• Max_Power@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Years after, what else is there to say? The citizens were duped and they voted for this.

    • Th4tGuyII@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      And those of us that weren’t duped (and did actually vote) are stuck along for the ride, all the while knowing how preventable this whole mess was.

      For starters, some of the people voting to leave didn’t even know what the EU was, some voted simply because they wanted to spite David Cameron, and some thought it’d get rid of the “foreigners”. All absolutely dumbfuck reasons to fuck over the country by voting leave.

      Furthermore, a bunch of the remainers didn’t even vote because they assumed we’d win, which is also a massively dumbfuck reason not to vote, as by doing so they effectively voted to leave instead.

      To be slightly fair to them though, I’d too have a hard time imagining that there’d be so many people willing to vote so completely against their own interests based off almost solely off the words of two slimy rich bastards and a bus.

    • Zeppo@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      It was an incredibly stupid idea pushed by foreign propaganda and complete morons. So, it seems this is one example of what happens when people do something incredibly stupid.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Kimi Karjalainen and his brother Marko poured their life savings into Bone Machine Brewing Co when it opened in Pocklington, East Yorkshire, in 2017 before moving to Hull, as part of the craft beer revolution that swept Britain.

    Post-Brexit trading arrangements with European Union countries meant that Bone Machine’s craft beers needed to be accompanied by expensive and time-consuming paperwork.

    Bone Machine is one of more than 100 small brewers that have been forced out of business in the past 18 months, hit by a combination of Brexit, the pandemic and the cost of living crisis and now threatened by changes to beer duty laws.

    So while people were getting worse off, the multinational brewers were going to pubs, to free houses, and saying ‘we’ll give you cheap kegs, but we want control of all your lines’.”

    Other issues affecting the industry have been the shortage of carbon dioxide following the early stages of the energy crisis, and Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine which raised the cost of barley and hops.

    Larger companies have been doing well, including Brewdog, the Camden Town Brewery and Beavertown, which the Grocer reported had seen supermarket sales rise by more than a quarter.


    The original article contains 958 words, the summary contains 199 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Can I just add that a lot of UK craft beer firms went bust because they were started by a bunch of trust-fund babies with sleeve tattoos and no experience and their beer was disgusting over-hopped SHITE

    That would explain about 70% of this statistic

  • bomberesque1@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    but kimi kimi kimi, you set up a business in the UK… “heavily geared for export [to EU countries]” …. in 2017…?

    • toyg@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      There was no change in trade regulations until 2021. The UK government insisted all along that they would get “the best of both worlds” and “no friction”. While there was a reduction in demand from the EU side, acknowledged by most pre-established businesses, if you started in 2017 you wouldn’t have seen it.

      Kimi was a mug for believing lies from the UK government, or hoping/betting that things wouldn’t get as bad as they did. A softer, saner agreement achieving EEA-like status would have been fine for him, after all. But nope, we got our hard brexit…