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Thread: OT. The futures Bright, the Futures Brexit!!!

  1. #4351
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    Quote Originally Posted by MadAmster View Post
    ... and I still keep coming up with the EI being part of the whole gloablisation thing where all political and economic power ends up in the hands of half a dozen tossers and the rest of us end up as some kind of puppet with a microchip insert so they know, 24/7, what we do, think, say and where we are.

    Believe me we are well on the way, and that is why I am so against the entire damned abomination.
    You don’t sound like some kind of ‘microchipped puppet’ to me, MA...and economic power in this country has been in the hands of a tiny minority for ever...long before the EU.

    The EU hasn’t even managed to get us to drive on the right, fully embrace the metric system or join the Euro, nor have they tried - not in the case of the first two at least. Think you may have to look elsewhere for for a source of the ‘thought police’.

  2. #4352
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    Quote Originally Posted by ramAnag View Post
    You don’t sound like some kind of ‘microchipped puppet’ to me, MA...and economic power in this country has been in the hands of a tiny minority for ever...long before the EU.

    The EU hasn’t even managed to get us to drive on the right, fully embrace the metric system or join the Euro, nor have they tried - not in the case of the first two at least. Think you may have to look elsewhere for for a source of the ‘thought police’.
    Correct rA, however, IMO the intent is to reduce the number of hands even further. Not an idea I fancy for me or my kids.

    As for driving on the right, the cost of doing that is prohibitively high although I have heard a rumour that the Irish are to run a pilot project starting with just HGV's.........

    The cost of replacing every road sign in the UK telling you how far town X is from here to reflect the distance in KM's is also ridiculously high.

    Pints will not disappear either and at least you know what you are getting in the UK. A pint is a pint is a pint, Over here you order beer by the type of glass you want it in. a "fluitje", which is 20Cl, a "vaasje" 25Cl or a "pint" which is actually half a litre. Apart from the pint, the Dutch, in the main don't know how much is in which glass type.

    In the old "bruin cafes", the old "working man's" bars they also have the "stapelglas". a small glass where 2/3 of the way up it "fattens" out and you can stack empty glasses easily. That's the big con. When you get a stapelglas of beer, you get beer up to the widening and then froth to the top. It's a 20CL galss and the froth at the top is half of the content.

    Another big question is, do they already know where we are 24/7 and able to tap into much of our communication? Yes they are. It's all in the software in your mobilephone, tablet and your smart TV etc.

  3. #4353
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    Nice to see the Farage Brexit party making a few headlines, looks like they're doing great in the polls too!
    Saying that it's what I expected!

  4. #4354
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    Quote Originally Posted by Manofpride View Post
    Nice to see the Farage Brexit party making a few headlines, looks like they're doing great in the polls too!
    Saying that it's what I expected!
    Current poll of polls puts them at 34% of the vote, more than Lab and Cons combined, and 11X the support generated by its 'opposition' party, the Independent Group, running at 3%. Based on Ramanag's comments about Brexit voters, we seem to have a lot of 'thick' people out there

  5. #4355
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    Quote Originally Posted by Manofpride View Post
    Nice to see the Farage Brexit party making a few headlines, looks like they're doing great in the polls too!
    Saying that it's what I expected!
    Try watching the channel 4 programme of following Verhofstadt and his team for 2 years.

    Total mockery of the wine gulping slimes.
    Laughing at the UK and branding us a "colony" of the EU, their plan all along.

    Shocking and vile.


    https://www.facebook.com/leaveeuoffi...09746519/?t=24
    Last edited by Trickytreesreds; 12-05-2019 at 09:19 PM.

  6. #4356
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andy_Faber View Post
    Current poll of polls puts them at 34% of the vote, more than Lab and Cons combined, and 11X the support generated by its 'opposition' party, the Independent Group, running at 3%. Based on Ramanag's comments about Brexit voters, we seem to have a lot of 'thick' people out there
    As I remember it, Andy, my comment was specifically aimed at those taken in by Johnson’s lies, Farage’s persona and those who believed that the Brexit negotiations were going to be the ‘easiest ever’. Please don’t misrepresent me.

    So Farage has ‘34% of the vote’...so what? He was always going to have around 37% wasn’t he? Even easier now that both Labour and the Tories are hamstrung by Party splits and hopeless leaders...at the end of the day though your maths should also tell you that approximately 66% of the electorate haven’t fallen for his politics of selfishness.

    Got quite cross on Marr this morning didn’t he? I expect you think it was that naughty old socialist undemocratic Beeb up to it’s tricks again, when actually it was just the leader of a new Party being fairly asked, in the absence of any manifesto, if he still believed in what he’s said in the past.

  7. #4357
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    Interpretation. rA is right when he says 63% of those entitled to vote didn't vote Leave. Those who use the opposite logic say 67% didn't vote Remain.

    Both major parties fought the last general election on a Leave platform. They got 80%+ of the votes cast between them. That vote ensured that the UK would Leave, or should have.

    The problem is that 80+% of MPs of both parties want to Remain. They have angled for either a No Brexit situation, their preferred position or, a deal that has the UK More in than out, even when that means, as it does with May's deal, that the UK is only OUT of the decision making process but still in everything else including the paying of millions each year for access to the single market and the Customs Union. Two things May has said time and time again she wouldn't have.......

    It's a huge mess.

  8. #4358
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    Quote Originally Posted by MadAmster View Post
    Interpretation. rA is right when he says 63% of those entitled to vote didn't vote Leave. Those who use the opposite logic say 67% didn't vote Remain.

    Both major parties fought the last general election on a Leave platform. They got 80%+ of the votes cast between them. That vote ensured that the UK would Leave, or should have.

    The problem is that 80+% of MPs of both parties want to Remain. They have angled for either a No Brexit situation, their preferred position or, a deal that has the UK More in than out, even when that means, as it does with May's deal, that the UK is only OUT of the decision making process but still in everything else including the paying of millions each year for access to the single market and the Customs Union. Two things May has said time and time again she wouldn't have.......

    It's a huge mess.
    For what it’s worth MA I think that’s one of the most sensible and least divisive post of recent times.

    I’d take issue with the idea that both parties fought the last election on a ‘Leave platform’ but you’re right it’s a ‘huge mess’.

    We, as a country, are almost irreconcilably divided.

    Labour and the Tories have been utterly hopeless, both inadequately led and divided by internal squabbles. Into the void has stepped probably the most opportunist political figure of all time - Mr. Mirage...the Oswald Mosley of the 21st Century - the one person to have benefited more than any other out of all the Brexit chaos but a figure who is almost entirely destructive...constantly challenging but never ever offering a solution or even, in the case of the forthcoming elections, a manifesto.

    So where do we go from here? A second referendum is one answer. It’s interesting that this is an option that ‘Remainers’ are generally far more in favour of than those supporting ‘Leave’ and one cannot help but wonder why that should be.

    Having said that a second referendum is only likely to reinforce the aforementioned ‘irreconcilable divisions’ as a narrow victory for either side - which seems most likely - will still leave around around half the electorate dissatisfied.

    That is often the case after a General Election but at least the situation then can be ‘corrected’ within five years. With the Referendum result the consequences are likely to be with us for decades. We cannot afford to get this ‘choice’ wrong and the ‘people’ do not, imo and experience, know best where such hugely complicated issues are concerned.

    So how about taking on the advice of the Referendum for what it was...advisory concern from a significant proportion of the electorate about the direction the EU has taken.

    Let’s stop talking about abuses and betrayals of democracy...it’s no such thing, let’s stop letting the extremists and opportunists muddy the waters and allow our elected politicians on all sides to work out the best and most beneficial way for us to proceed in our relationship with our geographical and trading neighbours in Europe.

  9. #4359
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    Quote Originally Posted by ramAnag View Post
    For what it’s worth MA I think that’s one of the most sensible and least divisive post of recent times.

    I’d take issue with the idea that both parties fought the last election on a ‘Leave platform’ but you’re right it’s a ‘huge mess’.

    We, as a country, are almost irreconcilably divided.

    Labour and the Tories have been utterly hopeless, both inadequately led and divided by internal squabbles. Into the void has stepped probably the most opportunist political figure of all time - Mr. Mirage...the Oswald Mosley of the 21st Century - the one person to have benefited more than any other out of all the Brexit chaos but a figure who is almost entirely destructive...constantly challenging but never ever offering a solution or even, in the case of the forthcoming elections, a manifesto.

    So where do we go from here? A second referendum is one answer. It’s interesting that this is an option that ‘Remainers’ are generally far more in favour of than those supporting ‘Leave’ and one cannot help but wonder why that should be.

    Having said that a second referendum is only likely to reinforce the aforementioned ‘irreconcilable divisions’ as a narrow victory for either side - which seems most likely - will still leave around around half the electorate dissatisfied.

    That is often the case after a General Election but at least the situation then can be ‘corrected’ within five years. With the Referendum result the consequences are likely to be with us for decades. We cannot afford to get this ‘choice’ wrong and the ‘people’ do not, imo and experience, know best where such hugely complicated issues are concerned.

    So how about taking on the advice of the Referendum for what it was...advisory concern from a significant proportion of the electorate about the direction the EU has taken.

    Let’s stop talking about abuses and betrayals of democracy...it’s no such thing, let’s stop letting the extremists and opportunists muddy the waters and allow our elected politicians on all sides to work out the best and most beneficial way for us to proceed in our relationship with our geographical and trading neighbours in Europe.
    One thing puzzles me rA (well many things do in your stout defence of remain, but one big thing) one the one hand you constantly question the people's ability to understand the issues and thus decide / advise re Brexit yet on the other you call passionately for a second referendum.

    How do you reconcile the inconsistency in these positions, or is it that you see a second referendum as a "get out of jail free" card for what might be a sub 50% majority vote to remain second time round?

    IMHO both the people and Parliament are irreconcilably split. A bigger minority of the people voted leave and the balance in Parliament favours remain but are charged with leaving. The main parties ar also split.

    So how will another referendum, which would undoubtedly not give an electorate majority either way, help? All it would do would be to give Parliament an excuse of "you told me to do it". Don't come on with the claptrap about politicians not lying second time around, people being better informed etc. That won't change, just be different. Politicians won't take the public for naive fools, they will just try to lie better and harder. On both sides.















    .

  10. #4360
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    Perhaps the solution is to leave in accordance with the referendum result and then parliament to immediately apply to join again. Then this thread could hit 8,000 posts 😂

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