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Farm Business
Politics, Covid19 and Brexit
Irish Border post Brexit
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<blockquote data-quote="Devil_0101" data-source="post: 5865346" data-attributes="member: 114666"><p>If you don't get it, the "good friday agreement" costs money, and both the UK and the EU are paying for it. After brexit what makes you believe the EU will continue to pay money to keep peace in NI? The UK will have to pay more money or eventually drop the land because it wont be convenient anymore.</p><p></p><p>This is the typical british policy, invade a land and tax them as much you can. The NI is under a dictatorship of taxes. The USA had their independent war because of the taxes the UK was imposing the them. It is called colonialism, and when you see the money you get are less then the money you give you drop the place like you did many times already.</p><p></p><p>"The Agreement assumes continuing EU membership for both the UK and Ireland but binds neither explicitly to maintaining that membership."</p><p></p><p>Are you in the EU and in their membership now? There is no agreement that says the EU has to pay especially when the UK wont be a member anymore.</p><p></p><p>"That High Court in Belfast declared in October 2016 that it would be an over-statement to suggest that EU membership was a constitutional bulwark central to the Good Friday Agreement, which would be breached by notification of Article 50."</p><p></p><p>This means that the article 50 is not directly linked to the "good friday agreement", therefor the brexit under a certain point might be "illegal" according to the agreement itself, therefor the agreement might end as not supported by the EU anymore. Regards.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Devil_0101, post: 5865346, member: 114666"] If you don't get it, the "good friday agreement" costs money, and both the UK and the EU are paying for it. After brexit what makes you believe the EU will continue to pay money to keep peace in NI? The UK will have to pay more money or eventually drop the land because it wont be convenient anymore. This is the typical british policy, invade a land and tax them as much you can. The NI is under a dictatorship of taxes. The USA had their independent war because of the taxes the UK was imposing the them. It is called colonialism, and when you see the money you get are less then the money you give you drop the place like you did many times already. "The Agreement assumes continuing EU membership for both the UK and Ireland but binds neither explicitly to maintaining that membership." Are you in the EU and in their membership now? There is no agreement that says the EU has to pay especially when the UK wont be a member anymore. "That High Court in Belfast declared in October 2016 that it would be an over-statement to suggest that EU membership was a constitutional bulwark central to the Good Friday Agreement, which would be breached by notification of Article 50." This means that the article 50 is not directly linked to the "good friday agreement", therefor the brexit under a certain point might be "illegal" according to the agreement itself, therefor the agreement might end as not supported by the EU anymore. Regards. [/QUOTE]
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Irish Border post Brexit
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