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2021-03-17
, 13:51
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Posts: 2 |
Thanked: 8 times |
Joined on Mar 2021
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#12
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2021-03-17
, 17:34
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Posts: 807 |
Thanked: 1,589 times |
Joined on Aug 2014
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#13
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"Unfortunately it is no longer possible to purchase a Sailfish X licence in the UK due to Brexit.
Jolla Team"
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2021-03-17
, 22:54
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Posts: 1,038 |
Thanked: 3,980 times |
Joined on Nov 2010
@ USA
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#14
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2021-03-19
, 13:56
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Posts: 106 |
Thanked: 313 times |
Joined on Mar 2019
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#15
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Can we leave politics out of this, please?
Look at it from an individual business' point of view. International trade has challenges. You have to deal with different rules
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2021-03-19
, 16:12
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Posts: 6,447 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#16
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All these things aren't some law of physics; they are the product of politics, and that is the product of an interventionist ideology.
Free trade is: you want to buy and I want to sell and no politician interferes.
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2021-03-20
, 08:27
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Posts: 106 |
Thanked: 313 times |
Joined on Mar 2019
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#17
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Indeed. Hence my follow-up post.
Absolutely! ALL human interaction follows rules made up by humas. You can say it is all the product of some ideology or other. Including the unregulated, free market you advocate.
But let's have a look at a few achievements of a such an "interventionist ideology"-free utopia:
- Slavery
- 14 hours per day, 6 days a week work
- 5-year-old children climbing up chimnies or down mine shafts because they are small enough to fit
- Workers getting crushed, losing hearing or contracting lung cancer because there si no "political interference" forcing their employers to provide safety harnesses, ear protection or respiratory masks
- Radium girls
- DDT, smog, acid rain, global warming, plastic gyre, leaded petrol, ozone hole...
- The 2008 financial crash!
- Pensioners freezing to death because they cannot afford the heating bills
- Food banks popping up all over the country (I know about the UK and the US, not so much about others), because people with jobs do not earn enough to feed their families
It is interesting to observe how the proponents of "free this" and "free that" like to forget that part of freedom is also, "I do not want to buy from you or sell to you." (Or, in case of the so-called "free speech", replace "buy from and sell to" with "listen to".)
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2021-03-21
, 03:16
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Posts: 1,038 |
Thanked: 3,980 times |
Joined on Nov 2010
@ USA
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#18
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2021-03-21
, 08:34
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Posts: 106 |
Thanked: 313 times |
Joined on Mar 2019
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#19
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availability, sailfish x |
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That being said, I disagree to many points from @switch-hitter
This is probably because I am an economist :P
I believe Brexit was not mostly based on economics. All economic reasoning that have been used to convince people for brexit were/are mostly excuses to justify something based on politics.
The view of Martin Sandbu is quite balanced I believe (even though I am sure the FT is viewed and played the card against brexit):
The UK gained more autonomy but what is it good for? (https://www.ft.com/content/8c0aaf62-...5-2b14d1ae342d)