Originally posted by scooterscot
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The way I see it this means, Article 50 was triggered, there's a time limit, or shall we say a cut off period, a period at the end of which, UK is cut off from existing contracts/agreements.
At that point, if by then new agreements have not been made then I assume the UK will fall into default Rest Of The World agreements.
Consequently this means, the Borders etc will be managed by the book.
And this means there are going to be queues either side of Dover and Britain's supplychain IS going to be affected.
This is the time to start thinking about prepping.
You heard it here first.
Let's be clear, there aint gonna be any oh they're our friends let's just forget it, this is a legal process with legal consequences and ownership and liabilities, and if the EU does anything than work by the book and rules/processes/laws in place they will put themselves in a vulnerable and liable position.
To make it clear for the hard of hearing, it's like writing to the electric company and saying you don't wish to continue the contract from date xyz, and then hoping they keep the electricity connection open. It aint happening.
Milan.
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