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| Zitat von [gc]Fide|
Es ist irgendwie ein komplexes Meisterwerk. (das is keine inhaltliche Beurteilung).
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Schon.
Sowas wie die EU ist halt noch nie vorher gemacht worden. Und für den ersten Versuch, die Interessen von 28 Staaten auf freiwilliger Basis unter einen Hut zu kriegen, ist das Ergebnis ziemlich gut, finde ich.
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Ball, der Beitrag ist jetzt aber sehr boulvardesk!
Was für eine Schande. Wenn man aus der EU austritt, dann muss man sich bei der Einreiuse in ner anderen Schlange anstellen al die EU Bürger?!?
Das ist ja richtig gehässig. Naja zumindest nicht hilreich.
Ich hab da aber ne ganz pragmatische Lösung, die allen gerecht wird: Eine extra Schlange für alle Bürger des UK. Großes Schild an den Schalter: "UK-Express".
Und sobald alle anderen Einreisenden kontrolliert wurden, kann ein Beamter der Bundespolizei an den Schalter gehen und mit der ausgiebigen Passkontrolle beginnen.
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Wissen die, dass die nicht in der Express-Schlange stehen, weil sie so toll Briten sind, sondern weil sie EU-Bürger sind?
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| Zitat von [gc]Fide|
Ball, der Beitrag ist jetzt aber sehr boulvardesk!
Was für eine Schande. Wenn man aus der EU austritt, dann muss man sich bei der Einreiuse in ner anderen Schlange anstellen al die EU Bürger?!?
Das ist ja richtig gehässig. Naja zumindest nicht hilreich.
Ich hab da aber ne ganz pragmatische Lösung, die allen gerecht wird: Eine extra Schlange für alle Bürger des UK. Großes Schild an den Schalter: "UK-Express".
Und sobald alle anderen Einreisenden kontrolliert wurden, kann ein Beamter der Bundespolizei an den Schalter gehen und mit der ausgiebigen Passkontrolle beginnen.
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aber erst einmal Mittagspause
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| Zitat von Xerxes-3.0
Wissen die, dass die nicht in der Express-Schlange stehen, weil sie so toll Briten sind, sondern weil sie EU-Bürger THE GLORIOUS BRITISH EMPIRE, AN EMPIRE SO GLORIOUS, THAT NO OTHER EMPIRE SHALL EVER BE AS GLORIOUS AS THE GLORIOUS BRITISH EMPIRE sind?
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[Dieser Beitrag wurde 1 mal editiert; zum letzten Mal von Sniedelfighter am 04.04.2019 13:00]
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Unsere Rache für Heathrow!
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ich gebe zu ich bin nicht so der vielflieger, aber was ist an Heathrow schlecht?
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| Zitat von Sniedelfighter
ich gebe zu ich bin nicht so der vielflieger, aber was ist an Heathrow schlecht?
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Es ist leichter an passierschein A38 zu gelangen als dort ohne Nervenzusammenbruch in einen Anschlussflug.
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Anschlussflug. ne, danke. Ich bin froh wenn ich lebend aus einem Flugzeug komme, da muss es nicht direkt ins nächste.
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| Zitat von Sniedelfighter
Ich bin froh wenn ich lebend aus einem Flugzeug komme
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Na, aber bist du schonmal tot aus einem Flugzeug gekommen? Siehste!
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meistens deutlich älter, so vong feeling her. Also näher am Tod als vorher.
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Die Gespräche scheinen voranzukommen.
/Läuft gerade eh.
| Im britischen Unterhaus musste eine Sitzung unterbrochen werden, weil es durch das Dach hereinregnete. Das Parlament in London ist marode und muss komplett saniert werden. | |
#irgendwasmitdachschaden
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[Dieser Beitrag wurde 1 mal editiert; zum letzten Mal von -=Q=- 8-BaLL am 04.04.2019 20:13]
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Das hat schon symbolische Bedeutung.
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Geschickt auch den Begriff Parlament verwendet.
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| Zitat von Badmintonspieler
Das hat schon symbolische Bedeutung.
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jep. Wenn es selbst den Göttern zu blöd wird sollte man das Drama wirklich beenden.
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| Zitat von Fersoltil
Horter!
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| Zitat von Fersoltil
Hodor!
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ORDOR!
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"I May Not Survive A No-Deal Brexit": Disabled Man's Heartbreaking Call > >
| Brian told James O'Brien that he has a spinal injury and is unable to use his arms. He has two specialised carers to help him out and one is from the EU, meaning he simply doesn't know if he is going to be allowed to stay in the UK.
If Britain crashes out of the EU without an agreement, that means he may be without the care that he needs to live. [...]
"There's absolutely no certainty. My English carer has said he would step up, but there's a limit to how long one person can do it. It's a 24-hour job and I call on them day and night. If I don't have access to that assistance, then my condition very quickly becomes lie-threatening. Put bluntly, I would either have to check myself into the nearest hospital, which may not have the skills to provide me for the specialist care that I need. Or I check myself into the nearest morgue. If I'm left without care for more than 48 hours, then that's the situation. It's quite a stark place to be in." | |
--
| Work in the NHS.
People will die. No other way about it. We already have a noticeable portion of our workforce ready or preparing to upsticks and move to the continent.
On a social level, Im gutted and distraught. On a political and healthcare level, I'm fucking devastated. We cannot replace these staff even with already qualified people due to red tape and employment procedures etc. It'd be a minimum 6 months from today before you've filled one spot. We already went 6 months with one senior vacancy without even having the job put up.
We. Are. Fucked. > | | | I work in Pharma, we are stockpiling for all Brexit outcomes. The impact of not being able to supply life saving drugs isn't one I want to think about, we need to fill up EU supplies from the UK to avoid impacts there as well as the UK. Most of our products are made in the EU.
[...]It's not just isotopes though, it's all of the ingredients in a recipe. There are already shortages across a number of drugs, making it harder to import things here won't help.
Dropping to the "we won't check" doesn't help either as that just means we will see the UK flooded with counterfeit drugs. We have been known to joke that in the UK (and EU) we measure by the mg and in China by the shovel, can you imagine imports of generic white pills from ??? without checks? | | | If a no deal brexit makes it difficult for me to get an ample supply of the medication I need to survive, then it'll probably mean the end of me too.
I'm lucky in many ways. Single, not many friends, no dependants, so should no deal cause me to shuffle off then it doesn't leave anyone but me in the shit. The potential for a sudden & early death has been a constant for most of my life so I'm not afraid of it.
I just think it's quite unfair - not to mention sad - that irresponsible politicians are willing to put the lives of thousands at risk to further their own careers. T'was ever thus, however. > | | | Some of the deaths will be pretty quick but most of them will take a month or years. Diabetics aren't going to just die from their condition if they can't get insulin, initially, they will be increasing unwell, maybe the doctors have to amputate a limb and in the worst cases, they will maybe die a few months later.
The same will be true for Kidney and liver and other systemic problems that are managed with drugs, slowly the body will lose control and the waste products will build up and we will have a lot of dialysis, but some of those people won't survive. It kills the most afflicted, who are right now functioning members of our country but without the right drugs in months or a year will suffer greatly and maybe die.
On Monday I tried to get a common ear drop, have had it many times. Out of stock, none in the warehouses got sent back to the doctor to get an alternative, they gave me a list of ones they have. Been out of stock for a month apparently with no time scale for when it will be in stock as it depends on the result of Brexit, supplier won't ship in the current climate as has no idea if by the time it arrives if it will be the same legal climate. I won't die from soon, but it sure left me in pain for 2 extra days than necessary, wasted more Doctor time and I am using a less effective alternative. The shortages are already happening. | | | Depends on the type of diabetic. The complications you talk about (amputation) are more long term ones resulting from poor glucose control. But type 1 diabetics (and some type 2 diabetics) fully reliant on insulin can (and do) go into diabetic ketoacidosis within 24 hours of having missed your insulin, and that's a life threatening complication. It's management relies on intravenous fluids and, crucially, intravenous insulin infusions.
Chronic health conditions do have long term complications managed by medications, but that doesn't mean it doesn't co-exist with short term complications. If people with high blood pressure stopped taking all their medications their blood pressure would rapidly rise and potentially result in a fatal bleed into the brain. Patients with heart failure can easily decompensate without their diuretics leading to worsening heart failure, fluid retention, renal failure, and death.
All that being said, it's difficult to predict how badly Brexit will affect drug shortages. What we should bear in mind, however, is that drug shortages have been ongoing for a long time, long since before Brexit was a thing, and its causes are multifactorial and far from only a political/Brexit issue. We should be cautious before assuming that after Brexit we'll no longer have insulin and other critical medications and people will die. | |
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Uff.
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Das sind doch bezahlte EU-Bots.
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Durch die massive zusätzliche NHS Finanzierung wird alles in Ordnung kommen
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Farage im EU-Parlament. XD
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Endlich noch n Datum.
| Großbritanniens Premierministerin Theresa May hat die EU um eine Fristverlängerung des Brexits bis zum 30. Juni gebeten. In einem Brief an EU-Ratspräsident Donald Tusk hieß es, Großbritannien werde Vorbereitungen für die Teilnahme an der Europawahl treffen. | |
https://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/may-aufschub-105.html
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oha. Diesmal bin ich echt gespannt. Wird die EU blöd genug sein sich darauf einzulassen?
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Thema: Der Brexit ( Wird das UK die EU verlassen? ) |