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2nd EU Referendum Petition…..
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iffoverloadFree Member
As if there never has been a political U-turns before…
it is pretty stupid to make a mistake and crash on regardless ecause someone might thnk you are a spineless moron…
..in fact anyone that does not admit to being a fool and making a complete pigs ear out of something and does not attempt to fix the situation is probably the biggest coward as well as a true fool.
crispyriceFull MemberThere has been a suspiciously uniform number of signatures being added to petition over each minute.
HoratioHufnagelFree MemberWhilst there was a consensus to leave the EU, there is absolutely no consensus on what next. If we join the EEA, we have technically left, but still have freedom of movement and free trade, but pay more money – how is that possible a good decision for anyone, leave or remain??
There need to be FOUR options
1. Remain
2. Leave – join the EEA (Norway)
3. Leave – set up bilateral agreements (Canada)
4. Leave – just use WTO.AristotleFree MemberIt was never about facts. It was about emotion and freedom from slavery, oppression and being sent to the gulag or something.
And foreigners. Mostly foreigners. And some people seemed to blame Muslim refugees from the Middle East
Intellectuals and experts were, of course,”wrong” -by definition…..
Throughout history angry poor people have tried to get rid of the “guilty” minority and heretics and Intellectuals, aided by dodgy people who offered solutions, but weren’t necessarily their friends.
History repeats itself.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberWhat happens if we have a second referendum, and we still have a majority in favour of leaving, however small, wrong or misguided?
Will those of us who want to remain get a third go? Best of 5?
inbred853Full MemberBBC – Second EU referendum petition investigated for fraud. You can’t make this stuff up, although some people will go to any lengths it seems! 😯
zokesFree MemberI don’t like decision to leave, but the democratic process WAS the referendum.
Not strictly true. The democratic process now involves the result of this advisory referendum being debated in parliament. Parliament has to act in the best interests of the country. Quite what those are is anyone’s guess, but I think it’s safe to say that they are not bound to simply ratify a result that over 500 of them disagree with.
imnotverygoodFull MemberWell, even if 3.1 million of the signatories are fraudulent, the petition still has enough to get debated by parliament.
Still lovin’ the fact that it was set up by a Leave campaigner. Talk about a potentially sore loser!!!deviantFree Memberbut I think it’s safe to say that they are not bound to simply ratify a result that over 500 of them disagree
See this is where politics has gone wrong for me, they are public servants, a referendum was held, it doesn’t matter if they like the result or not, they are duty bound to do as the electorate asks…..basically how it should work is you say “jump” and your MP replies “how high”…..things have become twisted in recent years where politicians now think they’re something special, they aren’t and you don’t need any qualifications to be an MP, says it all really.
imnotverygoodFull MemberSee this is where politics has gone wrong for me, they are public servants, a referendum was held, it doesn’t matter if they like the result or not, they are duty bound to do as the electorate asks…..basically how it should work is you say “jump” and your MP replies “how high”…..things have become twisted in recent years where politicians now think they’re something special, they aren’t and you don’t need any qualifications to be an MP, says it all really.
It hasn’t gone wrong at all, because it was never like the way you suppose. We elect MPs on the basis that they are the ones best placed to decide on issues, not that they must always do the public’s will, otherwise you would have a referendum every week to determine what the ‘public’ wanted. If you want to make the decisions, stand as an MP. Simples
thebeesFree MemberI hope it does get debated in parliament then the children can experience disappointment all over again. It’s like training a puppy. It must be embarrassing for the remainers who have accepted the result with dignity.
zokesFree MemberSee this is where politics has gone wrong for me, they are public servants
And they have a job to do, which is to act in the best interests of the country.
We could have a referendum on cutting taxes to 0% while simultaneously handing out free booze on Fridays and it would probably win. Frankly, such a motion wouldn’t be much more damaging than the one we’ve just had, and at least we could all drown our sorrows when it went Pete Tongue.
Anyway, this is sovereign parliamentary democracy in action. I thought that was one of the things Vote Leave were after, no?
zokesFree MemberI hope it does get debated in parliament then the children can experience disappointment all over again. It’s like training a puppy. It must be embarrassing for the remainers who have accepted the result with dignity
I could take the rather selfish view that I will enjoy watching you all greatly regret this over the next few years while I sit pretty in Oz. I haven’t because my friends and family in the UK deserve better than that. But, unless this situation is unfucked very quickly, that will be about the only option I have. Sadly it’s not one on offer to most of you when you do eventually come to your senses. As discussed previously, we have rather strict borders over here…
deviantFree MemberWe elect MPs on the basis that they are the ones best placed to decide on issues,
That’s a joke, a huge number of MPs have left university and known nothing but how to be a researcher or runner for a particular party, then brown nose a job as an assistant to an existing MP, then get parachuted into a safe seat….that kind of person is not best placed to decide on the country’s issues.
Parliament should be full of ex servicemen, ex coppers, small business owners, retired DRs, the odd lawyer, union reps who have moved up from the shop floor, a couple of wealthy entrepreneurs etc etc….basically a mixed bag of people with life experience.
thebeesFree MemberIt’s a big leap from mass bed-wetting to anarchy on the streets. Mind you that scruffy **** Geldof is good at mobilising people, so maybe.
imnotverygoodFull MemberParliament should be full of ex servicemen, ex coppers, small business owners, retired DRs, the odd lawyer, union reps who have moved up from the shop floor, a couple of wealthy entrepreneurs etc etc….basically a mixed bag of people with life experience.
So elect them.
It is wonderfully ironic that people who voted leave so that our domestic political system ‘regains its power’ continue to display an ignorance as to how it is supposed to work.deviantFree MemberSo elect them.
Would love to, trouble is the usual candidates from all parties consist of a grey list of late 20s/early 30s nominees whose profiles reads: studied PPE at Ox-Bridge, worked for the last 10 yrs for <insert party>, now standing for election in wherever….great, inspiring stuff.
Remember when everyone was chuffed to bits about Sarah Tether (remember her?!) being elected?….i just remember thinking what the hell has a 29 yr old got to offer parliament or the country!?….her background?….education and then a selection of non jobs as a ‘policy advisor’ for a number of organisations before contesting elections….absolute nonsense.
It’s Hobson’s choice these days when voting.imnotverygoodFull MemberSo why are you so keen (assuming that you voted leave) to give the power back to these people at the cost of wrecking the country?
deviantFree MemberBecause I simply don’t believe in the EU as a legal entity or a superstate….as a free trade bloc I have no problem, if it had remained simply that then I’d probably have voted to stay….but various individuals and countries have been on a power grab for years and morphed it into a corrupt behemoth they can preside over with lovely salaries, pensions, allowances etc…
imnotverygoodFull MemberBut you don’t appear to believe in the UK political establishment either? So why wreck everything else to leave one unsatisfactory political entity for another?
JunkyardFree Memberex servicemen, ex coppers, small business owners
😯 an interesting insight into how authoritarian and right wing your subconscious is
igmFull Membergrantway – Member
Could this bring Anarchy to our streets?Well apparently, and wait until the dust has settled for confirmation, leavers are already acting to the stereotype they all claim is nothing to do with them.
Conservative MP for Chelsea and Fulham Greg Hands earlier reported on Twitter that the Polish Social and Cultural Association has been graffitied with “go home”.
Also reports of Europeans being abused in the street.
#NotAVictoryForRacists
aracerFree MemberI’m no big fan of the career politician, and like you would rather see people with more experience of life…
But, how do you think they are at taking decisions compared to (from a selection of people I’ve seen interviewed who I suspect are representative of much larger numbers)
– the person who voted Leave because they didn’t think their vote mattered and are disappointed that Leave won
– the chap who was just voting for change because “it can’t get any worse”
– the girl who thought it meant England wouldn’t be in the football Euroswho are the people who’ve actually taken this decision for us.
mikewsmithFree MemberSee this is where politics has gone wrong for me, they are public servants, a referendum was held, it doesn’t matter if they like the result or not, they are duty bound to do as the electorate asks…..basically how it should work is you say “jump” and your MP replies “how high”…..things have become twisted in recent years where politicians now think they’re something special, they aren’t and you don’t need any qualifications to be an MP, says it all really.
For the hard of understanding here is a summary of the will of th people
37% Leave
36% Remain
28% No Vote
On that basis if 37% of the politicians would like to take a leave vote, 36 a remain and 28 decide on the day we can have the vote.rkk01Free MemberI’m not sure where I am with Brexit at the moment…
The anger on social media and reports of abuse on the streets of the U.K. are depressing.
One of my own FB posts had triggered a feud within my wife’s family. Within my own wider family it’s going to come down to falling out with people I’ve known and felt close to for 40+ years, or shutting up and getting on with it.
But what should democracy mean?
17 million people have made a choice I don’t agree with. That is the democratic will of the people, so should be taken forward by Government.On the other hand, an unknown proportion of that 17 million have taken the EUref as a green light to express views that I cannot sign up to and that are detrimental to this Country – not just the economic health, but the very fabric of society
My BIL shared the crying toddler photo. A few clicks showed that he had shared it from someone closely linked with the EDL – an account with diabolical neo-Nazi views and a photo of Jo Cox’s murderer wearing a Nazi slogan t shirt and giving a Hitler salute.
I don’t believe that my BIL is a racist bigot, but my comments (made in heat of the moment anger) asked whether he was. This is how the far right have infiltrated the mainstream and subverted rational thinking.
For my own family, I stand back in genuine disbelief as 20&30 Somethings in wider FB friendship groups are openly talking about going back to pounds & ounces and pounds, shillings & pence – “Fwk the EU”
So – suck it up and move on as many people are sneeringly telling us we have to?
Or get more involved in campaigning / politics and try to fight for all that’s been achieved over the last 20 years?
One view represents censorship. The other represents DEMOCRACY
philxx1975Free MemberAnd the debate will come down to who we wish to vote us into power next do we satisfy the university educated whiners who have found out they can’t get their own way by stamping their feet, or the old people who according to them never did anything for the countrynes who worked all their lives as per the system
and now have **** us all, ,oh hell you know them actually fought in the war.grantwayFree MemberSo from a Demcratic society to a Dictatorship voting system
We might has well trade and become a part of ChinaJunkyardFree Memberare you really claiming the majoroty of pensioners fought in the war?
the man issue with thsi is
1) most pensioners are women
2) To have fought in the war – assuming, generously 18 on 1945, one would have to be at least 78Basically your point is some jingoistic flag waiving hyperbolic BS..thats basically what got us in the mess in the first place
patriotic thick folk full of pride and bereft of facts
oldnpastitFull Memberdo we satisfy the university educated whiners who have found out they can’t get their own way by stamping their feet
Actually what they’ve found out is that bare-faced lies can work surprisingly well.
Us university whiners should probably do more of it rather than relying on reason.
rkk01Free Memberoh hell you know them actually fought in the war.
No. I didn’t know that??? Do you?
I spent my childhood / teenage years growing up with that wartime generation. Being interested in “Airfix” and reading accounts of those in the RN, RAF and the Army, I spent that time actually talking to them.
Most wouldn’t talk about their experiences directly or publicly, but I guess they were disarmed by a small and interested kid – I vividly remember my Gt Uncle’s account of when his destroyer flotilla were tasked with picking up survivors from Hood (his ship, HMS Echo found none), or another relative’s account of flak over the third Reich and of the utter delight of flying the Mosquito after originally flying Stirlings then Lancasters.
They were modest men. They would not have wanted their efforts and their mates deaths to be dragged into a political debate – on any side, let alone a right wing agenda not that far removed from what they fought against…
… Oh, and they were all dead by the end of the 80s
philxx1975Free MemberBasically your point is some jingoistic flag waiving hyperbolic BS..thats basically what got us in the mess in the first place
patriotic thick folk full of pride and bereft of facts
I did read it on britain first, I’m surprised you never slipped in “the on Benefits” tag too
theotherjonvFree MemberTo have fought in the war – assuming, generously 18 on 1945, one would have to be at least 78
88 actually. Although you could have been a lot younger and still been witness to the war, rationing, the blitz, etc.
However – wasn’t the war fought to combat the threat of far right bigotry and intolerance. Weren’t the other lot famous for rounding up people they didn’t like from other countries / religions / cultures and getting rid of them?
A proportion of Brexit campaigners don’t seem to me to be far away from that position, so using the ‘we fought a war to stop the Germans telling us what to do’ card as a reason for Brexit and then advocating deportation for people they don’t like – that leaves me far colder about the state of our nation than any economic turmoil that in the end some very clever people in the BoE / Civil Service will sort out for us.
And where’s Nigel disappeared to. What’s his view on the ‘ordinary decent’ people who are now graffiti’ing the Polish centre and handing ‘Get Out Now’ cards to schoolkids?
Nigel – my daughter’s two best school friends are Italian and Polish; my daughter’s a clever and compassionate girl and when these girls moved to the UK with only basic English skills, she befriended them so they had someone to lean on as they took frightened steps in a new country. Can you tell her Nigel – are you planning to send them home? What should she say to them to reassure them that they aren’t going to be deported?
When a 9 year old girl has a better idea about what basic human decency means than a big chunk of our population, that’s when i despair about what our country has become.
jambalayaFree Member37% Leave
36% Remain
28% No Vote@mike I am very much against giving influence to those who can’t be bothered to vote. There was a BBC piece about Romford and one lad said, “its complicated amd I don’t understand it so its best someone else decides” yes that’s dissapointing but you make a choice in not voting of opting out.
Of the older people I spoke to who had voted in ’75 Referendum a key reason for Leave is that they felt lied to as they had voted for a Common Market with no political power and what they had got was quite different. As for “fighting in the war” whilst they might not have done so their parents, aunts, uncles, older brothers would have done with many dieing or being injured so the war memories are very real for them. The sense that close relatives died for our freedom is very real to them.
zokesFree Member“its complicated amd I don’t understand it so its best someone else decides” yes that’s dissapointing
No, that’s common sense. Or do you always make decisions on things you have no understanding of?
Oh, wait, you voted leave but have comprehensively demonstrated you have only a minuscule grasp of what effect that will actually have. It seems that at least in this case, you have demonstrated that you’ll happily make decisions in the absence of understanding. I can understand your frustrations that you weren’t as sensible as the lad from Essex.
The sense that close relatives died for our freedom is very real to them.
I don’t doubt it, but yet again, that has **** all to do with the EU.
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