Fair enough, it’s just an observation based on what I see when ‘on site’ versus what I see when ‘in the office’. The difference between these two groups is absolutely stark.
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I’m honestly not sure what you’re suggesting, Andy.
As far as Brexit is concerned you’re the only Brexit supporting ‘Remainer’ I know and your desire to run with the hares and hunt with the hounds seems to know no bounds.
Now you seem to have introduced what used to be known as the blue collar v white collar divide into the argument via your newly acquired familiarity with the ‘workers’.
So where are you actually going with this other than to make the frankly patronising suggestion that manual workers are the only ones who keep the country going and consequently have no time to debate the finer points of Brexit or have you just realised that the ‘working class’, just like the ERG, includes it’s fair share of bigots and bullies too?
Which ‘two groups’ are you referring to and what is this ‘absolutely stark difference’?
Surprised you have time to comment on this whilst you're signing the petition multiple times? Whether you want to be blind to how easy it is to fake signatures on those petitions or not is your choice, but can you not see how pathetic it is? I haven't signed the petition for the "leave without a deal" petition, because it's frankly a childish act.
You can write to your MP, visit one of their surgeries, protest in the street, and stick stickers to your car bumpers - but this silly little attempt to derail the process with an online petition just sounds like a child trying to get out of PE with a note from his mummy.
:rolleyes:
Really? How’s it ‘childish’ to sign a petition, Adi?
If you genuinely believe in something surely it’s quite a reasonable, responsible and above all, peaceful, thing to do.
Infinitely better than going around intimidating those with foreign sounding names or accents for sure.
What’s childish is those stamping their feet and claiming democracy is being challenged because, having looked at things in more detail, they might not get their way as recognition gradually dawns that Brexit will be an exercise in self harm...that and Farage claiming to be a ‘man of the people’ when actually he’s failed to get elected seven times.:rolleyes:
I presume we have all seen the "comparison" photos attempting to compare apples and pears on social media. A handful of Leave stragglers on their way to London being compared to the large attendance in London yesterday for the Remain march. Numbers range from several hunderd thousand up to 2 million being the largets number I have seen. Some wag suggested that that estimate was from Diane Abbott.
In the name of balance I say, if you want the remotest chance of balance, compare yesterday's crowds with however many hit the streets on the 29th or the 30th on the planned "big" Leave march.
Even then it might not be a fair comparison. Why? Just maybe such a huge turnout for Remain might trigger a lot of Leavers to go who hadn't planned to do so simply to try to outdo the Remain march....... childish but quite likely IMO.
EU 2.0 seems to be gaining support quite rapidly as a new option and is soemthing real and significant May can offer the EU.
What will happen? I have absolutely no idea apart from the thought I have had since June 23rd 2016 that I would believe Brexit when I saw it. I still hold that view.
Will we see No Deal? May's Deal? 2.0 Deal? No Brexit? It's all very much up in the air and nobody, not the EU and definitelty not May, has the slightest idea how this will pan out.
Evidently May won't be the PM/leader when whatever happens, happens. The tories have had their sacrificial lamb.
What if this bloke is right..........
https://www.facebook.com/DemocraziaV...5977272757274/
I'm suggesting that the petition, and for that matter yesterday's march, whilst impressive, are a reflection of different habits of various populationn sectors within our country. One feels the need, and has the opportunity, to march/register protest, the other, to paraphrase Adi, did their march on 23/6/16 and doesn't see the need or have the time to repeat that. I could anecdote this to death, but everyone has an anecdote.
Of interest to me, maybe to you also, is that signing of the petition geographically reflects referendum and/or subsequent election protest voting - the vast majority of signatures emanate from either inner london or constituencies with a high university population, where around 20% of the electorate have signed, in my own constituency it's around 4% and in areas where the leave vote was high, the sigs are around 2% of the electorate. If anything the petition merely reinforces the divided nation we live in
Virtually everyone has the ‘time’ to sign a petition Andy.
Perhaps it is worth reconsidering that so many of the ‘university population’ you describe did not have the same opportunity to vote in the initial Referendum as those ‘workers’ you contrast them with.
It is notoriously difficult for full time students to register to vote particularly when that vote is being made at or towards the end of the summer term precisely when there is uncertainty about whether they’ll be based back at home or at ‘Uni’.
When a vote is so crucial, so close and has such long term implications for the young I believe this is a bigger issue than whether ‘manual workers’ have the time and inclination to sign or start a petition.