Non-EU citizens can only spend a total of 90 days over an 180-day period in the whole of the European Union.

  • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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    11 months ago

    Firstly, fuck the Express and fuck that site in particular, turned my phone’s screen into Times Square.

    While the article doesn’t mention their 2016 voting, I’d love to see a Venn diagram of those who had the means and bought property in the EU, and those who had voted to leave. I suspect they’d not be far off a circle.

    I feel genuinely sorry for the outliers (edit: assumed outliers) who believed in the EU’s ideals and wanted property for whatever reason - work, family, whatever - and are getting horsed by the Blue Passport Gang.

    Anecdotally, a good friend of mine has British parents who moved to northern France, voted to leave, and are now shocked that new and harsher rules could possibly apply to them. The most frustrating part is that they’re absolutely blind to the prospect that they might just have pissed on their own chips. It’s genuinely saddening to see people put two and two together, and come up with “someone else’s fault”.

    • zurohki@aussie.zone
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      11 months ago

      they might just have pissed on their own chips

      This might be the most British thing I’ve ever heard.

        • littleblue✨@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Malt vinegar sours beefy quickly in open air, to the point that even after a single lunch rush at a chip shop, the bins reek of urine-like rotting vinegar… So, there’s that tidbit of trivia.

    • Weslee@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Lives in France, votes to leave the EU, fuck sake, these Brexit dummies make me ashamed to be English. Thanks for fucking over the rest of the country with your stupidity!

      • jpeps@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I genuinely can’t understand it, like I can’t even come up with a single plausible way these people could think this way. How could you live in France, in the EU, intend to continue to live there because you obviously like it, and think that your home country needs to do something different?

        • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          As somebody else pointed out above; “British exceptionalism”.

          I was living in Britain at the time of the Leave vote and the vast majority of the Leave “arguments” were anchored in some way or other on the idea that Britons and Britain would get special treatment because of being who they are (remember the whole “German car manufacturers will make sure we have a good deal to keep access to the UK market” argument?).

          Also I’m from a very touristic country and it’s pretty easy to notice the feeling of superiority of lots of Britons when they come here, especially old people.

          (The funny bit its that I ended up in England after years in The Netherlands, so ended up with Northern European standards and hence was less than impressed by Britain by the time I got there in 2006)

          Anyways, all this to say that it’s absolutelly believable that lots, maybe even most, of those older people who lived abroad after retiring (so never really integrated in the local society, as people actually working there would) did genuinelly believe the idea that Britons would get special treatment. I mean, here in Portugal they’re not especially well integrated but especially the stories from the Costas in Spain is of pretty much self-contained Little-England communities, english-speaking and with their own stores and everything, all filled with British retirees most of whom never go into the trouble of learning even the most basic Spanish.

          PS: Just to add that some Remainer arguments were also of the British Exceptionalist kind. Specifically the whole idea of “We should stay in the EU and change it from the inside” also reeks of “we know best” and “the EU will change to accomodate us”.

          • jpeps@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            That’s fair, thanks for your well thought out comment. I imagine most Europeans knowing your language can create a feeling of superiority.

            The brexit arguments were pretty broad as well in terms of what the EU would do for us, so I suppose there may have been a pipe dream of maintaining the right to travel and remain. Ugh I don’t think I will ever not be angry about the outcome.

            • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              I always felt it was more of a “big country which was once an empire” problem.

              Even my tiny Portugal has some level of “celebrating the greatness of the country” on account of what was done by people there 5 centuries ago (i.e. during the time of the Discoveries) and Britain’s “Glory Days” are closer in time, were even bigger and, maybe more importantly, unlike in my country were that kind of stuff is out of fashion because the Fascists were heavy users of it, there are frequent celebrations of past glories some way or another in British media and there is often a nationalistic slant in the reporting of international news (mainly of Britain being portrayed as more important and listenned to abroad than it actually is if you look at the coverage of the same news in other countries).

              It’s understandable when you’ve spent your life seeing international news being reported always with a slant that makes Britain seem important (which it isn’t anymore than other similar-sized countries, and often looks kinda desperatelly trying to ride in the coat-tails of America, the real important ones) and were the Imperial past is constantly remembered (nowadays, mainly with films and TV series), one ends up believing “we’re special” and that was easilly weaponized by the Leave campaign and is still weaponized by the Tories.

              Most Brexiter arguments wouldn’t at all be believable for those with a realistic and informed view about Britain’s position in the World, the view of Britain abroad and the balance of power between the rest of the EU and the UK.