Just had LBC on where James O'Brien was talking about why Leavers are still getting angry with the people who told them they were being lied to, rather than with the people who lied to them.
A caller rang in and said his problem with the EU is, it is toxic.
James asked him for an example. He said a farmer had told him years ago that they had had restrictions placed on them by the EU on the size of cattle herds, also milk quotas, which hadn't helped that farmer.
James told the caller that quotas for farming are no longer there. The caller said: still, that is one of many ways in which the EU has been toxic.
James asked for another example. The caller said, what about the large number of nurses coming to work for the NHS from the EU, when there are a million unemployed people here? He said the nursing vacancies should be being filled by UK-trained nurses, but successive governments have been bringing in EU nurses instead of investing more in training them here.
This caller only just managed to make his point, as James kept on talking over him, saying for example that the exact number of nursing vacancies is 43,000 so it's essential to be able to hire EU nurses.
It struck me that the caller had a valid point though. James eventually cut him off, as he often does (as well as talking over them) when a caller is in the process of winning an argument.
So, what do you think? Could investing more in things like nursing training (rather than filling the vacancies with EU workers) result in UK unemployment going down? Did this caller have a point, or was James correct to say after the call finished, "there is another example of how people have been misled" (ie, rather than admit the caller had made a logical point, he stuck to his position of, "so many vacancies means we need access to EU labour")
The way he kept interrupting the guy made him look quite rude; this is one of the reasons why, back in 2016, I decided not to take his advice.