View Poll Results: Should Britain leave the E.U. ?
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Yes
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109 |
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No
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46 |
21.10% |
No.. But things MUST change
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38 |
17.43% |
I don't care
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14 |
6.42% |
Undecided
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11 |
5.05% |
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27 May 2016
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And because Britain is the obesity capital of Europe it means we have even less space...(As an obese Brit obviously takes up the space of two skinny Spaniards)
However, if we leave the EU, it means there will be massive taxes on EU inspired healthier food so everyone will have to go back to eating pie and chips 7 days a week and we will all get even fatter and become more overcrowded.
We just cant win can we !!
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27 May 2016
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Quote:
We just cant win can we !!
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No this is true, but we'll lose harder by leaving. As a fellow northerner and scouser, I'm sure you'll agree that overall EU money has done the world of good. Still, I'd actually quite like to vote to leave, firstly just to see Cameron and Osbourne consigned to the dustbin of history, and then several decades worth of schadenfreude as the Brexiters realise that their resentment and anger, of which much is genuine and understandable, has nothing to do with the EU, which in my opinion has been made a scapegoat for something much worse, namely;
Relentless privatization and asset stripping, spiraling costs of education, poorly thought-through mass immigration, under-investment in infrastructure (outside of London) and the callous abandonment by the Tories of the North by a London-centric political class, along with the failure to address the decades of decline triggered by de-industralisation - throw all that on a trashheap of an economic policy which has dominated since the 1970's by both mainstream right and left political parties, driving inequality to absolutely perverse levels. Not just between the worlds richest and poorest, but between the top 1% and the remaining 99%. Leaving the EU will help not one single bit with this, in fact it will likely make it worse.
I've always been more towards remain, but I've listened to the arguments of the Brexit carefully. In the end, the Brexit argument goes like this;
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"Europe need us more than we need them, if we vote out we'll get all the benefits of EU membership and none of the costs"
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The Brexit argument attacks the EU but acknowledges none of the benefits. It's campaign has been driven by exaggerations, rhetoric and outright lies. They can criticise ad nausea the faults and shortcomings of the EU but simply have no facts, no clear vision, basically no idea how the UK will be post-Brexit, other than 'it will be great, trust us'.
It's backward and regressive and if we vote Brexit, rather than transforming Britain into some sort of socialist paradise where we are governed by Brits for Brits, we'll see workers rights, human rights and environmental rights stripped away, and those vicious spivs in Westminster having a carte blanche to do whatever the hell they want.
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27 May 2016
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Cheer up, we are a long way from finished
Quote:
Originally Posted by ridetheworld
Still, I'd actually quite like to vote to leave, firstly just to see Cameron and Osbourne consigned to the dustbin of history, and then several decades worth of schadenfreude as the Brexiters realise that their resentment and anger, of which much is genuine and understandable, has nothing to do with the EU, which in my opinion has been made a scapegoat for something much worse, namely;
Relentless privatization and asset stripping, spiraling costs of education, poorly thought-through mass immigration, under-investment in infrastructure (outside of London) and the callous abandonment by the Tories of the North by a London-centric political class, along with the failure to address the decades of decline triggered by de-industralisation - throw all that on a trashheap of an economic policy which has dominated since the 1970's by both mainstream right and left political parties, driving inequality to absolutely perverse levels. Not just between the worlds richest and poorest, but between the top 1% and the remaining 99%. Leaving the EU will help not one single bit with this, in fact it will likely make it worse.
I've always been more towards remain, but I've listened to the arguments of the Brexit carefully. In the end, the Brexit argument goes like this;
The Brexit argument attacks the EU but acknowledges none of the benefits. It's campaign has been driven by exaggerations, rhetoric and outright lies. They can criticise ad nausea the faults and shortcomings of the EU but simply have no facts, no clear vision, basically no idea how the UK will be post-Brexit, other than 'it will be great, trust us'.
It's backward and regressive and if we vote Brexit, rather than transforming Britain into some sort of socialist paradise where we are governed by Brits for Brits, we'll see workers rights, human rights and environmental rights stripped away, and those vicious spivs in Westminster having a carte blanche to do whatever the hell they want.
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Utter tosh.
If you were to read the most recent postings in the "economic crisis" thread you would see what has been happening with westernised economies over about the past 30 years.
The EU is not responsible for this, but it does support the economic "progress" in its' own manner by the way, for just one instance of how it has turned the screws on the Eurozone member known as Greece.
As for a Brexit strategy, I posted one such document quite a few pages back in here: the Flexit proposal which runs to over 400 pages of what amounts to a statement of "democracy", in short.
In itself, that document originates from the "Harrogate Agenda" - again you could do your own research about that.
I was very pleased, very pleased indeed, to have the recent judgement concerning the Hillsborough 96; IMO, that has been a turning point in this nation - nor does it have anything directly to do with "Left", "Right" or any other political direction. It reflects on the people of this country who are standing up for what is right; we will see more of this when the Chilcot report is published, soon after the June referendum apparently.
To remind you, we change our politicians every 5 years by general election (for sure, we get the politicians that we deserve).
Last night on the BBC Question Time programme, the guy who lost the general election of last year for the labour party, aka Milliband, was soundly trounced by both the other panellists and, especially, by the audience.
Some further recommended reading (from a female blogger who has writtene widely about the law of this country and has no axes to grind because she is dying of cancer):-
In which Ms Raccoon performs a EU turn….
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27 May 2016
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Was it Churchill who said democracy is the worst form of government bar all the others?
Trouble is, Westminster is now out of date never mind a comission, parliament with two locations and MEP's with overly diverse aims. We should be using the internet to table motions directly from the electorate and teleconferincing the discussions. The EU version where the Moldovan Peasants Party backs the Spanish Bullfighting party in exchange for their support on extra payments for producers of Moldovan cheese is like going back to bent boroughs and the corn laws.
The Westminster Turkeys don't like the idea of Internet Christmas for some reason. They want us to vote for the perpetual EU February.
Andy
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27 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Threewheelbonnie
Was it Churchill who said democracy is the worst form of government bar all the others?
The Westminster Turkeys don't like the idea of Internet Christmas for some reason. They want us to vote for the perpetual EU February.
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Yes, attributed to Churchill.
Yes again, the likes of Milliband was uncomfortable last night on TV when the audience made it clear that they wanted him to justify his platitudes.
He was way outside his comfort zone of the House of Commons and their stitch ups.
In contrast, David Davis genially spilled some beans about how government actually works behind the scenes*, as did Steve Hilton who is currently an emigre to the USA.
*Note, UK nominees to the EC are definitely not voted in by popular vote; Davis explained the UK process live on TV last night, and named Neil Kinnock in particular as a case study.
In essence, they are place men who have been passed over by the UK political process, as are Tusk and Junker from their respective countries - those "central powers".
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6 Jun 2016
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That binary choice
Quote:
Originally Posted by Threewheelbonnie
Trouble is, Westminster is now out of date never mind a comission, parliament with two locations and MEP's with overly diverse aims. We should be using the internet to table motions directly from the electorate and teleconferincing the discussions. The EU version where the Moldovan Peasants Party backs the Spanish Bullfighting party in exchange for their support on extra payments for producers of Moldovan cheese is like going back to bent boroughs and the corn laws.
The Westminster Turkeys don't like the idea of Internet Christmas for some reason. They want us to vote for the perpetual EU February.
Andy
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Returning to this point for a moment: it reminds me of my earlier question about the optimum number of levels of government but also the fact that we do vote for UK politicians - for better or for worse.
There was an earlier post that praised the democratic nature of the EU - I never could identify with that.
It may be like that in Germany but here in the UK the public do not vote for the EC commissioners (I see that Neil Kinnock and his side-kick wife have joined us from the continent for a while).
THe UK gets about 70 MEPs among 700+ total and are voted down on every occasion by virtue of this inbuilt minority or by use of Qualfied Majority Voting.
In essence, the UK, for many reasons - common law being but one - is not compatible with the current arrangements of the EU.
In any case, the European Parliament is notorious for acting as a mere rubber stamp to the EC; as just one instance, the EU parliament cannot introduce legislation, it simply accepts the proposals that come from the EC.
So, the EU parliament is less of a representative democracy system than that of our own UK system which has it's own gaping issues that need to be addressed.
But, the binary choice presented at present is not about the many UK internal issues but the external issue of the EU; in that we all need to make a judgement of where it is going, 10-20-30 years and more ahead.
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27 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Walkabout
As for a Brexit strategy, I posted one such document quite a few pages back in here: the Flexit proposal which runs to over 400 pages of what amounts to a statement of "democracy", in short.
In itself, that document originates from the "Harrogate Agenda" - again you could do your own research about that.
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The 17 May 2016 posting in this blog summarises the Flexit paper, for anyone who can't read 400+ pages.
http://leavetheeuropeanunion.blogspot.co.uk/
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27 May 2016
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This Brexit bollox is no different to any other vote or election thingy. Each side spouts it's own tripe and they hope enough people will agree to allow them to get their way. I have heard many 'experts' say it would be a great move and other 'experts' say it would be a bad move.
I suppose it depends on which liar you choose to believe.
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28 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ChrisFS
This Brexit bollox is no different to any other vote or election thingy. Each side spouts it's own tripe and they hope enough people will agree to allow them to get their way. I have heard many 'experts' say it would be a great move and other 'experts' say it would be a bad move.
I suppose it depends on which liar you choose to believe.
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Listening to tripe and liars as you put it is a choice we have to help us decide which way to vote or not to vote at all
But if you don't vote then you can not whine when things happen that you don't like
Wayne
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28 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lonerider
if you don't vote then you can not whine when things happen that you don't like
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Yip.....and that's why I don't whine about things that happen.
I only whine about the twats who ultimately make the decisions and talk bollox while the public are led a dance akin to the Pied Piper.
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28 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lonerider
Listening to tripe and liars as you put it is a choice we have to help us decide which way to vote or not to vote at all
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Which is why this thread degenerated once people started posting links to all sorts of tosh written by other people. I'm not really interested what 'experts' have to say, to me it's a simple choice between getting sucked into an increasingly federal European state, or remaining independent. I don't need to read 100-page articles to decide which way I'm going to vote. I'd much rather read simple posts stating simple personal thoughts.
The latest European army move is a great example of ill-thought federalisation. With the exception of France and the UK, most countries' armed forces aren't fit for purpose. The shame of the Dutch army's failure at Srebrenica is a moot example. And one British officer described the Bundeswehr's operations in Afhanistan as "an aggressive camping organisation" rather than an army.
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3 Jun 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by *Touring Ted*
Ain't that the truth...
I keep thinking back to a quote by Mark Twain.
"If voting made any difference, they wouldn't let us do it"
Sent from my G7-L01 using Tapatalk
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I also bear that in mind; postal voting has a lot to answer for according to some commentators.
However, there is cause for optimism in the current police investigations into last years' elections.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Walkabout
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Last night on the BBC Question Time programme, the guy who lost the general election of last year for the labour party, aka Milliband, was soundly trounced by both the other panellists and, especially, by the audience.
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Now "fact checked":-
https://fullfact.org/europe/26-mays-...e-factchecked/
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3 Jun 2016
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Interesting discussion?
What do you think? Some good points made here, but I am not on the
ground in Britain, so I leave it up to those who are.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/why-brex...-molyneux.html
xfiltrate
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3 Jun 2016
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Moderation in the HUBB pub might be looser than elsewhere but it's still unacceptable to get to the stage of name calling and rude language. By all means post a response saying you don't agree with a point of view, but please stay polite.
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28 May 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ridetheworld
No this is true, but we'll lose harder by leaving. As a fellow northerner and scouser, I'm sure you'll agree that overall EU money has done the world of good. Still, I'd actually quite like to vote to leave, firstly just to see Cameron and Osbourne consigned to the dustbin of history, and then several decades worth of schadenfreude as the Brexiters realise that their resentment and anger, of which much is genuine and understandable, has nothing to do with the EU, which in my opinion has been made a scapegoat for something much worse, namely;
Relentless privatization and asset stripping, spiraling costs of education, poorly thought-through mass immigration, under-investment in infrastructure (outside of London) and the callous abandonment by the Tories of the North by a London-centric political class, along with the failure to address the decades of decline triggered by de-industralisation - throw all that on a trashheap of an economic policy which has dominated since the 1970's by both mainstream right and left political parties, driving inequality to absolutely perverse levels. Not just between the worlds richest and poorest, but between the top 1% and the remaining 99%. Leaving the EU will help not one single bit with this, in fact it will likely make it worse.
I've always been more towards remain, but I've listened to the arguments of the Brexit carefully. In the end, the Brexit argument goes like this;
The Brexit argument attacks the EU but acknowledges none of the benefits. It's campaign has been driven by exaggerations, rhetoric and outright lies. They can criticise ad nausea the faults and shortcomings of the EU but simply have no facts, no clear vision, basically no idea how the UK will be post-Brexit, other than 'it will be great, trust us'.
It's backward and regressive and if we vote Brexit, rather than transforming Britain into some sort of socialist paradise where we are governed by Brits for Brits, we'll see workers rights, human rights and environmental rights stripped away, and those vicious spivs in Westminster having a carte blanche to do whatever the hell they want.
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I too grew in in that socialist hell hole of Liverpool and well remember each Fridays announcement of 2,000, 3,000, 3500 job factory closures, the Tate & Lyle’s, Triumph, Cammel Lairds etc., etc., etc.,. I also remember the Militant Tendency years when Oxbridge educated, Guardian columnist Corbanista Owen Jones’ old man was flying around the city with his fellow thugs beating up any trade unionist who stepped out of line. I remember the Objective One years and witnessed first hand the corruption, nepotism and sheer waste of money and the distortions in business and society of the city those years. It will come as no surprise that I have never in my life had a job. The only money I make is what I made for myself. Most of my contemporaries left the city.
It is therefore, a great sadness to me to know that even worse than this is currently being inflicted upon the young people of Spain, of France, of Portugal, of Greece and more besides. It is the EU and its monetary policy that is largely responsible for the destruction of their lives.
It is shocking therefore that the contradiction in your argument is your failure to see that the people behind “remain” and “Project Fear” are precisely those whom you despise – the 1%.
They have the entire media, the entire establishment, every big organisation in the world, all the money, from the banks, from the government, from the EU, from the corporations, they have the televisions, the newspapers, the social media networking sites, the MPs, the foreign Presidents and Prime Ministers, the military, the intelligence services, the 90 yr old veterans, the police, the charities, the stars, celebrities and virtue signallers, the universities and the crooked academics - almost the entire financial, political, media, military/industrial, intelligence agency, cultural, academic and anything-else-you-can-think-of strength against the Brexit campaign.
And they still can't win.
No one has all the answers. However, the answer to our problems, real or otherwise, big or small is not more government, more politicians, more taxes, more regulations. You want your socialist Paradise? Go to Venezuela.
Make no mistake, this is about more than Brexit, this is the 1% against everyone else. This may well be a turning point in the 21st Century, we agree there - the point the people said "No more" to the Elite. Britain was the country to bring democracy to the world, it's fitting that it should be the one to bring it back. Don't pander to the 1%. Vote Leave
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