Dover...

Then there's this:

let me check

are you suggesting that laws which the UK implemented, conforming to the EU standards that UK used to play a major part in forming, should be jettisoned?

And we should do without laws on, say, food safety or car design?
 
control of what we do by virtue of the Civil Service (and others) who support the EU in every way they can
You are unfortunately part of Cummings gaming strategy: frame anybody as an enemy of brexit, then unite brexers against a common enemy.

Its a shame, but it is going to be almost impossible to have a reasoned debate with you because your beliefs in Brexit are built on emotions not on evidence.
 
part of Cummings gaming strategy
He isn't the only one. Trump, Boris. Farage. It's an attempt to appear to be a popularist which is how they work. That's pretty simple really in their case. People have beefs about various things, group them together and say they will be fixed when they wont / blame something that isn't really responsible for them what ever they were. Eg Hitler and Jews etc. A rather extreme example.
 
What are you all training about?
You all fell for the fake news!
There's nothing wrong, everything was guaranteed years ago.
FB_IMG_1658792243758.jpg
 
That 53% is from a dodgy online opinion poll.
All it shows is that 53% of those polled don't know what they are talking about.
As the Protocol has never been fully implemented, How can anyone offer an opinion on something which has not yet occurred.
You should have read your link before posting it.
Statistic from the same poll...
Quote.
But 55% worry about the implications if grace periods ended and the protocol was implemented in full.
Find another poll then. Until you do that's the best evidence we have, stop whining because it doesn't suit your assumptions.

Of course they're worried about the full implications, but they're presumably more worried about the full implications of a hard Border in Ireland and the inevitable reaction by the EU to us rejecting the Brexit agreement
 
The purpose of brexit was to “get back control”,
Yet brexit supporters are claiming the problem at Dover was caused by 5 Frenchmen turning up late for work.

Either

1) Brexit has not got back control
or
2) the problem at Dover is not due to the French

which is it?
You're taking the argument to the extreme which makes it nonsense.

Brexit was never about shutting ourselves off from the world or from the EU. Brexit was never going to result in us having control of people entering other countries and this case we we chose to allow French border officials to operate within our borders. However, that doesn't remove the liability of the delay from the French border control staff, or lack of.
 
tough

there is no alternative to the protocol so the childish DUP better suck it up and take responsibility for what they voted for
There is always an alternative, and i don't think the DUP voted for the withdrawal agreement.

The no alternative line is what the EU say, not reality.
 
You're taking the argument to the extreme which makes it nonsense.

Brexit was never about shutting ourselves off from the world or from the EU. Brexit was never going to result in us having control of people entering other countries.
I am most certainly not taking the argument to extremes

Weve had 6 years of this false argument that:

brexit will "get back control"
brexit will "get back sovereignty"
brexit will "get back self determination"

its all completely false, because unless we want the UK to be isolationist, we have to agree compromises with the rest of the world, especially the EU

by the way brexit hasnt got control of people or goods entering this country.

And I should add, Brexit liars like Jacob Rees Mogg stated explicitly that delays and queues would only happen on the Calais side not Dover
 
There is always an alternative, and i don't think the DUP voted for the withdrawal agreement.

The no alternative line is what the EU say, not reality.
oh come on, you are a businessman -you understand the reality
There are no alternatives

NI and GB are in different regulatory jurisdictions -that means a customs border. WTO concur
 
This would have happened whether or not we were still in the EU. There have always been passport checks at Dover, and if the one side doesn't put on enough staff to cope with the load, there will be delays.
There was never a need to stamp passports. So no, this wouldn't have happened if we still had freedom of movement. Some delays undoubtedly but not an average of between 6 and 11 hours.

By the way, no one has suggested that the booths were undermanned on Saturday, how well did that go again?
 
oh come on, you are a businessman -you understand the reality
There are no alternatives

NI and GB are in different regulatory jurisdictions -that means a customs border. WTO concur
There are alternatives, and i predict that in the next couple of years there will be substantial changes to the protocol.

The EU are playing hardball at the moment and claiming there are no alternatives, but there are and things will change.
 
This would have happened whether or not we were still in the EU. There have always been passport checks at Dover, and if the one side doesn't put on enough staff to cope with the load, there will be delays.
I’ve been through places where they just look at your passport or put it in a machine. I’ve also been through places where they look at your passport or put it through a machine and then stamp it. The latter always seems to take just two seconds longer. I can’t see that stamping a passport once you’ve inspected it can account for major delay's. Try it. Open a book, inspect the page and just before you close the book, thump your fist on the table and then thump the open page. See!

As far as I can remember in 'normal' times, at the start of most school breaks (but the summer break in particular), there’s always been motorway traffic jams as well as port and airport queues and delays. Add in the fact that not many people have been abroad for the last couple of years and a few lazy frogs with 'Le 'ump' turning up late for work and there was always going to be an increase in delays for travellers at the ports at the start of this summer break. It happens with holidays at peak times the same as it happens on the roads every morning and every evening. It’s called the rush hour. We should be used to it by now.
 
There are alternatives, and i predict that in the next couple of years there will be substantial changes to the protocol.

The EU are playing hardball at the moment and claiming there are no alternatives, but there are and things will change.
It will change and for the worse. When Biometric checks are required for passports then it's all going to get much worse. Currently that's forecast for September.

 
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