http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-36171266
Well done EU for helping save the public millions of pounds annually.
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-36171266
Well done EU for helping save the public millions of pounds annually.
Have you replied to any of the arguments yet in the EU thread?
Anyway this old recycled story that gets thrown up every so often, so easy to debunk.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-36171266
In addition to this, roaming charges are now being abolished across the globe: this isn't unique to the EU or Europe.Quote:
Originally Posted by BBC News
http://www.voteleavetakecontrol.org/..._we_vote_leave
Even if it was just the EU (it is not) and you had to be in the EU to abolish them (again, not) it wouldn't justify staying in and being governed from abroad. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by Vote Leave
i've been looking forward to when they're abolished completely. i used to be on EE and because i go home every so often i used to not be able to use my phone due to the charges or if i did i'd be charged quite a lot. although, 3 already provides data roaming for free across quite a lot of countries which is great for when i go home!!
You haven't debunked anything? All you've done is parrot the rest of the leave camp and said "well we could do this without being in the EU". Just because something could be done outside of the EU doesn't mean it would. They actually did it, so how about giving credit where it's due?
A while back EE dropped their charges but it just seemed so weird to be using my phone like normal there so I just kept it turned off the whole time still (apart from wifi)... it just feels wrong :')
as for the whole EU thing, the UK could decide to get rid of the caps if we were to leave the EU? It wouldn't make much business sense if we're one of the only developed countries with the cap still. Doesn't surprise me both camps will be using it as ammunition though...
Other than being a buzzword that has nothing to do with my previous post, what has democracy got to do with you blindly assuming the UK would remove roaming charges outside the EU?
Because the EU actually removed them? Any guesses as to what the UK would have done outside the EU is a... guess?
Because my friend as I point out time and time again whenever a policy is enacted - for good or bad depending on who you ask - that decision should be made by our elected representatives in our accountable parliament. Then, at election time, we can either throw them out if we do not like it or reward them if we do like that said policy. The constitutional principle that no government can bind its successor is at the heart of democracy and one which EU membership destroys.
If Britons want to abolish roaming charges (we have not actually been asked) then fine. That's a decision for Parliament, not one to be imposed on us.
@lawrawrrr;Quote:
Originally Posted by The Don
He's just trying to do that "ooOoOoo scary if we weren't inside the EU cos lyke unknown" thing when everything you said made economic and political sense.
Indeed if he'd have read the press release and the article it is clear HM Government is fully behind this price cap so you could even argue we'd have been able to do it possibly faster than the EU has given how slow and sluggish the bureacratic machinery in Brussels functions. Either way, it's certain it'd be enacted.