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[Closed] EU Referendum - are you in or out?

 igm
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Ninfan - much as I revere Tony as a British political icon his view here is irrelevant. Referenda have very little place in a mature democracy. Also his time has gone, past, prologue - he is as relevant now as James VI.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:04 am
 mrmo
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in the words of Farage 52/48 is unfinished business. So quite clear that there is no mandate.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:05 am
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"the shambolic mess of the tory policy on this cannot stand up to any scrutiny"

LOL, you can't blame the parties for this. This shabolic mess is directly down to us, the people.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:07 am
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tjagain - Member
One thing to consider - why is May so determined to stop any debate in the Commons? MY guess it is because she knows the shambolic mess of the tory policy on this cannot stand up to any scrutiny.
She has the mandate so should not be bog down by irrelevant delays that is my interpretation.
slowoldman - Member
So here are the judges who will decide on the appeal
Supreme Court Judges
Let's see if these judges apply common sense this time.
Shackleton - Member

Let's just leave it at our last forum exchanges as I think both of us have provided both sides of the story.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:11 am
 igm
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Thought you'd gone to bed Chewkw

By the way judges are employed to apply the law not common sense (whatever that way actually be). They may apply common sense in interpreting the law, but law is where it's at.

Don't worry I'm sure the MPs will support you're rather extremist views


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:12 am
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wow the world really has gone topsy turvy

ninfan using Benn over Thatcher who said referendums were

“a device of dictators and demagogues.”


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:13 am
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mrmo - Member
in the words of Farage 52/48 is unfinished business. So quite clear that there is no mandate.
He is just being "conservative", polite and respectful of the Brexit victory when he said that. He knows and we know Brexit has won big time. It is not an election. It IS a Referendum.

Brexit Won a Referendum. It can only happen Once in a lifetime. I suspect most will not see similar referendum again because EU will disintegrate in the near future.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:14 am
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Referenda have very little place in a mature democracy.

You're mistaking 'representative democracy' for the same thing as 'mature democracy'

You only need to look at Switzerland to see a functioning, mature democracy that embraces referenda successfully.

KImbers - actually, Attlee said that, Fatch just agreed with him


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:16 am
 igm
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"Big time" 😆


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:16 am
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No, as Tony Benn pointed out regards EU referenda, those elected to parliament are lent powers, by the people, to use on their behalf, and they have no right to hand those powers away to somebody else (the EU). His contention was that only the people could do that.

I think you're deliberately disingenuous. You know as well as I do that this is about trying to use non-parliamentary methods to overturn domestic, UK law.

It doesn't matter how they became law; they [i]are[/i] law. Their provenance is an irrelevance.

Your latest argument is as follows: as these laws were enacted as a result of our agreements with Europe, and as I have decided that this was an unfair handing-over of power, therefore those laws are null.

Nonsense.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:17 am
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As you haven't gone to bed, and especially as you've made a point of responding to me for most of the evening, I'd like you to prove where I've not accepted the referendum result. You're big on wanting things proven, so this'll be easy for you.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:18 am
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He is just being "conservative", polite and respectful of the Brexit victory when he said that. We know Brexit has won big time.

Apart from Farage saying it when he was worried he would lose before the vote.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:20 am
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igm - Member
"Big time"
Yes, big time. Do you know why? If you win an election it is just for short term perhaps lasting one term or two and three if you are good.

Win a Referendum, on the other hand, is like winning an election that last forever.

You will not have similar referendum in this life and perhaps anymore if EU is no longer viable.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:21 am
 igm
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Ninfan - is that the same Switzerland that are tying themselves in knots over the 2014 referendum on freedom of movement of labour? I rest my case


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:21 am
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You only need to look at Switzerland to see a functioning, mature democracy that embraces referenda successfully.

yeah look how well their last EU referndum worked out for them, booted out of erasmus and science programmes badly affected
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/22/switzerland-votes-for-compromise-to-preserve-relations-with-eu


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:22 am
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Yes, big time. Do you know why? If you win an election it is just for short term perhaps lasting one term or two and three if you are good.
Win a Referendum, on the other hand, is like winning an election that last forever.

I'd still like to know what Britain has won. I can see politicians and their cronies are winning in a fairly narrow sense, but the UK? Not looking like winners so far.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:23 am
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igm - Member
By the way judges are employed to apply the law not common sense (whatever that way actually be). They may apply common sense in interpreting the law, but law is where it's at.

It is about applying common sense in law.

Common sense says if judges overturn the will of the people and the referendum result then they are no longer applying common sense in law. If they do that then they have just made a mockery out of the law, Govt and the British. You lot will look foolish if the judges do that.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:27 am
 igm
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Maybe we'll leave the EU and may be we won't - I don't know and to be honest I'm starting not to care. Maybe the wreckers who want to destroy Britain, Fox, Davis, Farage et al will win. But they will lose, for they will inherit a country half what it was. And most of the people who drive, or perhaps drove, the country forward to ever greater things will be disillusioned, disenfranchised and likely to be seeking other opportunities. To the lunatics, I leave the asylum.

I suppose it'll sort the net immigration numbers.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:27 am
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You will not have similar referendum in this life and perhaps anymore if EU is no longer viable.

You're right. I'd be surprised if anyone would get away with the same level of blatant lying again.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:27 am
 igm
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You lot will look foolish if the judges do that.

Why?

Do answer I'm starting to enjoy your stream of unconsciousness.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:30 am
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Posted : 05/11/2016 12:30 am
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Common sense says if judges overturn the will of the people and the referendum result then they are no longer applying common sense in law. If they do that then they have just made a mockery out of the law, Govt and the British. You lot will look foolish if the judges do that.

Probably just as well that they didn't nor have any intention of doing so. I'm so glad you finally agree!


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:32 am
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referendums are a very blunt instrument
reducing our relationship with the EU down to a yes no answer was a huge mistake

because as we all now know brexit means whatever you want it to mean

to get it down to yes/no the campaigns are forced to stoke populism to win their argument

now we have government in paralysis unable to decide what it is they want to implement


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:32 am
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jambalaya - Everyone inc Remainers said Brexit meant leaving the single market as per the video I posted weeks ago.

Everyone apart from Cameron's [i]Conservative Govt?[/i]

Honestly, A....revisionism is one thing, but-


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:34 am
 igm
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Shackleton- apologies, you are correct. I got sucked in for a minute.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:35 am
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igm - Member
Maybe we'll leave the EU and may be we won't - I don't know and to be honest I'm starting not to care.
The British people have decided to overturn the decision made by ex-PM Heath 43 years ago, so I think you should simply just let it go and go with the flow, otherwise you will be stressed.
Maybe the wreckers who want to destroy Britain, Fox, Davis, Farage et al will win. But they will lose, for they will inherit a country half what it was. And most of the people who drive, or perhaps drove, the country forward to ever greater things will be disillusioned, disenfranchised and likely to be seeking other opportunities. To the lunatics, I leave the asylum.
What needs to be done shall be done.
I suppose it'll sort the net immigration numbers.
Up to the Govt to decide really.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:36 am
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I'm actually surprised that the brexshitters haven't called for a second referendum. There was such a narrow margin the last time that surely they have demonstrated over the last 4 and a bit months how organised and by how much the UK will benefit and we can clearly see the EU quaking in its boots that a second referendum will give them the consolidating lanslide victory that will put this issue to bed once and for all.
Otherwise all I hear is the desperate bleating of brexshitters telling me I'm wrong.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:36 am
 igm
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How long before TM is former prime minister Theresa May?

If she loses at the Supreme Court presumably the honourable thing is either to resign or call a GE?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:36 am
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jambalaya - Everyone inc Remainers said Brexit meant leaving the single market as per the video I posted weeks ago.

jambafact #421

- in reality we had very prominent outers offering the norway & switzerland relationships as models of what we might negotiate


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:37 am
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I'm not sure that "common sense" is a good guide for lawmakers, what with it being a largely subjective term used by people to legitimise whatever their opinion might be about a given issue.

How about words like jurisprudence, sovereignty, constitution, democracy, convention?

No?

Cos' that might elevate this debate a bit above its current level.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:39 am
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If she loses at the Supreme Court presumably the [b]honourable [/b]thing is either to resign or call a GE?

Obvious flaw is obvious. Until you can prove that she is honourable, I'm saying she ain't.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:39 am
 igm
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Chewkw - not stressed. Personally I'm doing very nicely. Pay rise, more interaction with some interesting areas of our business. But I do care about those who are potentially about to get a kicking as a result of Brexit. I work in the north east and they are about to suffer "big time". The vulnerable always get the biggest kicking sadly.

On immigration numbers, have a think about what I might have meant, 'cos you ain't there yet.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:40 am
 igm
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Captain - sorry rookie mistake


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:40 am
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Thankfully the UK respects the rules of law, so whether it is common sense or not, parliament must have a say on Brexit.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:41 am
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captainsasquatch - Member
I'm actually surprised that the brexshitters haven't called for a second referendum. There was such a narrow margin the last time that surely they have demonstrated over the last 4 and a bit months how organised and by how much the UK will benefit and we can clearly see the EU quaking in its boots that a second referendum will give them the consolidating lanslide victory that will put this issue to bed once and for all.
Otherwise all I hear is the desperate bleating of brexshitters telling me I'm wrong.

Referendum is once in a life time.

No need to call for another referendum within this life time perhaps even forever regarding EU.

A win is a win regardless of the percentage margin and in this referendum Brexit won.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:46 am
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Where does it say it is once in a lifetime?
Lifetime of what, who?
And more importantly what did you win? ( I ll help you, control like UK laws by UK judges) .


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:49 am
 igm
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But he is a bureaucrat, not a Briton. He won bureaucracy in the great Faragista bureaucracy give away. Bureaucracy jobs for bureacracyish people.

Wow. It's like a drug this. Set you mind free and just string random words together like Chewkw. I can see why he's happy, the freedom. I mean it doesn't mean anything, but wow freedom.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:52 am
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igm - Member
Chewkw - not stressed.
Glad to hear that. Not taking the mickey by the way.

fin25 - Member
I'm not sure that "common sense" is a good guide for lawmakers, what with it being a largely subjective term used by people to legitimise whatever their opinion might be about a given issue.

How about words like jurisprudence, sovereignty, constitution, democracy, convention?

No?

Cos' that might elevate this debate a bit above its current level.

The first day I attended my law lecture the lecturer mentioned the term common sense many times regarding the application of law.

That is how the law is interpreted as far as I know. I ain't arguing with my law lecturer put it this way.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:55 am
 igm
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Not taking the mickey by the way

I am. It's fun

By the way your law lecturer, though probably less qualified than the former Olympic fencer, was right. And you listened, well done. Pity you didn't understand.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:56 am
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[quote=tjagain ]One thing to consider - why is May so determined to stop any debate in the Commons? MY guess it is because she knows the shambolic mess of the tory policy on this cannot stand up to any scrutiny.

The point most people seem to be missing (and I did kind of point this out on FB earlier!) is that an Act of Parliament has to go through both houses, and I have to wonder whether it's not the HoC she's so worried about. I don't think the HC ruling presents any sort of constitutional crisis in itself, but if the HoL refuses to vote through the bill we might have one then - and IIRC the Parliament Act isn't supposed to be used on constitutional issues (though we might need another court ruling on that one!)

BTW can anybody answer me the one thing which is bugging me about this whole process - why are you bothering to engage with chewy?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:58 am
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cchris2lou - Member
Where does it say it is once in a lifetime?
Lifetime of what, who?
And more importantly what did you win? ( I ll help you, control like UK laws by UK judges) .

If you apply the "benchmark" of the period of the last UK referendum on EU that was 43 years ago. For some this is a lifetime.
Winning the peace of mind if you must know.

Winning a referendum is like winning forever.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 12:59 am
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Referendum is once in a life time.

I take it that apart from this being the second eec/eu referendum in my lifetime, it's a once in a lifetime opportunity.
I can see exactly where you are coming from ( no I can't).

The first day I attended my law lecture the lecturer mentioned the term common sense many times regarding the application of law.

My law lecturer said that UK law is black and white! WTF do they know?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:01 am
 igm
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Chewkw - for all I know you're a made up internet character, but if you are the way you describe yourself (which I doubt), then you, personally, lost - you just haven't realised yet. I, personally, didn't. But I try to look out for people. Must be that socialist upbringing.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:02 am
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There's still an awful lot of presumptions about this referendum.
There were no real defined criteria, terms or conditions and everyone seems to have interpreted leave how they wanted. The problem is Its not a simple yes / no decision to leave..

There are far too many criteria and other effects with a decision to leave..
You cant simply leave, take back your freedom and have no more foreigners flooding through our uncontrolled borders and an extra £350 million in your back pocket.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:02 am
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igm - Member
I am. It's fun

By the way your law lecturer, though probably less qualified than the former Olympic fencer, was right. And you listened, well done. Pity you didn't understand.

Glad to hear that you are not offended. Good man.

Yes, that ex-Olympic fencer. He becomes a judge and also the other bloke being the youngest judge at 35 when he was appointed.

In that profession you need to be amongst the "inner circle" otherwise you will never be appointed as one.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:04 am
 igm
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Not offended. It's the tinterweb for goodness sake. And anyway I'm right.

Don't know about that judge comment though Chewkw. In most games, if you not being considered for top jobs by the time your 35 to 40 you're not going to make the top. So 35, yes it's young but it's not that young in the scheme of things. To be fair judges might generally be a little older than most.
My suspicion is if he was 35, it means he was / is good.

Buy the way haven't your views moved in 5 years! The stuff you posted about Egypt, not even half of the population. And now look at you.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:13 am
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Yes, that ex-Olympic fencer
they are indeed renowned for the way they climb to the highest echelons of British life. forget the bureaucrat maggots its those fencers we want to watch out for especially ex olympian ones.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:14 am
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It's a coup. He'll be emperor and Bruce Dickinson will be his enforcer. SCREAM FOR ME!


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:15 am
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igm - Member
To be fair judges might generally be a little older than most.
My suspicion is if he was 35, it means he was / is good.
Actually it was a controversial appointment apparently. Many judges (think it is that lot) objected but I guess not enough to overturn the appointment.

Buy the way haven't your views moved in 5 years! The stuff you posted about Egypt, not even half of the population. And now look at you.
Sorry man I cannot remember what I said about Egypt 5 years ago.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:18 am
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Junkyard - lazarus
Yes, that ex-Olympic fencer

they are indeed renowned for the way they climb to the highest echelons of British life. forget the bureaucrat maggots its those fencers we want to watch out for especially ex olympian ones.
Something tell me that fencing is a sport taken up by mostly public school pupils ... am I right? A very posh sport, yes?
Okay, he is a judge who is good at sport.
Northwind - Member
It's a coup. He'll be emperor and Bruce Dickinson will be his enforcer. SCREAM FOR ME!
Yes, the Iron Maiden bloke is a fencer too. 🙂


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 1:21 am
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It is about applying common sense in law.

In many years of interacting with you in STW, I've never seen a semblance of common sense in what you've posted, Chewkw. Not even once. With all due respect (and the amount of respect you're due, Goering would be scornful of), you're talking out of your posterior.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 3:05 am
 mrmo
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Referendum is once in a life time.

demonstrateable crap, the last was 40 years ago. so not a once in a life time event.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:00 am
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All is not well in the Conservative this morning. A few seniors MP not happy at the way the High Court is being criticised in the press and by some people in Government.

The whole Brexit process is getting worse by the day .


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:14 am
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The whole Brexit process is getting worse by the day .

No! It's getting better. You might have to squint to see it, but I'm sure it's getting better.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:16 am
 igm
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Sorry man I cannot remember what I said about Egypt 5 years ago.

Let me help you Chewkw, it was about given less than half the population wanted change, there should be no change.

Now I'm not sure I agree or disagree with you there, but that was your view.

do you just adopt the argument that suits you at the time, or do you show an honourable consistency of view like that ex-Tory who just resigned?

I disagree with him, but I respect his position.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:23 am
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Yeah an early election looking more likely, coz we need another round of bullshit campaigning mostly about Europe, and even more lies and division in the country 🙄


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:23 am
 igm
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We need a unity party led by someone not involved in the Brexit shambles - is Tony doing anything?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:25 am
 igm
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That wasn't serious before someone goes off the deep end


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:25 am
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Isn't that exactly what's he's up to?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:28 am
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So this morning our glorious leader is in India, preparing the path for a new trade deal. One of the things that India wants in return is 'more freedom of movement'.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:28 am
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And access to the single market via the UK.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:37 am
 igm
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5thE - yes. But come on seriously? Back in 97 I thought he was great, but he squandered his mandate, and took us into an unnecessary war (I'll leave debates on legality to others).

Brown on the other hand would actually be quite good in this situation. He was a manager not leader, by which I mean give him a clear goal and he was good at achieving it, but he wasn't good at setting the agenda.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:39 am
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So this morning our glorious leader is in India, preparing the path for a new trade deal. One of the things that India wants in return is 'more freedom of movement'.

Obviously. That was one of the key messages of brexit. Becoming international in outlook.

If we don't get the bulk of our immigrants from Europe it's pretty obvious they'll be coming from elsewhere.

Remain was (or should have been) the choice of the racist.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:41 am
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An unnamed former Tory minister also commented in this regards. The minister said: "You see the Germans and Italians easily exporting their engineering to India but it's harder for us given their restrictions on important services industries such as insurance.

So it's not so hard to "do business" and "take advantage" of these countries that are outside the EU, then? Even if your slap bang at the heart of the EU project, with the Euro currency and ev'revfin?

It's simply we haven't got the mercantile brains to make stuff that we can actually sell to them...


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:43 am
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5thE - yes. But come on seriously? Back in 97 I thought he was great, but he squandered his mandate, and took us into an unnecessary war (I'll leave debates on legality to others).

He won an election after the war. Normal people just don't have it very high on their list of things that matter. His subsequent money grabbing may be an issue, but I wouldn't be surprised if it isn't.

He'd do infinitely better than JC. Not saying much obviously.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:44 am
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[url= http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/politics/politics-headlines/shame-to-waste-corbyn-on-a-snap-election-says-may-20161104116602 ]why a snap election definitely wont be happening[/url]


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:44 am
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Let me help you Chewkw, it was about given less than half the population wanted change, there should be no change.

well that's not true - the ones that stayed at home where implicitely saying "we'll accept the outcome of the vote whatever" - so therefore they accept that the country wants change.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:52 am
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well that's not true - the ones that stayed at home where implicitely saying "we'll accept the outcome of the vote whatever" - so therefore they accept that the country wants change.

Quite a lot of people were barred from voting.

If they had been allowed to vote, it's quite possible the vote would have been remain.

Edit:changed "almost certain" to "quite possible" (over excited....)


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:57 am
 DrJ
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Following the Sun's lead I am going to recommend to the mods that usernames be prefaced with the words "foreign-born" where appropriate, hence "foreign-born chewkw".

https://medium.com/mosquito-ridge/a-readers-guide-to-shit-the-sun-writes-f5778a6a3ab8#.ctiu1rv5v


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 10:57 am
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well that's not true - the ones that stayed at home where implicitely saying "we'll accept the outcome of the vote whatever" - so therefore they accept that the country wants change.

Unfrortunately a statement like that will have chewkw demanding that you prove it. Otherwise it's pure bunkum.
You've not considered the remainers who stayed at home who felt that the expected landslide would still have happened without their single vote.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:01 am
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If forced to vote the most likely outcome would have been 52/48. Any other conclusion is fantasy.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:02 am
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You speaking for the 16-18 year olds, there?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:04 am
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Children? We don't even trust them to drink. Why would we let them vote?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:06 am
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What happens if you call a 17 year old "a child"? Can I stand and watch (from a safe distance) while you do it? 😀


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:09 am
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One of the few pleasures in life 😉


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:12 am
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"At long last, have you left no sense of decency?"


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:20 am
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Following the Sun's lead I am going to recommend to the mods that usernames be prefaced with the words "foreign-born" where appropriate, hence "foreign-born chewkw".

Ooh can I be hunky?


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:24 am
 igm
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turnerguy - it's in his posting history and he clear thinks that those who stay at home, of any age, supported no change. I'll let you two argue.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:25 am
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What happens if you call a 17 year old "a child"?

Experience tells me that they are. There are still a few who can maintain this status well into their forties too.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:25 am
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Whats the best I can hope for now, as a slightly-resigned Remainer?

Will I see full scrutiny, inc in public, of the Brexit plans? I know they're essentially non-existent but had hoped that this would allow me to interrogate my MP to have the 'plans' revealed for our consideration.

The govt will fight this by saying that it will give our hand away to Europe, of course. They've been saying that up to now anyway.

What I'm really hoping for is retaining single-market access.


 
Posted : 05/11/2016 11:30 am
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