Max Power
Established Member
I voted out and would do the same again . We went into a mutually beneficial trading block ,It has changed beyond all recognition to the point where we are in danger of no longer being an independent nation .
Random Orbital Bob":3f89zc2c said:Not sure about post factual politics, we certainly have entered a very strange era in politics when people scream from the rooftops what they think they want and then when they get it, reject it out of hand.
Steve Maskery":12rxsp64 said:But is it really democratic when the person with the most votes doesn't actually get elected? Arguably not, I'd say.
Staying in and reforming from within would seem to be the sensible thing to do.RobinBHM":22r37s11 said:Maybe we dont have an easy solution to exit the EU.
However neither did the UK sign up to become a federal Europe which is the ideal of European Parliament.
The Eurozone countries joined single currency without meeting the requirements and there are serious fundamental underlying issues with Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy and soon France all with serious financial problems. Not to mention the Deutsche bank crisis.
The EU and especially the Single currency Eurozone needs reform.
The Remainers who believe it is all a mess and wont work need to consider the long term dangers of staying in a EU that wont want to reform, in or out I dont think there is an easy path.
One side won an advisory commitment to an impossible plan.Mr_P":3d9okxdu said:Pretty sure the anti-mooners would have provided a decent economic arguement against such a plan. A trip to the moon for the weekend would be nice but the logistics of taking 65 million would be eye watering, make HS2 and third runaway look like a walk in the park. On the bright side he would have been laughed out politics a lot sooner.
Get over it Remoaners, we have voted. One side won and the other lost. It will take more than a bit of reductio absurdum to get a second ref.
I think Smith is being forgotten even faster than Cameron! They'll feature in pub quizzes soon - who were labour leadership contender and PM in 2015/16? Dunno never erd of eever of em!Mr_P":3ve3zku7 said:..
Sounds like you lost twice, Owen Smith was the the perfect candidate for Jeremy anyway.
Random Orbital Bob":u9ytr2zr said:You have to love the irony of the leavers who claim their vote was in support of parliamentary sovereignty don't you?
The recent legal case unequivocally ruled that it is unlawful for anything other than parliamentary sovereignty (ie correct due process) to trigger A50.
So now, you literally couldn't ask for a more clear definition of precisely what that sovereignty means....but...nope....not good enough...scrap that...we want the will of the people to over-ride it. Not sure about post factual politics, we certainly have entered a very strange era in politics when people scream from the rooftops what they think they want and then when they get it, reject it out of hand.
They were asked to adjudicate on the law as it stands. They had no opinion at all about the issues - it was only about the law - which says pretty clearly that ultimately Parliament decides. Thus we regain out sovereignty instead of allowing a minority of the voting population to force through their project.Cheshirechappie":21ja085n said:.... It also seems a bit bemusing that Judges get on their high horses when they effectively tell 17.4 million people that their votes don't really count....
No we don't. We know only what a voting majority thought in September. A much larger group were silent or against brexit... we do know what the Silent Majority thinks about the UK's membership of the EU.
The wise thing to do is to sort out what's best for Britain and do it democratically via Parliament. Force doesn't come into it - it's an obligation - it's why we have Parliament and electionsIt would be unwise of the establishment to ignore that and try to thwart it, I think.
Cheshirechappie":3399zxke said:Since the referendum, I've been trying to understand both sides of the argument to some degree.
RossJarvis":fck9x69w said:.....It's only when a single, yes/no issue is massively beaten up and put to the people that it seems like there is a divide over a single issue and maybe it has been created by the process (thank the likes of the sub-toilet-paper rag The Mail for doing this).
Maybe the point behind the Brexit vote and The Donald Trumping everyone else is not because the people are divided on certain single issues, but because everyone is divided over thousands of issues and given one yes or no choice we end up effectively tossing a coin.
RogerS":1lcq3heb said:I think that the lack of ability or IQ of the average voter to actually do any analysis of the issues so as to make an informed decision might have something to do with the result. Both here and in the States.
RossJarvis":1k7g1p5y said:Cheshirechappie":1k7g1p5y said:Since the referendum, I've been trying to understand both sides of the argument to some degree.
I'm not sure if there is actually two sides to this argument. It is, like the voting public a lot more complex than that. I think there are probably many people with differing views from all sorts of directions who voted leave and the same for remain. It's maybe easy to assume that because a vote is presented with a simple yes or no answer that people will have a simple yes or no reason. I dare say that some people with similar views on many things could have voted either way and obviously people with vastly differing views may well have voted similarly.
I personally have a fairly poor view of the political industry and its practitioners, on the one hand because they have a fairly limited understanding of truth and on the other because few if any of them represent me and my views on how things should be. No Party represents me and probably never will.
A few years ago I'm sure more people felt it easy to align with either of the two big parties (or else smoked gorse flowers and wore Sandals so voted Liberal) but my feeling is more and more people feel unrepresented for lots of different reasons. It's only when a single, yes/no issue is massively beaten up and put to the people that it seems like there is a divide over a single issue and maybe it has been created by the process (thank the likes of the sub-toilet-paper rag The Mail for doing this).
Maybe the point behind the Brexit vote and The Donald Trumping everyone else is not because the people are divided on certain single issues, but because everyone is divided over thousands of issues and given one yes or no choice we end up effectively tossing a coin.
RogerS":310u3a3j said:RossJarvis":310u3a3j said:.....It's only when a single, yes/no issue is massively beaten up and put to the people that it seems like there is a divide over a single issue and maybe it has been created by the process (thank the likes of the sub-toilet-paper rag The Mail for doing this).
Maybe the point behind the Brexit vote and The Donald Trumping everyone else is not because the people are divided on certain single issues, but because everyone is divided over thousands of issues and given one yes or no choice we end up effectively tossing a coin.
I think that the lack of ability or IQ of the average voter to actually do any analysis of the issues so as to make an informed decision might have something to do with the result. Both here and in the States.
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