I've never met anyone who eats meat in the UK but refuses to eat it while on holiday in the USA.
Sure. UK holiday makers should plan to starve themselves i the US. This somehow makes sense to you? No, of course they don't. I am going to guess that UK holidaymakers in the US are sufficiently intelligent to realise that a brief ingestion is very different from a continuous ingestion. Is my guess overestimating the intelligence of the British?I've never met anyone who eats meat in the UK but refuses to eat it while on holiday in the USA.
How?
I've never met anyone who eats meat in the UK but refuses to eat it while on holiday in the USA.
You're not comparing similar things. It would be very easy to refrain from eating meat while in the USA. The gun laws and employment laws would affect everyone living in the UK: not something that it would be possible for a UK resident to opt out of.Not everyone who has been to the United States would advocate US gun laws, or US hire-at-will laws are adopted here either.![]()
You're not comparing similar things. It would be very easy to refrain from eating meat while in the USA. The gun laws and employment laws would affect everyone living in the UK: not something that it would be possible for a UK resident to opt out of.
You're not comparing similar things. It would be very easy to refrain from eating meat while in the USA. The gun laws and employment laws would affect everyone living in the UK: not something that it would be possible for a UK resident to opt out of.
No. I'm in favour of raising UK food standards to get a trade deal with the USA.Are you in favour then of lowering UK food standards to get a trade deal with the USA?
Wilfully missing the point. If USA gun laws were adopted here, it would likely increase the chances of UK citizens in the UK being shot or otherwise negatively affected by increased gun crime.Of course I'm comparing similar things. It's easy to avoid guns and being employed in the US while visiting there too.
Gun laws and employment laws would actually affect a smaller proportion of UK residents than food protection laws
Hear hear, think how much money I could make selling "dangerous electrical goods" and "child sweat-shop trainers" once we have freed ourselves of the damn protectionist EU policies.If and when a trade deal with the USA is agreed that means we do accept the meat products you're referring to, most people will quickly accept the new products. All the fuss right now is just another example of EU protectionism
Wilfully missing the point. If USA gun laws were adopted here, it would likely increase the chances of UK citizens in the UK being shot or otherwise negatively affected by increased gun crime.
If UK citizens wish to avoid buying meat sourced from the USA, they will partly be able to do so - by checking labels or asking when buying store-bought meat. Of course it won't be so easy to check where meat served in restaurants originated from.
If and when a trade deal with the USA is agreed that means we do accept the meat products you're referring to, most people will quickly accept the new products. All the fuss right now is just another example of EU protectionism - similar to the fuss about "genetically modified foods."
No. I'm in favour of raising UK food standards to get a trade deal with the USA.
And the 56% of people in Norn Iron who voted against Brexit and are now having it foisted on them?Look that is what the people voted for, who are you to try to end the will of the people? If Ireland wants an open border it can leave the EU too.
I don't need a passport to enter the UK from Ireland.I have a cunning plan for that. Check their passports at the border.
And the 56% of people in Norn Iron who voted against Brexit and are now having it foisted on them?
I don't need a passport to enter the UK from Ireland.
....and lower food standards will likely result in negative health outcomes for people.
Nearly everyone eats nearly every day, so even small changes are likely to have widespread consequences.
That's a gross oversimplification of the complexity of the food supply chain. One US-sourced meat of a lower standard than the current UK standard is in the supply chain, most people won't be able to determine whether they're eating it.
Of course people will accept the new products but then again people are prepared to buy all kinds of unsafe and adulterated goods if they think it'll save them a few bob. Part of the job of legislation is to protect the public from unscrupulous people and bodies who may wish to take advantage of them - and that includes foreign governments![]()
No. I'm in favour of raising UK food standards to get a trade deal with the USA.