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- Oct 16, 2011
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- 36,181
Even as someone who thinks Brexit is incredibly fecking stupid, I don't think a lot of the PV types do themselves any favours.
I was surprised yesterday when a couple of Sky newsreaders announced they had both stocked up their house ready for shortages. I know chatting bollocks is part of their job, but they seemed genuine.
So, I haven't stocked up a jot, but maybe I'm out of line, what have the boys and girls of RedCafe done, has anyone already filled their cupboards ready for doomsday?
Yeah I know. Everything from the very start until now is beyond ridiculous. There should have been more options in referendum in the first place because as you say, you can leave EU in a lot of different ways. Leave campaign was mostly based on laughable lies and false promises (infamous £350m per week for NHS...) and unfortunately there are over 17 million fools who believes (or believed) that. I don't think having a second referendum with more options (Leave with no deal, leave with a deal that is currently on the table, revoke Article 50) would be any less democratic than having an entire campaign based on lies. It's a complete shambles and there will be no winners whatever the outcome will be. I am not into politics at all and I don't even live in UK anymore so I might be talking nonsense I am not sureAs opposed to the 56 General Elections we've had in this country?
Yeah, it's laughable. Let's just keep the Whigs in for ever and ever.
Democracy is not about a single snapshot of public opinion. It's a regular temperature gauge of how the people believe the country is being/should be run.
Brexit was too big a choice to left to a single vote., particularly when there are at least 3 stages to be concerned with (leaving, the nature of the breakup and nature of our relationship with non-EU countries). Each stage has a knock-on effect to the next one. So at the very least, there should be another referendum to ask whether we're on the course that 2016 promised.
That's how the party works. Manifesto policy (i.e UNDER LABOUR) doesn't tend to be made to order for the benefit of the Beeb.Can this lot pick a fecking position and stick with it?![]()
Yeah I know. Everything from the very start until now is beyond ridiculous. There should have been more options in referendum in the first place because as you say, you can leave EU in a lot of different ways. Leave campaign was mostly based on laughable lies and false promises (infamous £350m per week for NHS...) and unfortunately there are over 17 million fools who believes (or believed) that. I don't think having a second referendum with more options (Leave with no deal, leave with a deal that is currently on the table, revoke Article 50) would be any less democratic than having an entire campaign based on lies. It's a complete shambles and there will be no winners whatever the outcome will be. I am not into politics at all and I don't even live in UK anymore so I might be talking nonsense I am not sure![]()
Congratulations you've managed to point out that government spending is more complicated than buying pints!
You made the ascertation that Labour would spend this country into oblivion and I’m simply showing you that the Tories aren’t spending at all, despite recent economic growth.
Also you shouldn’t throw around such hyperbole about who understands economics and who doesn’t, particularly when you quoted the unemployment figures being a win for the tories, but conveniently didn’t mention the zero contract hours which are a significant contributor to the unemployment numbers.
Further to that, this idea that due to Labour’s spending the Tories simply HAD to cut to balance the books and recover the deficit is false and oversimplified. When recovering from a severe downturn such as 2008 — and with interest rates at nearly zero — the deficit should not be the target of policy. Instead, it should be allowed to expand until the economy has recovered. Also Osborne said austerity would last until 2015, and by then public spending would increase because the economy will have fully recovered - he failed spectacularly and now that has been delayed to 2025, a 10 year revision.
As for your Glazers analogy, well the less said about that the better.
Yep. Got a couple weeks’ worth of extras in. I figure if the shit is hitting the fan after that brexit will be toast and there will be urgent discussions with the eu to stabilise the situation.I was surprised yesterday when a couple of Sky newsreaders announced they had both stocked up their house ready for shortages. I know chatting bollocks is part of their job, but they seemed genuine.
So, I haven't stocked up a jot, but maybe I'm out of line, what have the boys and girls of RedCafe done, has anyone already filled their cupboards ready for doomsday?
Well the Labour manifesto was very clear that they wanted to Leave, so he should saying that shouldn't he?That's how the party works. Manifesto policy (i.e UNDER LABOUR) doesn't tend to be made to order for the benefit of the Beeb.
You are very welcome. I just replied to someone and gave my opinion, I don't follow all this nonsense everyday hence why I never post in this thread.Absolutely the greatest quote on here today, well done, dove thank you, you've restored my faith in the human "I'm not sure what I'm talking about" syndrome
Yet another completely incorrect sweeping statement.
Its an opinion Buster, can you disprove it?
Completely true. There is no common purpose with any of the parties or politicians for national unity. The only common interest is self preservation.
You are very welcome. I just replied to someone and gave my opinion, I don't follow all this nonsense everyday hence why I never post in this thread.
If one talks of shortages people think you're being overdramatic and scaremongering and all the rest.
If there is a no deal, things that were taken for granted will be different. Nobody knows to what extent but it won't be the same as before but certainly fresh produce will be affected, food wise. You can't stock up on fresh produce.
What makes even less sense is that people say there may be an initial shock but unless things change back to how they were, the initial shock would be continuous. It's not suddenly going to go away.
Furthermore until it happens most people think everything will carry on as normal. I've no idea why.
Close to 5 million signatures on the petition, there was another one calling for a second referendum which got similar numbers but that was hijacked by bots. Nobody with any serious clout has suggested this yet and I'm sure it will pass the 5 million mark.
What more do people have to do to be listened to?
As Martin Luther King said "a riot is the language of the unheard" and I fear we could see this if things don't take a different course. I abhor destroying cities but the government can't keep ignoring the people. If anything we're to happen, I would hope nobody is hurt.
Labour were in power during the boom and continued spending so that we had no contingency. In 2008 the banking crisis came so that rise has nothing to do with the Tories.
We are currently in the lowest ever unemployment the country has ever had, so you can't blame the business side.
And the Tories have had us in 'austerity', as you say.
Are you not missing the rather obvious point that the Tories have no option but to do what they have done as we would otherwise be closer to 100% debt!
On the flip side, if Labour acted responsibly and didn't try to buy votes that 80% peak could be at more like 60%.
It's no point trying to explain stuff like this on here, it's a markedly left leaning forum.
It's no point trying to explain stuff like this on here, it's a markedly left leaning forum.
It's no point trying to explain stuff like this on here, it's a markedly left leaning forum.
Ignoring a referendum where it was laid out in plain terms what voting out entailed (and all the scare mongering that came with it) and then demanding a second referendum before the results of the first one is even implemented or asking for a soft brexit which isn’t actually what leave was painted as (by both sides), is democratic I suppose?Ignoring a million people marching in the street and 5 million petition signatures is not Democratic.
What he's saying is largely incorrect though - austerity isn't the only approach to tackling debts and deficits. Plenty of economists have said so - the only reason the Tories pursued austerity was because the financial crisis gave them a convenient disguise for doing so. And the fact the party have went for Brexit so keenly shows they don't give a feck about good economic management of the country, it's always been an ideological desire for them to reduce the size of the state.
What he's saying is largely incorrect though.
No, its that the EU exports more to us than we do to them that's the nub of it. I doubt if either wants to get into a trade war or cutting noses off to spite face.
'Project fear' was always nonsense as was 'Cake and eat it', isn't it time we left these behind now surely!
Ignoring a referendum where it was laid out in plain terms what voting out entailed (and all the scare mongering that came with it) and then demanding a second referendum before the results of the first one is even implemented or asking for a soft brexit which isn’t actually what leave was painted as (by both sides), is democratic I suppose?
You’re all asking for the far right to truly have cause to get behind by literally wanting to overturn the results of the referendum.
Ignoring a referendum where it was laid out in plain terms what voting out entailed (and all the scare mongering that came with it) and then demanding a second referendum before the results of the first one is even implemented or asking for a soft brexit which isn’t actually what leave was painted as (by both sides), is democratic I suppose?
You’re all asking for the far right to truly have cause to get behind by literally wanting to overturn the results of the referendum.
The Referdum wasn't ignored. It was followed through upon with numerous negotiations and votes in Parliament.Ignoring a referendum where it was laid out in plain terms what voting out entailed (and all the scare mongering that came with it) and then demanding a second referendum before the results of the first one is even implemented or asking for a soft brexit which isn’t actually what leave was painted as (by both sides), is democratic I suppose?
You’re all asking for the far right to truly have cause to get behind by literally wanting to overturn the results of the referendum.
That all depends on who's economic model you follow, Paul Krugman would disagree with you but what does he know?Increasing public spending during a recession is a quick way to economic ruin
So a referendum every 5 years is the way to go?We've had 56 General Elections since the 1800s. There's a reason it wasn't just 1
If you're going to quote the post, try reading the whole thing.So a referendum every 5 years is the way to go?
To be fair, your posts are generally so shit I'm struggling to get to the end of this one.I did
The Referdum wasn't ignored. It was followed through upon with numerous negotiations and votes in Parliament.
At risk of repeating myself, Democracy isn't a 'set it and forget it' process. It's a constant set of course corrections. If an elected official does a bad job, they're voted out. If they do a good job, they're kept in. If they lie, cheat, steal, act honourably, dishonourably, etc. the people have the option to register their opinions at regular intervals.
We've had 56 General Elections since the 1800s. There's a reason it wasn't just 1.
Brexit was a chance for the electorate to tell the powers-that-be the direction in which they'd like the ship to be steered. But that direction was set against a backdrop of lies and mistruths.
In any kind of proper Democratic system, we'd be allowed to change course. Instead, we're sailing in slow-motion into the rocks. Everybody knows it. Everybody sees it. Everybody knows how to stop it. But they won't out of stubborness for an idea that is the exact of opposite of the Democracy that is supposedly being protected.
If there was a General Election tomorrow, I'd vote out May for her incompetence because I think she's bad for the country and has proven to be so over the course of time. As a citizen of a first world country, I'd like the same option on Brexit in light of what's come to transpire since 2016. If you're going to have a vote to kick the process off, you should then also have equally significant votes at important junctures. Or else not have any votes on that particular matter at all.
A single vote was the worst of all worlds because it leaves the British people with no recourse to political mismanagement and dishonesty.
Makes your response even more nonsensical then. Lost count the amount of times this has been posted and debunkedI did
Don't recall anyone stating that upon having another referendum there can't be anymore? The only arguement I see is that there is more information around regarding the potential outcome of what we are about to do, and generally people are now informed, so maybe... just maybe... It might be a good idea to confirm whether or not we want to go ahead and jump?... seems a bit one sided doesn't it?
I don't disagree with you entirely but we had a vote to kick this whole thing off in the 70's. Then we didn't bother with any more votes for forty years despite huge changes in the organisation we joined. Now the vote went the other way so we have to revote over and over every two to three years, you have to admit that seems a bit one sided doesn't it?