There is plenty of scope for personal attacks on both sides, from the prominent leave politician who in public is optimistic over Brexit but in his sideline as a business consultant is advising companies that it will be catastrophic, to the ostensibly patriotic money man who outsources his company's call centres to Africa whilst raging against globalisation, and who forgot/lied about several meetings with the ambassador of a pro-brexit hostile foreign power who offered him a lucrative state-run goldmine at a knock down price (as you do, pretty forgettable really), to the man many on here regard as a god-king who twice declared defeat despite having seen exit polls suggesting Leave had won, which coincidentally allowed his associates to make a killing on the currency markets.
I suppose the point I'm trying to make is that it's futile talking about liberal elites, snowflakes, remoaners and so on because there's plenty to go round. Brexit is happening, there are only a handful more letters needed for a vote of no confidence in May, then Gove, Johnson or Rees-Mogg can take back control via a hard Brexit, if they've got the courage.
It might be better to start talking about which countries we want trade deals with, what those deals should look like, what concessions we're prepared to make in order to get them, how long it will take to get them, and so on.