I've recently discovered
David Wilks YouTube channel, and was pleasantly surprised to see he's fair local to me and doing really interesting stuff, sharing his knowledge of deep-hole boring and trepanning, which is something of a black art in the machining world.
Well worth watching!
Edit:
After reading
@RobinBHM's comments, I feel like this should be titled
"What Brexit can tell us about UK Government's attitude to supporting British industry" because the Brexit and Europe angles are both irrelevant to the core issue...
Whenever the government is faced with a need to do something meaningful to support UK industry they dither for a bit, then do nothing of substance, whenever they talk about UK PLC or the Leveling Up agenda, there's no coherent policy behind the words which will drive that. Both of which I find deeply frustrating.
However, going through his back catalogue, I found he's been
slowly selling off his equipment, and dissolving his business.
I've linked to the relevant bit, but to quote the video:
"The Brexit was the start of it.
Brexit absolutely destroyed the engineering business, in, I don't know about the rest of England, but Sheffield took a massive beating."
Which just re-ignited my fury from 4 years ago.
Now don't get me wrong I was firmly in the remain camp during the referendum; but my nose was not unduly bent out of shape by that decision, it happened and the world had to keep moving; I was willing to be convinced that Brexit could be a good thing.
It's what came next (or didn't, to be precise) which got my blood boiling...
In the weeks after the referendum, once the pound devalued, I could see that there was an opportunity, and if played right the decision to exit the EU, and the associated rebalancing of the pound on a more logical footing with the dollar and euro offered massive potential for the UK to revitalise it's manufacturing industry and body the economy with national export growth.
We announced a new element of "industrial strategy" within government, and I thought "Great, they're really going to do it, this could be the UK's chance to emulate the success of Korea in the 70 & 80's!"
But as time wore on within a month or two, I could see nothing was happening, the political optics and the need to win on an ideological level was trumping the practical steps which needed to be taken immediately in order to lay the groundwork to make the most of what opportunities Brexit could offer, and the capacity within the civil service which should have been moving heaven and earth to prepare that, was being wasted on endless to-ing and fro-ing due to constant government changes of direction (and leadership).
- No-one in power was making a positive case for how we could re-make Britain and it's place within the world.
- The planning for and investment in infrastructure and capacity building which needed to be happening "rIght now!" was nowhere to be seen, and
- No short to medium term support for otherwise strong businesses which were being hit by the investment uncertainty and currency fluctuations was forthcoming.
By four months in, I was sick of being told that Brexit was "the will of the people", whilst seeing previously profitable businesses (including customers and suppliers of mine who I had excellent working relationships with) restructuring or dissolving entirely because of adverse trading conditions, and talking to friends who were losing their jobs directly as a result of the lack of clarity about the future.
I'd forgotten all that with time, become ennured to the medium term damage, come to let the BS from our elected representatives & the newspapers wash over me, and accepted that this was our lot as a nation.
But watching that video brought it all back, and I'm still irked by how things have played out, in the end pragmatically having a foot in both camps was more torture than just picking a side and sticking to it.
Rant Over.