Am I the only one that finds the OP astonishingly arrogant?
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Another Brexit "benefit"
(270 Posts)Those of us living in the EU are about to be deprived of the use of our Barclaycards as a direct result of the UK leaving the EU. Like many others who have retired to France, Spain, Portugal, Italy and other EU countries my income derives from the UK and I use my card to purchase items from the UK and also when we visit.
So, a hearty thank you to all you Leavers for making our lives just that little bit more difficult.
"Really? I never knew!"
Dear Ashcombe, your response reminds me of the old tale about the Free Church of Scotland minister preaching to his flock about the Day of Judgement: "Sinners will be cast into the Eternal Fires of Hell, crying, 'Oh, Lord, Lord, we didnae ken!'; and the Lord in his infinite mercy will look down on them and say, 'Ah weel; ye ken the noo!' "
I am delighted that you, at last, ken the noo.
Ignorance is bliss.
I shan’t squeal, I promise.
??
I do love your repetitive narrative varian when you always manage to shoehorn ‘pesky foreigners’ into your posts!
Another “joy” to endure this winter.
I suspect the ‘reality of the situation’ will not hit many until much later. When it does watch them squeal.
jaberwok well the oven ready deal has been proved to be half baked as we aren’t even getting the one promised with Johnson reneging on his own treaty. Making it up as they go along.
Bodach
"Do you remember that Barclays supported the apartheid regime in South Africa? Or do those of you who voted for Brexit support apartheid as a concept?"
I'm afraid, dear Ashcombe, that comments such as those above serve only to encapsulate and illustrate the muddled thinking, non sequiturs, wild generalisations and downright bile deployed by all too many of the "Remain" persuasion in their anger and frustration But it's no good slamming away at this particular stable door. The horse has gone. You really must try to accept the reality of the situation and move on.
Really?
I never knew!
There will always be credit cards available for all who need or want them. Banks really want customers - and like us to have them.
Many have no foreign transaction fees (or annual fees) and can be used internationally. There is no 'problem'' really. I just wouldn't expect to live abroad and use a UK one.
"Do you remember that Barclays supported the apartheid regime in South Africa? Or do those of you who voted for Brexit support apartheid as a concept?"
I'm afraid, dear Ashcombe, that comments such as those above serve only to encapsulate and illustrate the muddled thinking, non sequiturs, wild generalisations and downright bile deployed by all too many of the "Remain" persuasion in their anger and frustration But it's no good slamming away at this particular stable door. The horse has gone. You really must try to accept the reality of the situation and move on.
Language, law and medical so not engineering, no.
Puzzling or not, that's what happened. It was the early nineties, they were engineering students. Was Erasmus so well established then? I'm not trying to paint engineering students as insular, but were your students maybe from other disciplines? Would that have made a difference do you think? DH was very disappointed that he couldn't convince any students to venture over the channel.
So many of my students went to study for a term or year in EU, with Erasmus programme. Our eldest did too, and went with quite a significant group from her Uni. Sadly, this option will no longer be available for our grandchildren.
We know many too, biba and it's sad that this will be coming to an end.
It's why I found Alegrias's post puzzling, as if young British students are insular. That is not my experience.
Alegrias
DH worked in universities in France and here in the UK. His students always had the opportunity to spend a term at an institution in another EU country. Almost all the French students took it up, not one of the UK students did. I think that's very telling about our attitudes, even among the young.
Really?
I know several British students who spent time at universities in Spain, France, Germany and Sweden, several of them in our family.
That was one of the worries about the ending Erasmus scheme
Do you remember that Barclays supported the apartheid regime in South Africa? Or do those of you who voted for Brexit support apartheid as a concept?
That makes no sense.
Do you mean that those people who have a Barclays bank account or Barclaycard would be assumed to support apartheid?
None of this "you can only ask about one thing" because you have less than 10 minutes.
On this one, I do have to agree (!!) Dinahmo that French GPs are better at looking at the whole picture rather than just the isolated problem.
Jaberwok
We were NOT promised an oven ready deal, we were promised an oven ready W.A which we got! Spot the difference?!!
Well my SIL lived in France at the time of the referendum and after a lot of thought sold their house and moved back to England mainly for future health reasons. They certainly didn't have an issue with us because of the way we voted, and we certainly don't feel remotely guilty! At the time nobody voted for a deal or no deal, because we weren't asked! It was a simple IN or OUT. Surely anyone living in Europe must have realised that things would almost certainly alter and at least have put feelers out as time went on and make a few enquiries and a few contingency plans? after all there must be people outside the EU living in an EU country,? How do they manage?!
Funny that you should mention health. I went to my doctor yesterday and saw one of the trainees. I went because I thought I might have arthritis in my hip and lower back but her first questions to me were about my asthma. She thought that I should have different medication and gave me a letter for a chest specialist at the university hospital in Limoges. She also gave me a letter for z-rays and one for a physio.
None of this "you can only ask about one thing" because you have less than 10 minutes.
I do have to make the appointments myself but that's no big deal.
Jaberwok
We were NOT promised an oven ready deal, we were promised an oven ready W.A which we got! Spot the difference?!!
Well my SIL lived in France at the time of the referendum and after a lot of thought sold their house and moved back to England mainly for future health reasons. They certainly didn't have an issue with us because of the way we voted, and we certainly don't feel remotely guilty! At the time nobody voted for a deal or no deal, because we weren't asked! It was a simple IN or OUT. Surely anyone living in Europe must have realised that things would almost certainly alter and at least have put feelers out as time went on and make a few enquiries and a few contingency plans? after all there must be people outside the EU living in an EU country,? How do they manage?!
When we decided to move to France, back in 2007 there was very little antagonism towards the EU, apart from the likes of Farage.
At that time, aged 60, we just thought that, instead of playing golf and getting pissed in the club bar, we would have an adventure, which it has been. There was no need for contingency plans back then. No more than if you;d decided to move from Sunderland to Cornwall and decided that you didn't like it and wanted to move back up north.
We moved to France in 2008, 8 years before the referendum. There are Americans living here and they either have to go back to the States for a period each year or else they become French citizens. Most of the ex pat population here are from other EU countries.
biba70
So many of my students went to study for a term or year in EU, with Erasmus programme. Our eldest did too, and went with quite a significant group from her Uni. Sadly, this option will no longer be available for our grandchildren.
The son of some old friends went to Italy for a year as part of his 4 year degree course. His year there had lasting effects since he met an Italian girl, she got pregnant and they got married. Our friends are happy with their Italian rellies and now have a house in Italy. Their children are multilingual. Which IMO is a good thing.
Callistemon
I think this could be to do with money laundering and not Brexit, as it is the same for people in non-EU countries.
No it hasn't. We were checked for money laundering when selling our last house in England and transferring the balance to France.
I'm glad to hear that biba70. Maybe DH's students were just a stay at home bunch!
So many of my students went to study for a term or year in EU, with Erasmus programme. Our eldest did too, and went with quite a significant group from her Uni. Sadly, this option will no longer be available for our grandchildren.
DH worked in universities in France and here in the UK. His students always had the opportunity to spend a term at an institution in another EU country. Almost all the French students took it up, not one of the UK students did. I think that's very telling about our attitudes, even among the young.
My husband lives in France whilst my main home is in the UK. Due to the lack of availability of information on how life would be for British residents in the EU post Brexit, it is impossible for them to make plans. Barclaycard is one of the first organisations to actually provide information, be it unpopular with its customers.
Do you remember that Barclays supported the apartheid regime in South Africa? Or do those of you who voted for Brexit support apartheid as a concept?
But the leavers seemed to believe that freedom of movement was a bad thing because it meant pesky foreigners coming here, not us or our children and grandchildren having the right to extend our horizons and life experience by living and working in 27 other European countries
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