have two WW's prove it, the third potential one? nah we need a rest! damn tiring having to jump in and save europe so often and lack of gratitude - is very astounding!!,maybe we should be the bad guys for once? oh wait.......our pirates did that......but we DID clean them up eventually - the only nation that could manage it. ah the nostalgia! that was before we became the soft touch we are today and pandered to everyone elses needs except our own peoples.

    • @fredrit323
      @fredrit323 Před rokem +18

      In fact, just remembering those last european Parliament sessions in Brussels with Farage and Widdecombe insulting EU mp's laughing and waving the Union Jack, is enough, not to mention all the moaning that went on for years...

    • @zurbluk
      @zurbluk Před rokem +20

      @@jakewright4394 the sentence "maybe we should be the bad guys for once" pronounced by a Brit in 2023 is so epically ironic in a least 65 countries it deserves it's own John Oliver segment

  • @patmcstuff671
    @patmcstuff671 Před rokem +97

    Biggest self inflicted wound I’ve ever witnessed, people don’t understand when they have it good

    • @viper_fan
      @viper_fan Před rokem

      You now can use patriotic imperial units, and no one will torture and kill you for it!!
      *God shave the king!!!!!*

    • @billfrehe6620
      @billfrehe6620 Před rokem +4

      @@Buckets1000 All very true. The exit of Angela Merkel left a massive power vacuum which the UK should have easily filled. We should be looking at an EU dominated by the UK both economically and militarily right now. Instead, we've got a pathetically weak UK on the verge of further disintegration when Scotland takes independence. France has stepped in to fill the EU leadership role in the Western EU while Poland has taken the same role in the Eastern EU. Meanwhile, the UK is now labeled sick-man of Europe.

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před rokem

      Cringe.
      There half a million self inflicted wounds in ukr from deciding to be in the e.ů.
      You would prefer that would you?

    • @COMEINTOMYWORLD
      @COMEINTOMYWORLD Před rokem +1

      You clearly have no idea about what you are talking about.

    • @jonsnow7092
      @jonsnow7092 Před rokem

      @@richardgallagher4880 stfu you putinistic boy. Ukraine is fighting for its real independence, they're tired of having a russian boot on their necks, keeping them poor and controlling their corrupt politicians. they've suffered for 20 years after the fall of USSR and since the fleeing of Yushcenko, they're in a war with Russia. This war is the big test for the nation of Ukraine. They win, they truly get out of russian influence and they can join the EU family. If they fail, Russia will continue to control them and slowly but surely grind their territory.
      Personally, I hope to see Ukraine, Moldova and Scotland in EU, Ireland whole; and England out.

  • @reza310
    @reza310 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks God , now we can stop hearing brita who blamed EU for their shortcomming.

  • @Runner899
    @Runner899 Před 8 měsíci +2

    America, Canada, and Mexico have a partnership in trade, it helps businesses produce more goods while consumers benefit from lower prices, Britain leaving the EU is like America leaving NAFTA.

    • @michaelmazowiecki9195
      @michaelmazowiecki9195 Před 7 měsíci

      Rather Canada leaving NAFTA as the USA is the economic giant. The UK was not the economic giant of the EU.

  • @dominicpeterson8362
    @dominicpeterson8362 Před rokem +422

    Covid hasn’t helped! But as someone who was about 6 months too young to vote, I know everyone in my year at school was wanting to stay. Definitely the youth getting mugged by the elderly.
    Also the poor Scottish who’s majority vote was to remain.

    • @geoffbirchall7552
      @geoffbirchall7552 Před rokem +8

      Shame you don’t remember the time when Britain was independent of Europe.

    • @markgallagher5908
      @markgallagher5908 Před rokem +90

      @@geoffbirchall7552 When the UK was last independent from Europe it was known as the sick man of Europe it is quickly returning to that situation.

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Před rokem

      @@geoffbirchall7552 Oh, sweetie. You realize your inability to present a single way in which your mawkish nostalgia actually possessed any material benefits demonstrates both that you know you can't support your white-supremacist Brexiteer nonsense and that you're too cowardly to cop to your obvious lies?

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Před rokem +39

      The Scottish, whose vote not to pursue independence was also explicitly based on a promise from David Cameron and the Tories that the UK would not leave the EU.

    • @1957hackie
      @1957hackie Před rokem +16

      @@geoffbirchall7552 Looke it up..Sick man of Europe

  • @namevorname1973
    @namevorname1973 Před rokem +167

    I left the uk after 17 years and Brexit had a huge contribution in my decision making. And now I can clearly see that that was my best decision I ever made. Whilst in the EU , UK was somehow manageable and one could live there. After leaving the EU, it is a hostile peace of land. The EU should be grateful to Brits it has this headache ticked off. And this headache is called the UK.

    • @ct5625
      @ct5625 Před 9 měsíci +17

      I'm a Brit and I'm inclined to agree with you. Our country is a hostile place thanks to the morons who did this and I don't imagine it's going to get much better any time soon. The EU is much better off without us.
      My only hope is that the next generation is able to reject the hatred, racism and ignorance of their parents and take the country forward again.

    • @Adamsamsm
      @Adamsamsm Před 9 měsíci +5

      You're so deluded "it's a hostile land" what are you even talking about?

    • @namevorname1973
      @namevorname1973 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Adamsamsm Your Priti Patel, Your Suella Braverman are evil women. Two faced like whole british society never liking to confront anything as cowardness is encrypted in Your British identity. Those 2 hostile, 2 evil women daughters to immigrants now attacking migrants. Thank God the EU is imposing new measures on You wishing to travel to get pissed mainly in Spain.

    • @michaelomalley392
      @michaelomalley392 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Keep a candle in the window for Scotland which voted to stay in the EU but was overruled by the much larger electorate in England.

    • @janeevans5132
      @janeevans5132 Před 8 měsíci +5

      I left the 2015 a i I could see how it was going to go. I am happily living and an E.U country now best thing I could do am so glad I did as looking at the U.K. from outside now it is not recognizable as my country anymore.

  • @xcoder1122
    @xcoder1122 Před 4 měsíci +1

    People keep saying that Brexit didn't turn out the way everyone expected, but that's wrong. It turned out exactly as everyone expected, that is, everyone outside the UK and everyone who voted to remain. It just didn't turn out the way the people who voted to leave expected, but they were living in a completely desultory bubble from the start.

  • @olaflieser3812
    @olaflieser3812 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Looking at it from inside the EU: So much fun watching the Brexit topic debates now, many years later.
    Only thing I have to remember: When I do visit the UK again, now I have to carry my passport (wasn't necessary before) ....

  • @WotsisFace
    @WotsisFace Před rokem +72

    Our government is supposed to represent the people, not live above us in luxury using our money, while we struggle to pay our bills.
    How have we let this happen? And why are we continuing to go along with it?

    • @Chris-xl6pd
      @Chris-xl6pd Před rokem +3

      Its been like that forever, what time in history do you point to that it wasnt like that?

    • @WotsisFace
      @WotsisFace Před rokem +7

      @@Chris-xl6pd I don’t disagree. It’s been this way for longer than my life. But what I said still stands..

    • @thunderstorm4074
      @thunderstorm4074 Před rokem +3

      @@WotsisFace
      What you said still stand , and will stand still for ever and ever

    • @Chris-xl6pd
      @Chris-xl6pd Před rokem

      @@WotsisFace I dont disagree with your sentiment, but, If its only sentiment then its no solution. Not saying I have one, just trying to point out the futility of it.

    • @WotsisFace
      @WotsisFace Před rokem

      @@Chris-xl6pd I see your point. I’m just hoping someone has the answer.

  • @Artistically.Autistic
    @Artistically.Autistic Před rokem +25

    Working at the London Stock Exchange and watching the Amsterdam Stock Exchange over take us. Then started up my own business and missed out on E.U customers, which means less tax paid and less money for the gov to spend. The UK is the sick man of Europe. Thank you Brexit.

  • @smellysam
    @smellysam Před 4 měsíci

    EU citizen, spent 7 years in the UK as a kid. I sadly cannot buy English things I love anymore due to the Brexit tax - that can reach 40€ for a 80€ purchase - no idea why a country would impose such hard trade sanctions on itself.

  • @olivierolivier6080
    @olivierolivier6080 Před rokem +53

    As said by a Lord, "if people were stupid enought to believe that leaving the biggest market in the world was beneficial for the UK, they deserve their fate". I feel though so sorry for those who opposed leaving.