I don't understand what he says--he claims to have voted for 'Brexit' as a businessman, but in what way did he expect it to benefit his business, when it now doesn't? Then he doesn't seem to want to admit that if he could go back and vote again, he'd vote against 'Brexit' not only as a private person, who values freedom of movement, but as a businessman, too, but he doesn't say what he thought would be in it for his business in the first place. Surely that staff issue must have been staring him in the face all along?
But whatever, I don't think this is a very powerful video. All it seems to say is that he can't employ people on really low wages any more, and that he can't get shit beer trucked from far away. Someone could easily reply that people should be paid better wages, even if bar prices then have to go up (which I obviously realise is a bit cyclical), and that he should be stocking good quality locally-produced beer (courtesy of that nice Gordon Brown).
I don't understand what he says--he claims to have voted for 'Brexit' as a businessman, but in what way did he expect it to benefit his business, when it now doesn't? Then he doesn't seem to want to admit that if he could go back and vote again, he'd vote against 'Brexit' not only as a private person, who values freedom of movement, but as a businessman, too, but he doesn't say what he thought would be in it for his business in the first place. Surely that staff issue must have been staring him in the face all along?
But whatever, I don't think this is a very powerful video. All it seems to say is that he can't employ people on really low wages any more, and that he can't get shit beer trucked from far away. Someone could easily reply that people should be paid better wages, even if bar prices then have to go up (which I obviously realise is a bit cyclical), and that he should be stocking good quality locally-produced beer (courtesy of that nice Gordon Brown).