Home Forums Chat Forum EU Referendum – are you in or out?

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  • EU Referendum – are you in or out?
  • mikewsmith
    Free Member

    Pipe Dream?

    If it was these 2 in charge I’d have more faith

    dazh
    Full Member

    The country as a whole.

    But if some have already been shafted and feel they have little left to lose, why would they care about what might happen to those who haven’t yet reached those depths? Seems to me that when people protest at ‘the country’ being shafted by brexit, what they really mean is the ‘the middle class’. We all know that the country as a whole won’t be shafted as it’s all relative.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    But if some have already been shafted and feel they have little left to lose, why would they care about what might happen to those who haven’t yet reached those depths?

    They will when they hit it.

    Seems to me that when people protest at ‘the country’ being shafted by brexit, what they really mean is the ‘the middle class’.

    Yep I’ve got some self interest in this, but I also know that if it hits me it will hit a lot more people and a lot harder. If you want to imply that people will only care if it effects them it’s a bit harsh. Some of us see how wide the implications of this could be – the bitterness that came from the 80’s is not something we want to repeat.

    dazh
    Full Member

    If you want to imply that people will only care if it effects them it’s a bit harsh.

    Wasn’t directed at you, more of a general observation. I may be wrong but I’m increasingly seeing brexit as a class issue. I come across very few working class people who are against it, and very few middle class who are for it. And a general derision of the former by the latter (witness the reaction to the Nissan news for example). That’s almost certainly a function of where I grew up, where I now live and the people I hang around with, but it can’t be a localised thing, and it’s certainly in evidence on this thread.

    the bitterness that came from the 80’s is not something we want to repeat.

    I think that ship has sailed. The fallout from the 80s will look like a love-in by the time brexit is done and dusted. It started with calling brexit voters racists (which I admit I was guilty of too), then gammons, then idiots who deserve to be where they are. This is fairly familiar isn’t it? How long before we have a ‘brexit street’ reality show on telly ridiculing the people of Sunderland who voted to be poor? I guess we can look forward to a decade of victim blaming and snobbery.

    dannyh
    Free Member

    I’ve come to realise something else frightening about Theresa May. She is also totally complacent and has utterly misjudged the ERG nutters, and continues to do so.

    She seems to see them as just the far end of a spectrum and so they might be appeased in some way. They are not. They are a traitorous, treacherous, enemy within who are hell bent on breaking this country so they can remake it to their (and their dark money supplying backers’) own benefit.

    The likes of Davis, Duncan Smith, Fox (and that utter cretin) Grayling are just useful idiots to them.

    May hasn’t got the awareness to recognize this cancer for what it is let alone confront it. Nor does she have the moral courage. Sad to say, but she is just a product of her environment and utterly bereft of any actual moral fibre.

    dannyh
    Free Member

    How long before we have a ‘brexit street’ reality show on telly ridiculing the people of Sunderland who voted to be poor?

    About as long as it takes before someone bungs them a few quid to further debase themselves. This is what they voted for. Exploitation and ridicule.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I come across very few working class people who are against it, and very few middle class who are for it.

    All depends who you brush up against, I suppose.

    Vist the Tory shires, where the comfortably off retired middle class voted Leave in their droves.

    Vist London and the larger cities in the North, where the workers voted Remain in huge numbers.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    dazh

    But if some have already been shafted and feel they have little left to lose, why would they care about what might happen to those who haven’t yet reached those depths?

    They’re about to discover what they have left to lose.

    I mean, look at it another way. I have more to lose than someone right at the bottom of the ladder, simply because I have more to start with. But that also means I can lose a lot more without it really doing me any massive harm, and certainly without coming close to where they already are- whereas losing even a tiny bit financially or in opportunity or job security or benefits support or healthcare could be devastating for them. Ironically this is no different from “we’re all in it together”, where we were supposed to think that not being able to buy that holiday home was as big a deal as £10 less in the pocket of an unemployed single mother of three

    I can afford to have my head move closer to the water, because it’s a long way up. I won’t like it, but I won’t drown, and I won’t pretend there’s any equivalence.

    kerley
    Free Member

    I come across very few working class people who are against it, and very few middle class who are for it.

    I live in middle class land and there are a very high number of Leave voters. It is also a very high Tory voter area and the 2 are linked in many case.

    When voting leave as a middle class person it is all about selfishness
    When voting leave as a working class person it is all about despair

    The continued selfishness of the one continues to add to the despair of the other.

    spekkie
    Free Member

    I have some friends back in the UK who voted Brexit. When they visit me here in Spain and we talk to them about how they voted, in pretty much every case it seems that whatever “issue” it was that they felt passionate about and voted to change, will not change.

    I’m sure there are other people in the UK who couldn’t afford a trip to Spain, even a cheap one. And for them, nothing will change but maybe they feel that “at least they tried”?

    binners
    Full Member

    in pretty much every case it seems that whatever “issue” it was that they felt passionate about and voted to change, will not change.

    Oh they’ll be changing alright. In big ways. All for the worse (unless you’re one of the top 5%). And it’ll change bloody fast, once these lot get to take the handbrake off

    As discussed above I think a lot of people need to wake up and face the reality of who/what you’re dealing with here. These people are disaster capitalists. David Davis has already let slip the other day what they really plan on doing.

    Once free of the EU, they want to immediately slash tax for corporations and the rich, which will then necessitate taking a hatchet to our already struggling public services. Bye bye NHS – free at the point of delivery. Bye bye welfare state. kiss goodbye to all the public services you presently take for granted. At the same time they want to take a torch to workers rights and environmental controls, or anything they consider a restraint on the rich and powerful being able to what the hell they like

    They want to take the form of capitalism that caused all the horrendous inequality in our society, then turbo-charge it!

    If the people in ‘left-behind’ areas think they’re marginalised now (and they are!) just wait until this lot really get going!

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Thousands of folk in Motherwell and the rest of North Lanarkshire will have woken up this morning surprised that they became Middle Class overnight.

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    Thousands of folk in Motherwell and the rest of North Lanarkshire will have woken up this morning surprised that they became Middle Class overnight.

    Only if they were upperclass the night before.

    mickmcd
    Free Member

    Once free of the EU, they want to immediately slash tax for corporations and the rich, which will then necessitate taking a hatchet to our already struggling public services. Bye bye NHS – free at the point of delivery. Bye bye welfare state. kiss goodbye to all the public services you presently take for granted. At the same time they want to take a torch to workers rights and environmental controls, or anything they consider a restraint on the rich and powerful being able to what the hell they like

    This is just going to take longer under EU rules I’m loathe to say it but I can’t imagine how this isn’t going to happen anyway, as they find a way to circumvent lots of these protections now.

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    The country as a whole.

    But if some have already been shafted and feel they have little left to lose, why would they care about what might happen to those who haven’t yet reached those depths?

    Please read my whole post for context. I’m referring to the apparently simple task of setting up post-Brexit trade agreements. Simple if we roll over and accept whatever conditions our new overlords impose.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    she can justify pulling the plug at the last minute.

    One more time: “she” can’t do anything; it needs a vote in Parliament for any action. There is no majority to “pull the plug”. So we’re stuck. May’s “deal” or no deal.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    If the people in ‘left-behind’ areas think they’re marginalised now (and they are!) just wait until this lot really get going!

    Binners in “hitting nail on head” shocker !! 🙂

    binners
    Full Member

    Even a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day DrJ 😉

    What worries me is what happens once it becomes apparent to the ‘left behind’* that what they were told would make their lives better – Brexit – is actually a project by ‘the elite’ to enrich themselves yet further while making the already dismal life chances of the poor considerably worse by turbo-charging inequality

    I can only see it ending one way. Really really badly, and probably really violently, once the true level of lies and deceit become achingly apparent

    * And if you want to see what the lives of the ‘left behind’ really look like, watch the thoroughly depressing Channel 4 programme Skint Britain about the rollout of Universal Credit in Hartlepool. It brings it home what true desperation is, and a belief that it can’t possibly get worse. Its not hard to see how they would vote for anything to give them even a glimmer of hope and how they could be swayed by shysters like Boris Johnson promising unicorns and ‘Sunny Uplands’

    It is about to get worse for them though. Lots, lots worse.

    I can’t remember which journalist said it, but theres a quote along the lines of ‘Thatcherism was unleashed by the right to decimate the working classes. Brexit is them coming back to finish the job’

    ferrals
    Free Member

    But on a positive note, this wonderful oppurtunity to mske britain great is only costing us £800m a week, a snip at the price!

    Guardian article

    willard
    Full Member

    I thought it was supposed to save the UK 350m a week? How come it is the other way around? I feel lied to

    dannyh
    Free Member

    I thought it was supposed to save the UK 350m a week? How come it is the other way around? I feel lied to

    Which is why I’d love to be able to give the ‘reward’ of Brexit to those who actually voted for it.

    Oh, what’s that? It isn’t an income, it’s a massive gopping great loss?

    OK – well, that’s life for you, risk and reward and all that. Here’s the bill.

    scud
    Free Member

    As someone with an 8 year old Type 1 daughter (and i know there are a few of us with T1 kids or T1 on here), insulin manufacturers are having to stockpile up to 18 weeks of insulin supplies and they are the ones looking at alternative ferry routes in to the UK, so they are clearly taking the threat seriously..

    JDRF update on insulin supplies in the event of a no deal Brexit – January 17, 2019

    And here was me thinking our Government always had the best interests of the people at heart (you’d think Theresa May at least might actually give a toss, though i guess she probably has her own private stash)..

    dannyh
    Free Member

    Be afraid, be very afraid, because this article shows my point about the likes of Leadsom and May totally mis-reading what the ERG is, is probably accurate.

    This is Liam Fox (Liam Fox of all people) starting – finally – to realise what the ERG is and what it is about. It is finally sinking in that the ERG are going to spike any deal other than the hardest of hard Brexits on any technicality that they can cook up. They are hell-bent on burning it down and re-building it to their own ends.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/feb/14/brexit-liam-fox-brexiters-ideological-purity-commons-vote-erg-eu

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    It’s Ok – they pushed Brexit to the sidelines to have a chat about Winston Churchill instead.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    As I’ve been saying for months now… you should be ignoring gov advice (May even repeated this in the last week) to not build up your own medical supplies. Listen to those who supply the NHS not the lying politicans who truely do not care about you and yours. We have 3 months rather than 1 month of insulin in the fridge now. Supplies will keep coming, but the chance of temporary shortages is far from zero… anything you need to keep you alive, rather than just make your life better, you should be taking steps to ensure continuity of availability yourself. Now. Not tomorrow. Now. Do not rely on just in time prescriptions.

    teethgrinder
    Full Member

    Even a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day…

    Except a digital one. They’re just ****. Like us.

    mickmcd
    Free Member

    Please read my whole post for context.

    Don’t be so **** stupid this is the forum where one of the same ten people snip the bit they need to service their own argument.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    First we discover the cake is a lie, now it seems there’s not going to be any Pi either.

    https://hexus.net/tech/news/industry/127463-raspberry-pi-chairman-signals-manufacturing-will-move-abroad

    Raspberry Pi production to move away from the UK – literally out of the horse’s mouth – “because of Brexit.”

    “Real businesses. Real employment. Real taxes. Lost,”

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I thought that his comments were about another business, and nothing to do with the Pi? I’m sure he said so on twitter… I should read your link I suppose…

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Ah, looks like he has since had to repeat many many times on twitter that it’s nothing to do with the Pi! Amateur level journalists must try harder.

    koldun
    Free Member

    If they simply pushed the Brexit date to 01/04/19 they could pass the whole thing off as a really bad joke.

    El-bent
    Free Member

    From where I’m standing the EU is a major pusher of globalisation and free markets.

    well, we are about to see what the alternative is. You’ll soon change your tune.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    You’ll soon change your tune.

    To I’m a Be-Leaver.?

    willard
    Full Member

    Shamelessly stolen from Reddit…
    Brexit economy

    Drac
    Full Member

    Cringe factor to 10.

    karn
    Free Member

    not sure if this has been posted before (appos if it has)

    LEAVER: I want an omelette.

    REMAINER: Right. It’s just we haven’t got any eggs.

    LEAVER: Yes, we have. There they are. [HE POINTS AT A CAKE]

    REMAINER: They’re in the cake.

    LEAVER: Yes, get them out of the cake, please.

    REMAINER: But we voted in 1974 to put them into a cake.

    LEAVER: Yes, but that cake has got icing on it. Nobody said there was going to be icing on it.

    REMAINER: Icing is good.

    LEAVER: And there are raisins in it. I don’t like raisins. Nobody mentioned raisins. I demand another vote.

    DAVID CAMERON ENTERS.

    DAVID CAMERON: OK.

    DAVID CAMERON SCARPERS.

    LEAVER: Right, where’s my omelette?

    REMAINER: I told you, the eggs are in the cake.

    LEAVER: Well, get them out.

    EU: It’s our cake.

    JEREMY CORBYN: Yes, get them out now.

    REMAINER: I have absolutely no idea how to get them out. Don’t you know how to get them out?

    LEAVER: Yes! You just get them out and then you make an omelette.

    REMAINER: But how?! Didn’t you give this any thought?

    LEAVER: Saboteur! You’re talking eggs down. We could make omelettes before the eggs went into the cake, so there’s no reason why we can’t make them now.

    THERESA MAY: It’s OK, I can do it.

    REMAINER: How?

    THERESA MAY: There was a vote to remove the eggs from the cake, and so the eggs will be removed from the cake.

    REMAINER: Yeah, but…

    LEAVER: Hang on, if we take the eggs out of the cake, does that mean we don’t have any cake? I didn’t say I didn’t want the cake, just the bits I don’t like.

    EU: It’s our cake.

    REMAINER: But you can’t take the eggs out of the cake and then still have a cake.

    LEAVER: You can. I saw the latest Bake Off and you can definitely make cakes without eggs in them. It’s just that they’re horrible.

    REMAINER: Fine. Take the eggs out. See what happens.

    LEAVER: It’s not my responsibility to take the eggs out. Get on with it.

    REMAINER: Why should I have to come up with some long-winded incredibly difficult chemical process to extract eggs that have bonded at the molecular level to the cake, while somehow still having the cake?

    LEAVER: You lost, get over it.

    THERESA MAY: By the way, I’ve started the clock on this.

    REMAINER: So I assume you have a plan?

    THERESA MAY: Actually, back in a bit. Just having another election.

    REMAINER: Jeremy, are you going to sort this out?

    JEREMY CORBYN: Yes. No. Maybe.

    EU: It’s our cake.

    LEAVER: Where’s my omelette? I voted for an omelette.

    REMAINER: This is ridiculous. This is never going to work. We should have another vote, or at least stop what we’re doing until we know how to get the eggs out of the cake while keeping the bits of the cake that we all like.

    LEAVER/MAY/CORBYN: WE HAD A VOTE. STOP SABOTAGING THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE. EGGSIT MEANS EGGSIT.

    REMAINER: Fine, I’m moving to France. The cakes are nicer there.

    LEAVER: You can’t. We’ve taken your freedom of movement.

    mickmcd
    Free Member

    Cringe factor to 10

    I’ll take it back…swap her for the isis woman in the refugee camp…

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    Conservative Remain-supporter Dominic Grieve says that “apart from a small minority in this House, who are absolutely fixated and persuaded that we can part company with our nearest neighbours”, MPs generally believe that Brexit, in whatever form, will be damaging to the country.

    “We are tying ourselves up in knots and that’s why we are paralysed,” he states.

    “Threatening to leave is the behaviour of a three-year-old who says they will hold their breath if they do not get the toy they want,” he adds.

    “We cannot allow this to happen,” he says, adding that “Brexit is not a sacred duty at all, but a rather profane matter”.

    He says he is “really alarmed” that the prime minister does not seem to understand his view that his “sacred duty” is to prevent it.

    “There is going to come a time when my ability to support this government is going to run out,” he finishes.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Ah, looks like he has since had to repeat many many times on twitter that it’s nothing to do with the Pi! Amateur level journalists must try harder.

    Yeah. There’s an update on the page explaining that now, that wasn’t there when I originally read the article.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    “There is going to come a time when my ability to support this government is going to run out,” he finishes.

    Next PM?

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