innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,418
As I was writing in another thread, it is impossible to negotiate with entrenched bureaucracies, or with the staff of institutions who has something to lose with change. The one way to deal with these things is to accept that they are enemies and behave accordingly.
If I was PM in the UK I would take a few months to build up customs and frontier services to greater capacity, prepare necessary legislation and make sure enough votes would be had in parliament. And when that was in place, I would just declare the Treaty of Lisbon null and void regarding the UK. And call the ambassadors or each and every EU m,ember country and offer them treaties on commerce, justice, and migration: take it or leave it. To hell with article 50 or exit negotiations with "EU officials": there is nothing to negotiate with them, they don't want to negotiate. The UK is there, right besides Europe, and each national government can either deal with it, or childishly start pretending pretend the UK doesn't exist.
They'd all come and seek deals. They must, weak as they are already - if one doesn't its neighbours might and gain an advantage. And the EU's bureaucracy and all its claims would be put in their place, exposed as the useless parasites they are.
And I strongly suspect this is how it will go in the end. The right move when the rules are stacked against you is not to play: dump the rules, throw the table, and attack the problem from a new angle.
If I was PM in the UK I would take a few months to build up customs and frontier services to greater capacity, prepare necessary legislation and make sure enough votes would be had in parliament. And when that was in place, I would just declare the Treaty of Lisbon null and void regarding the UK. And call the ambassadors or each and every EU m,ember country and offer them treaties on commerce, justice, and migration: take it or leave it. To hell with article 50 or exit negotiations with "EU officials": there is nothing to negotiate with them, they don't want to negotiate. The UK is there, right besides Europe, and each national government can either deal with it, or childishly start pretending pretend the UK doesn't exist.
They'd all come and seek deals. They must, weak as they are already - if one doesn't its neighbours might and gain an advantage. And the EU's bureaucracy and all its claims would be put in their place, exposed as the useless parasites they are.
And I strongly suspect this is how it will go in the end. The right move when the rules are stacked against you is not to play: dump the rules, throw the table, and attack the problem from a new angle.
