Stop crying, remoaners! There’s never been a better time to be British

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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2017 has been our best year yet, and 2018 will be even better.

I know that’s an unfashionable view. The official line is that we’re all going to hell in a handcart, that Brexit is crashing our economy, that Donald Trump is threatening world peace and that our living standards are stuck.

In fact, though, there has never been a better time to be alive. And there has never been a better time to be British...


DANIEL HANNAN Stop crying, remoaners! There’s never been a better time to be British

2017 has been mankind's best year yet and 2018 will be even better, and with Brexit firmly and comfortably on track Britain is set to reap the rewards in the years to come


COMMENT
By Daniel Hannan
30th December 2017

2017 has been our best year yet, and 2018 will be even better.

I know that’s an unfashionable view. The official line is that we’re all going to hell in a handcart, that Brexit is crashing our economy, that Donald Trump is threatening world peace and that our living standards are stuck.


There has never been a better time to be alive

In fact, though, there has never been a better time to be alive. And there has never been a better time to be British.

Let’s start with mankind in general.

People are living longer, healthier and more fulfilled lives than ever.

A whole industry depends on persuading us that global poverty is getting worse, but the numbers tell a different story.


Threats made by the Remain campaign during the referendum have been debunked


Theresa May's government made serious progress in Brexit negotiations with Brussels this year

In 1990, 38 per cent of human beings lived on a dollar a day or less.

Today, at equivalent prices, that figure has fallen to nine per cent.

You can take any measure you like. We are less likely to be ill, or to be murdered or to die in war. More of us can read. Fewer women die in childbirth. More kids make it to adulthood. More adults cast meaningful votes in elections.

In Britain, as elsewhere, life is generally getting better.


The economy has flourished, to the annoyance of remoaners


Some remainers continue to moan about the impact of Brexit

More of us are in work than ever before. We’re making and selling things previous generations never dreamt of.

Those economists who say that things haven’t improved in a generation seem to have forgotten how we lived 20 years ago — with no cheap flights, no wifi, four channels on TV and maybe the occasional Blockbuster video.

It is, of course, human nature not to see the improvements. Every generation, going back to ancient times, thought it was going through unusually hard days.

We moan about high prices without stopping to think that many of the things we are buying previously didn’t exist. We complain about immigration but rarely ask why so many people are determined to come to “austerity Britain” rather than stay in high-spending France.


Britain will be out from under the yoke of the EU in 2019

What of Brexit? Are we, as the Dutch PM announced shortly after the Leave vote, in a state of “economic and political meltdown”? Hardly.

To the visible annoyance of some Europhiles, our economy has continued to flourish since the vote. Manufacturing orders and industrial output are at 30-year highs. Unemployment is at a 42-year low.

Exports are rising. The Stock Exchange is at an all-time peak. The City of London remains the world’s premier financial centre and earlier this month Forbes magazine declared Britain to be the best place in the world to do business in 2018 — a ranking it has never given us before.

The threats issued by Remain during the Referendum turned out to be bunkum.


Brexit remains on track with politicians voting on bills to restore the supremacy of British laws

We have not each been charged an extra £4,000 in tax. Scotland is not leaving the UK. In fact, SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon has shelved her plans for an independence vote.

The Calais jungle has not been moved to Kent. Instead, it has been dismantled.

As for political chaos, while it’s true that the election result took most observers by surprise, Brexit remains comfortably on track.

MPs voted by a massive majority of 372 to trigger the withdrawal process, and the bill to restore the supremacy of British over EU law is now passing through Parliament. At the General Election, the parties that wanted another EU referendum — the SNP, the Lib Dems and the Greens — lost ground, while 85 per cent of voters backed parties that promised to deliver Brexit.


Scotland's Nicola Sturgeon has shelved plans for another independence referendum

Britain and the EU have sensibly agreed to guarantee the rights of people already living in each other’s territory, to avoid a hard border in Ireland.

Britain will meet some EU bills in the years to come, but a tiny fraction of what we would pay as members.

So what will 2018 bring? That’s up to us. We can now design policies to suit ourselves.

We can cut taxes. We can scrap EU regulations. We can ensure lower prices through free trade agreements with the many countries queuing up to sign deals with us.


Traditional blue passports are set to return after the UK leaves the EU in 2019

Being a free country means being free to succeed or fail. We could, I suppose, opt instead for Jeremy Corbyn, who regrets that the USSR lost the Cold War.

But I doubt we will. It’s not the kind of people we are.

We remain an enterprising nation. We lead the world in biotech, law, finance, education, TV.

We sell tea to China, kayaks to the Inuit, boomerangs to Australia.

We are as well placed as any nation on Earth to make a success of this century.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/52344...heres-never-been-a-better-time-to-be-british/
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Does the uk need trade with the eu?

You could say it does now, but maybe not in the future. That's because the importance of the EU to Britain for trade is declining year on year. Twenty years from now and it's likely the EU - should it still be around then - will be an irrelevance to Great Britain trade-wise.
 

Hoid

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 15, 2017
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Britain will decide who she trades with, not you.
the problem is that regardless of what they decide they will change their minds.

they have no problem deciding. Deciding is easy.

Its the living with their decision part that has them stumped.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
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Alberta
Funny how there's never been a better time to be Briddish yet Blackie constantly complains.

I think Canada is the greatest country in the world. I have no need to go to Briddish or American forums and try to sell it.
 

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
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Me, I asked the question.

All trade is good and the limits on it should be nil this in particular includes your closest neighbours.

You'll have to forgive Blackleaf. He struggles with the concept of transportation costs so somehow thinks the UK could compete with Malaysia when trading with Singapore, and that the UK can compete with Indonesia when trading with Australia, and with Canada when trading with the US or Brazil when trading with Argentina.

Any smart person understands that trade with distant countries should be viewed as an added bonus to strive for and not as a replacement for trade with one's closest neighbour.

Britain will decide who she trades with, not you.

I think geography plays a role in that too though. Of course the UK can choose to do like North Korea, exercise absolute sovereignty without compromise, and see how that will help its economy.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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You'll have to forgive Blackleaf. He struggles with the concept of transportation costs so somehow thinks the UK could compete with Malaysia when trading with Singapore, and that the UK can compete with Indonesia when trading with Australia, and with Canada when trading with the US or Brazil when trading with Argentina.

Any smart person understands that trade with distant countries should be viewed as an added bonus to strive for and not as a replacement for trade with one's closest neighbour.



I think geography plays a role in that too though.
Nonsense. Britain is, and always has been, despite the best efforts of the inward-looking EU, a global, outwards-looking trading nation.