How is that a barrier?But he knows that any trade deal, not just with the United States but also with India earlier in the week, is a further barrier to the return of the U K to the EU.
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How is that a barrier?But he knows that any trade deal, not just with the United States but also with India earlier in the week, is a further barrier to the return of the U K to the EU.
Under the single market regulations no EU nation can have new trade deals that are more favourable than those available to all the remaining nations. Since Brexit the United Kingdom has signed over twenty trade and tariff agreements with countries around the world. Each of these creates a higher barrier to any negotiation if the United Kingdom were to try to rejoin the EU.How is that a barrier?
Trump wanted us to accept chlorine chicken and steroid beef.
We declined to accept chlorine and steroid beef.
That's the part I was most concerned about. Our food standards should never be lowered.
Trump wanted us to accept chlorine chicken and steroid beef.
We declined to accept chlorine and steroid beef.
That's the part I was most concerned about. Our food standards should never be lowered.
Chickens are slaughtered, de feathered and gutted then rinsed in chlorinated water. The water kills off Sam and Ella. But not 100% so after a period salmonella reinfects the chicken.
In the UK and EU salmonella control starts in the farm and the process doesn’t involve rinsing dead birds. Salmonella is always present so after a period of time there is a level present likely to cause illness.
The US FSA has a more liberal policy on farm salmonella rates.
I can't be bothered reading most of the nonsense written on here so apologies if someone else has stated quite a basic FACT.
The US can try and export as much low grade beef, chlorinated chicken and out of date Tesla cars as it likes.
We ain't gonna be buying any of it...
Your reputation here, as it is across the vast majority of Europe, is on a par with pig shit nowadays. Want proof? Take a look at how well Mr Musk and his Hitler salutes car sales are going here.
Bloody bunch of clowns.
What is "chlorine chicken"?
^^thisChickens are slaughtered, de feathered and gutted then rinsed in chlorinated water. The water kills off Sam and Ella. But not 100% so after a period salmonella reinfects the chicken.
In the UK and EU salmonella control starts in the farm and the process doesn’t involve rinsing dead birds. Salmonella is always present so after a period of time there is a level present likely to cause illness.
The US FSA has a more liberal policy on farm salmonella rates.
To call it a barrier requires a lot of imagination. and amounts to nothing more than wishful thinking. No trade deal is a barrier. It is just something Britain would have to give up. When Britain joined the EU (then known as the EEC, we had free trade agreements with the whole of the Commonwealth. We imported Australian butter, New Zealand lamb and cheese, and even Hong Kong was in on the deal. None of that stopped us from joining because the EU market was bigger and closer. The EU also contributed to a number of projects that helped Britain back into a competitive world. These trade deals fall a long way short of the arrangements we had before. Giving them up would be hardly noticeable by comparison.How is that a barrier?
^^this
Edwina Curry and her campaign against salmonella in eggs! She dominated the headlines for weeks, demanding we improve farm standards enough to make raw eggs safe to eat. Every egg is stamped, so each egg can be traced back to the source. Chicken is processed fast and has a short use by date.
In cattle, growth hormones and the use of antibiotics as growth enhancers is banned. If cattle are prescribed drugs, they're taken out of the food chain until the drugs have cleared their system.
Oh, and some of your cars don't meet our safety standards either. We're not being arseholes, we just like to avoid unnecessary deaths and injuries. We have some of the safety roads in the world.
We do, but at much lower concentrations than your regulations allow. We allow less chemicals to be added to our diets in general.I admire your food industry standards, ours suck. Especially since the Government allowed food producers to "self certify" their products. After that happened food quality went downhill and we started having recalls (mostly for E Coli). Guess who processes the food? The same guy who also washes the dishes at your local restaurant. Because he's cheap labor.
Your water isn't chlorinated? At all? How do you control bacteria in the pipes and reservoirs?
We do, but at much lower concentrations than your regulations allow. We allow less chemicals to be added to our diets in general.
Getting sick from tapwater is almost unheard of, and everyone drinks tap water.
Our chicken isn't washed.So your chickens are actually "chlorinated" by rinsing too, just at a lower level?
This is beginning to sound more political narrative than truthful. Which is what I suspected given how food has to be processed in order to be safe for consumption by the public.
The same is probably true for the clamor against US beef too. I'd wager that if you really looked, somewhere in all of the noise someone is making boatloads of money from it. Someone not named Trump.
Our chicken isn't washed.
But the levels in tap water are nowhere near the levels in a chlorine wash.
Also, it's not the chlorine that's the major concern. It's that chlorine wash is used as a substitute for other measures which are legally required here. For example, eliminating salmonella from farmed chickens.
If you accidentally consume undercooked chicken, only the washed surface is free from salmonella.I see. Basically the gripe is about how the product is made safe rather than the actual safety.
I would like to see Salmonella eliminated and would certainly get behind a push to do as the UK has done. I don't see it happening right now for a lot of political reasons that have almost nothing to do with money.
And our eggs don't need to be refrigerated.The situation is similar in the EU, which is hardly surprising as the rules were identical until recently. Presumably they still are, as shortly after Brexit the UK unceremoniously turned many EU rules into British rules, which makes sense.
Another fun fact about the eggs. In the USA they have to be washed, in the EU, presumably also in the UK, they are not allowed to be washed. This is because eggs have a layer on the outside that protects them from salmonella and the like. This means that ‘clean’ washed eggs do not last as long.
But your fish do. So are ours. 80% of all herring are infected with threadworms. They die if the host, i.e. the fish, is frozen for 24 hours at -20°C (for those people who still use Fahrenheit for really silly reasons: that's a rough estimate of -487.76°F).And our eggs don't need to be refrigerated.
If you accidentally consume undercooked chicken, only the washed surface is free from salmonella.
If I accidentally consume undercooked chicken, as long as it's in date, I won't get as sick if I get sick at all.
This is not true. Farage wants people to believe it's true, but it isn't. The deal with India put's them on the same footing as Australia, New Zealand and fourteen other countries. It allows Indian companies to second workers from their Indian plants to fill gaps at their businesses in the UK without having to pay National Insurance. Those workers would still pay UK taxes plus a surcharge to allow them to use the NHS. It doesn't allow British companies to bring in Indian workers without paying National Insurance..
The UK/India deal opens the door to Indian nationals coming to the UK exactly the opposite of what stupid racist Brexiteers voted for.
Britain currently exports 5% of its steel production to the USA so it will help a little. When it comes to cars, It's no big deal we have gone from having a 3% tariff on British cars to a 10% tariff. My guess is that the manufacturers will take 2.5% hit, the importers will absorb 2.5% and the customers will see a 2% price increase. The quota is about the same as the quantity we currently export to the US and that market is forecast to shrink so it's not a problem. In general this much vaunted deal is a bit of a non deal all round.UK/US deal is good for cars and steel (what steel?) but still allows US tech giants to take their profits home.
UK was better off in the EU.