Soldato
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2005
- Posts
- 7,614
Yeah, because Brexit is just so mega terrible that it would trump a major erosion of our centuries old democracy.No it won't, not even close.
You EU ideologues need to get a grip.
Yeah, because Brexit is just so mega terrible that it would trump a major erosion of our centuries old democracy.No it won't, not even close.
Football match? It's not me crying about the result, or how that result came to be. That sounds like what happens after a football match to me.
So if a referendum is never a good idea, you'd agree with leaving the EU as the referendum on it was never a good idea in the first place right? Then we could start from scratch...
Remainers clearly did prefer the status quo as they voted for it.
We tried reforming the EU from the inside, have you forgotten already? I'm not surprised as Cameron came back with nothing.
It's not entirely possible to change leave the EU as no party with any chance of winning a GE in the foreseeable future supports leaving the EU.
No surprise that you give preference to a referendum from over 40 years ago to one from 1 month ago, the 1973 one is certainly more relevant to future...
It was a simple binary in/out vote, so in that context Remainers could only vote for the status quo. There were no other options, such as Remain But Reform for example. Had there been I wonder what the result would have been.
I think if you talk to anyone who isn't a total hardcore hothead, there's quite a lot of middle ground where people can agree. But the referendum has totally polarised things and made it very hard to reach that middle ground, because there's no longer anywhere in the middle to stand. "Brexit means Brexit".
As for Cameron, he was never going to get change was he? We all knew this. A weak leader who history will judge very poorly.
If Cameron absolutely had to call a referendum (which I dispute) then he should at least have shaped the question better, provided more options and required a firmer majority. Then the results could have been used as a mandate for demanding reform from the EU. I think more counties throughout the EU would have rallied to the the reform cause. But if reform wasn't forthcoming from the EU, then there'd be more justification for full Brexit and more chance to prepare for it rather than negotiating from a position of weakness like we will now have to do.
A more accurate way of putting it would be to obey the result of democracy or the people may rise up and cause trouble. The reason democracy works is becuase even if people don't get their way, they feel like they had a fair say. This is why the 2nd ref, or ignore the ref stuff would be far more damaging than anything Brexit could possibly do.
Why do people want to stay isolated in the EU?
Yeah, because Brexit is just so mega terrible that it would trump a major erosion of our centuries old democracy.
You EU ideologues need to get a grip.
I don't have EU ideologues so your assumption is wrong. Also poor attempt at a snide remark.
The two points you brought up was 2nd referendum and parliament ignoring the referendum. In context to these two point explain how they would be a major erosion of our democracy considering the fact that
The referendum wasn't legally binding and is to be debated in parliament.
It was won by a slim majority 52% (I would agree with you if say 60+% of people voted to leave)
Asking the same group set of people whether they are sure they wish to go through a major and irreversible change is actually a smart idea that is incorporated in a lot of things in life.
I am actually excited for the possiblities Brexit may bring. If we have a strong PM and I think we now do. Then this could work out very nicely for GB.
Why do people want to stay isolated in the EU?
I don't have EU ideologues so your assumption is wrong. Also poor attempt at a snide remark.
The two points you brought up was 2nd referendum and parliament ignoring the referendum. In context to these two point explain how they would be a major erosion of our democracy considering the fact that
The referendum wasn't legally binding and is to be debated in parliament.
It was won by a slim majority 52% (I would agree with you if say 60+% of people voted to leave)
Asking the same group set of people whether they are sure they wish to go through a major and irreversible change is actually a smart idea that is incorporated in a lot of things in life.
If the leavers are so convinced that they still hold the majority view, why are they, to every man, woman and dog, so set against a 2nd referendum?
If the leavers are so convinced that they still hold the majority view, why are they, to every man, woman and dog, so set against a 2nd referendum?
If the leavers are so convinced that they still hold the majority view, why are they, to every man, woman and dog, so set against a 2nd referendum?
If the leavers are so convinced that they still hold the majority view, why are they, to every man, woman and dog, so set against a 2nd referendum?
Both sides, and everyone in the country understood what it meant in reality, we were staying or we were leaving.
Why can't remainers accept that they lost and move on?
Solid argument.
Apart from the fact there's no definition to "leaving"
Apart from the fact there's no definition to "leaving"