Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Today is the first day of the rest of our lives
- This topic has 126 replies, 83 voices, and was last updated 8 years ago by slowoldman.
-
Today is the first day of the rest of our lives
-
gonefishinFree Member
I’ve already had to set a colleague straight after she complained about who got to vote yesterday. She voted leave FFS! I think I’m going to have to have the conversation repeatedly with some others too!
BillMCFull MemberTo become ‘competitive’ on the world market the minimum/living wage will become the Chinese/Indian wage. Invest in rice!
ahwilesFree Memberpeople of Britain, prepare for the dry-bumming of your life: TTIP_2.0_UKrelease, coming in hard, and fast.
votchyFree MemberSorry mods, unintentional swear filter avoidance, just frustration at the result.
dannybgoodeFull Member[Quote]Seems anyone interviewed who voted leave is surprised that they won and doesn’t know what to do/ say/ will happen now…. Suggests they haven’t given it much thought perhaps….?[/quote]
Farage even said as much. He said he just wanted to win and had no idea what would happen if they did but they’d muddle it through.
yoshimiFull MemberThat’s Standard & Poor, I believe, and they don’t, as I recall, have a good track record on getting their forecasts right, and neither do the likes of Goldman Sachs.
CountZero – did you see the film The Big Short? Our finanacial stability is in the hands of those people 😯
spekkieFree MemberAs I see it, this vote is a Win-Win for Britain.
Either the UK will become the “Land of Milk & Honey” that people seem to remember it once was – everybody will be happy, gainfully employed, well and fully educated and in good health (Hospital waiting lists will become a distant memory, just like “post war rationing”) Police forces, social services, public services and the armed forces will all return to their former glory. Or . . . it will turn out that the EU wasn’t the biggest problem after all and the real culprits responsible for the current state of the UK will be exposed, bought to book and will have to “change their ways” so that the UK becomes the Land of Milk & Honey it once was . . .
Either way Britain wins! Right? . . . . .
coconutFree MemberA huge positive is it will be the last time our proud hooligans smash up french cities… it’s their last ever euro championships.if that had been explained it would have swung the vote. Where will young chav smash up now??
Ro5eyFree MemberCoconut … I think you’re right but for the wrong reasons
Can you imagine how it’s going to kick off out there before the next match
Two world wars
One world cup
And an EU referendumI despair
BaronVonP7Free MemberTwo world wars
One world cup
And an EU referendum… if you’re being generous it’s “one World War” cos it was a draw at the end of normal time and victory was only declared after, er, penalties….
😀
dangeourbrainFree MemberFuzzyWuzzy – Member
I think there’s a bit too much doom and gloom here.The thing is I’m not that doom and gloom about the economy, it’ll recover eventually regardless. I’m soon and gloom about the fact we as a species have spent our entire existence working towards being a bigger grouping because there is strength in numbers, we’ve just steeped bank from that. We were a member of an organisation which could have been something great if only we (and others) stopped throwing a spanner in the works and thinking of petty self interest and, rather than try and fix it we’ve walked away. This isn’t (likely) a loss for us on an economic front in the long term, it is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation. It’s saying “we’re better off alone than together”, that your problems are not our problems, that you and I are not the same and that you are the root cause of my problems. It’s a long way from ghettos and forced labour but it’s a step closer to thinking we can solve society’s problems not by looking at what we’re doing wrong and taking steps to fix those things but by casting about for someone or something who doesn’t fit and getting rid of them.
It’s the same logic that says the best solution to refugees is to close our borders rather than to see what we can do to make their country habitable once again, that allows us to make no choice when we don’t like the options (assad IS being the perfect example) rather than making a bad choice over a worse one (stain over Hitler being the obvious comparison).
The world is not a better place for shutting ourselves on and thinking we’ll be okay. So yes doom and gloom about the fact that we as a species (assuming the UK populace is vaguely representative) are still predominantly incapable of thinking of people in terms of what makes us the same instead of what makes us better/different.
langyladFree MemberBank of England has had to promise £250 billion to shore up the markets. Isn’t that about 40 years worth of money we send to Europe? Sadly it would appear that the vast majority who voted leave, poorer working classes, are the ones who will be hit the hardest.
Turkeys and Christmas all over again.sootyandjimFree Memberburko73 – Member
All this “hope house prices crash so I can come back here and buy a house in the fall out” pi££es me off.
I had to save and do the right thing to buy a house, how does that help me and anyone else who’s bought a house recently if property prices crash and we’re all in negative equity? You think it’s the right thing to pick through the spoils of those who’ve had their houses repossessed and get a cheap deal on something the previous owners got chucked out of!So, say the house prices don’t fall, indeed let’s say they rise over time. When/if you choose to move home will you sell for the price you brought the property at, or take a profit driven by market forces? I’m guessing the latter.
You live by the sword…
Malvern RiderFree MemberWhere will young chav smash up now??
Mosques and Polski shops, naturally. And the pub at away matches.
mansonsoulFree MemberThe world is not a better place for shutting ourselves on and thinking we’ll be okay. So yes doom and gloom about the fact that we as a species (assuming the UK populace is vaguely representative) are still predominantly incapable of thinking of people in terms of what makes us the same instead of what makes us better/different.
I really like you. That’s how I’m feeling too. I wish we could all see our commonality, think co-operatively. That feels further away today.
mrmonkfingerFree MemberThis isn’t (likely) a loss for us on an economic front in the long term, it is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation.
post of thread
colournoiseFull Membermrmonkfinger – Member
This isn’t (likely) a loss for us on an economic front in the long term, it is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation.
post of threadTotally agree. This was my Facebook response earlier.
“Am disappointed to say the least. The vote is what it is, and we still have to see what the actual real-world result of it all will be…
For me it was never really about sovereignty (what an outdated idea that is anyway), immigration or the economy.
We woke up this morning a much poorer group of people in terms of humanity, hope and vision.”ahwilesFree Memberwe’ve just had our first ‘reassuring’ (but actually scary) email from the CEO.
with words like ‘impact’, ‘difficult’, and ‘endure’.
‘triffic.
coppiceFree MemberThe vote was close, surely the next step is a trip to Brussels and a discussion on what could be offered to help persuade the UK to stay followed by another referendum?
Or am I just being naive?
AristotleFree MemberThis isn’t (likely) a loss for us on an economic front in the long term, it is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation.
Yes.
It is a loss.
AristotleFree Membercoppice – Member
The vote was close, surely the next step is a trip to Brussels and a discussion on what could be offered to help persuade the UK to stay followed by another referendum?Or am I just being naive?
The ignorant masses still wouldn’t go for it, although enough might change to swing it.
Stevet1Full MemberThe vote was close, surely the next step is a trip to Brussels and a discussion on what could be offered to help persuade the UK to stay followed by another referendum?
Or am I just being naive?
Euro dude was just on making a speech. The upshot was – no renegotiation.
This isn’t (likely) a loss for us on an economic front in the long term, it is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation.
post of threadAlso agree, very well put post summed up what I am thinking. I can’t believe people have actually gone ahead and voted for Leave. Wonder how much of it was just a vote against Cameron and his overblown rhetoric. But then Trump is pleased – surely that should have been some hint to anyone thinking of voting leave that it was the wrong choice.
mogrimFull MemberMore likely blood bath tory leadership election (thank god I only have to live with that and not choose between the options they’ll put forward) causing more market woes. Gove or Boris to succeed Cameron over summer and run the country to its knees till 2020.
This is about the only thing that’s cheered me up – that **** Boris wanted Cameron to stay on while negotiating, now it’s his problem to deal with the mess 🙂
bob_summersFull MemberLooks like I’ll be chopping in my UK passport for a Spanish one. Rubbish…
FrankensteinFree MemberThis is about the only thing that’s cheered me up – that **** Boris wanted Cameron to stay on while negotiating, now it’s his problem to deal with the mess
Yep, Boris will get elected, get blamed for poor deals and breakup of the U.K. with Gove laughing.
mogrimFull MemberLooks like I’ll be chopping in my UK passport for a Spanish one. Rubbish..
Likewise… .all that Spanish paperwork 😡
BillMCFull MemberThe £ this morning was at its lowest exchange rate since 1985, lower than 1992 when we got chucked out of the ERM. A sign of things to come: downward pressure on wages and upward pressure on prices with a government scrabbling to increase its income by more privatization.
NotterFree MemberLooking at some of the non-UK individuals who have come out and said “Well done UK” reads like a who’s who of people I do not want us to be in tune with:
The Donald
Marion Le Pen
Florian Philippot
Geert Wilders
Beatrix von Storch
Matteo Salvini
Norbert HofercrashtestmonkeyFree MemberAnyone who quotes sovereignty IS uneducated in that regard as they don’t understand what it means.
Cameron gambled on offering a referendum on an issue that split his support in order to win a general election. He never expected to lose it. As someone on twitter said, the worst judgement call since Chamberlain.
Genuinely surprised, disappointed and depressed about what this says about the UK. The Leave camp now look a bit rabbit in the headlights.
Wales voted out, having failed to see the blue and gold signs on all their road and hospital building programmes. Cornwall just asked who’s going to replace the £60m a year they’ve been getting from the EU. Turns out it’s not all us propping up the Greeks, just a shame the Remain campaign was so negative and traded on fear of unknown rather than spelling out the positives.
imnotverygoodFull MemberPetition has been set up asking for another go. Wishful thinking. 🙁
kcrFree MemberI was a staunch no in the indyref
I’d vote yes right now and for the foreseeable.
I believe a lot of people voted “Yes” for independence, not due to simplistic nationalism, but because they didn’t agree with the direction UK politics was taking and wanted a different sort of society. The sort of society that would not have voted us out of Europe.
sootyandjimFree MemberI believe a lot of people voted “Yes” for independence, not due to simplistic nationalism, but because they didn’t agree with the direction UK politics was taking and wanted a different sort of society. The sort of society that would not have voted us out of Europe.
Playing Devil’s Advocate for a second…
So many of those who want independence from a ‘London-centric’ government (that doesn’t have the interests of Scotland at heart) are clamouring to remain in a union with 27 other countries, based in Brussels, because they think it’ll be better for Scotland?
Not saying I agree either way, it just seems a little….odd.
slowoldmanFull Memberit is a loss for progress, moderation, tolerance and cooperation.
+1
ahwilesFree Membersootyandjim – Member
Not saying I agree either way, it just seems a little….odd.
here’s how i see it:
Scotland in the UK: the government is in Westminster, Yes there’s a Scottish parliament, but they’re not really empowered to do much.
Scotland in the EU: the government is in Holyrood, yes there’s the EU, but that would just provide the framework for Scotland to do what it wanted.
similar but different.
sootyandjimFree Member…similar but different.
But as an independent Scotland would be applying to join as a new member nation (with all the clauses such applicants must agree to) how does that tally with moves towards an increasingly federal state?
How free to do what they wanted would Holyrood really be? We’ve already seen the EU run roughshod over the will of the Greek people.
Not sure the EU will be the land of milk and honey for an independent Scotland that many believe it will be, that’s if Scotland were even admitted.
mikewsmithFree Memberhope house prices crash so I can come back here and buy a house in the fall out”
Think that was me, sorry for picking small mercies from the debris of this shit storm. Don’t blame me for wanting to be selfish at this point seems like it’s theme of the week. When the impact of a brexit is felt across here in Oz and is impacting our economy you wonder who was right…
The topic ‘Today is the first day of the rest of our lives’ is closed to new replies.