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Badger11 Beckenham 10 Sep 19 9.01pm | |
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Originally posted by Matov
Come off it. Labours proposal is utterly ludicrous and beyond parody, even given the absolute rabbit-hole that British politics has plunged head-first into. Do you genuinely believe that they will offer us a Leave option that has even the smallest shred of credibility? Utterly delusional.
If you want us Leavers f***ed over then have the balls to spit in our faces, like the Lib Dems want to do, rather than stab us in the back because whilst we will react BADLY to both, at least we would not have been made to suffer the indignity of you w***ers trying to maintain your stand on the moral high ground. Remain is a swamp dwellers position now. The antithesis of any semblance of democratic belief. Own that. Wear that hat.
Edited by Matov (10 Sep 2019 8.17pm) Good post. If a 2nd referendum is held it is very likely that there will be legal challenges especially around the question. If the deal Labour agrees is Brexit in name only then the legal challenge will be that people who wish to leave are disenfranchised as the option is Remain or quasi leave. I suspect we will see a re-run of what we are going through now only this time it will be the leavers going to court and trying to block the referendum. Still all to play for.
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silvertop Portishead 10 Sep 19 9.07pm | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
As I predicted Corbyn has said the next Labour party manifesto "will promise to reach a better Brexit deal, but is not expected to commit to either Leave or Remain." If I was a Remainer I am not sure I would be voting Labour with that ringing endorsement. Maybe they should call it the okey cokey manifesto. I'm not sure many people formerly labour will vote for them for the very reason that their brexit stance is ambiguous and their leader saying he voted remain where everyone knows he is as leave as you like. That and the fact that he is an out and out marxist.
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Badger11 Beckenham 10 Sep 19 9.17pm | |
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Originally posted by silvertop
I'm not sure many people formerly labour will vote for them for the very reason that their brexit stance is ambiguous and their leader saying he voted remain where everyone knows he is as leave as you like. That and the fact that he is an out and out marxist. I agree. It doesn't help that Watson, Thornberry and Starmer are directly contradicting Corbyn's Brexit position. Up until now the spotlight has been on the confusion in the Tory party but Labour has just as many problems. As the possibility of a Labour government or coalition grows then these will come to the fore. The smaller parties seem to be the only ones that are united.
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silvertop Portishead 10 Sep 19 9.19pm | |
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Originally posted by Matov
Come off it. Labours proposal is utterly ludicrous and beyond parody, even given the absolute rabbit-hole that British politics has plunged head-first into. Do you genuinely believe that they will offer us a Leave option that has even the smallest shred of credibility? Utterly delusional.
If you want us Leavers f***ed over then have the balls to spit in our faces, like the Lib Dems want to do, rather than stab us in the back because whilst we will react BADLY to both, at least we would not have been made to suffer the indignity of you w***ers trying to maintain your stand on the moral high ground. Remain is a swamp dwellers position now. The antithesis of any semblance of democratic belief. Own that. Wear that hat.
Edited by Matov (10 Sep 2019 8.17pm) I am a remainer but do struggle with the democracy issue. As I said about a million posts ago unless there was something wrong with the vote it must stand. That said this paralysing impasse must end. There is not likely to be a deal the parliament will approve. A ge will doubtless produce another hung parliament and more of the same. A new referendum seems the only way to move and save the union. However putting some deal on the ballot sheet is wrong for 2 reasons. Either the deal is approved in which case we leave. Some concocted arrangement put to the people because it wont get passed parliament would end badly. The other reason is the inherent unfairness in splitting the leave vote. Nope it's remain versus no deal for me.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 10 Sep 19 9.30pm | |
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Originally posted by ASCPFC
I'm unable to fully talk about my work in an open context. I work with supposed refugees on a daily basis. In private, you learn a lot. In public these people are all victims. Here is some independent proof on this: Worryingly there have been no investigations in the rest of the country. Here is a general piece on asylum seekers but it is not the mail or the express or anything like that. And here is an EU political journal that talks about what the US customs thinks of the EU - along with some interesting stats on Syrian passports. On a personal note, I interviewed three Algerians last year. All were posing as Syrians. I finished the interview with 'why are you seeking asylum from Algeria?'. From what you say it seems that the agency you work for is not doing their job at best and possibly acting corruptly at worst. I know I couldn't live with that knowledge and would have to find a way to report it and stop it, whatever the cost to people's jobs. I don't blame people for wanting a better life but we absolutely must have robust systems in place to ensure that our willingness to accept refugees and asylum seekers is not abused. If the agencies we employ to do that are failing then we need to find out why and act to stop it.
For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally. |
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Stirlingsays 10 Sep 19 9.39pm | |
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Beyond parody.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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cryrst The garden of England 10 Sep 19 9.40pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
From what you say it seems that the agency you work for is not doing their job at best and possibly acting corruptly at worst. I know I couldn't live with that knowledge and would have to find a way to report it and stop it, whatever the cost to people's jobs. I don't blame people for wanting a better life but we absolutely must have robust systems in place to ensure that our willingness to accept refugees and asylum seekers is not abused. If the agencies we employ to do that are failing then we need to find out why and act to stop it. Especially as they may be terrorists eh wissy.
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cryrst The garden of England 10 Sep 19 9.41pm | |
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Originally posted by silvertop
I am a remainer but do struggle with the democracy issue. As I said about a million posts ago unless there was something wrong with the vote it must stand. That said this paralysing impasse must end. There is not likely to be a deal the parliament will approve. A ge will doubtless produce another hung parliament and more of the same. A new referendum seems the only way to move and save the union. However putting some deal on the ballot sheet is wrong for 2 reasons. Either the deal is approved in which case we leave. Some concocted arrangement put to the people because it wont get passed parliament would end badly. The other reason is the inherent unfairness in splitting the leave vote. Nope it's remain versus no deal for me. Good post but your last line somewhat contradicts your first line.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 10 Sep 19 9.43pm | |
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Originally posted by ASCPFC
Believe me when I say unequivocally that an EU integrated army was exactly what it was to be but I guess the Iraq and Afghanistan deployments put paid to it. Now those are largely over, it will be back on the table. Merkel and Macron are the current drivers on this but Blair was big into it before being paid off by the states. I could even give figures but am prevented from doing so. Here the EU gives its own response to some difficult questions after journalists (Kilroy-Silk!) got wind of something. Loved their own badge and command answer. (Click on answers to see the EU's written response). This is from them so it is in the public domain. So not exactly the Express. As this is the first answer I don't think there is any evidence for what you are suggesting:- " The Council would inform the Honourable Parliamentarian that the military resources used in EU operations are provided entirely by Member States on a case-by-case basis. No civilian or military personnel are permanently seconded to a Rapid Reaction Force. Whenever it is decided to conduct an EU operation, in each instance Member States determine the nature and extent of their participation in complete accordance with their national procedures."
For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally. |
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cryrst The garden of England 10 Sep 19 9.49pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
As this is the first answer I don't think there is any evidence for what you are suggesting:- " The Council would inform the Honourable Parliamentarian that the military resources used in EU operations are provided entirely by Member States on a case-by-case basis. No civilian or military personnel are permanently seconded to a Rapid Reaction Force. Whenever it is decided to conduct an EU operation, in each instance Member States determine the nature and extent of their participation in complete accordance with their national procedures." Do you need that explained or are you ok with it?
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Matov 10 Sep 19 10.09pm | |
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Originally posted by silvertop
I am a remainer but do struggle with the democracy issue. How can you, in any meaningful democractic way, believe that Remain, the losing option from 2016, deserves being on the ballot paper? Through gritted teeth I can concede that an arguement can be made for people being asked to vote on either a deal or no-deal with regards to how we leave the EU but the issue of Remain has been settled. But a second chance for Remain? That is what will destroy peoples faith in our democracy. That is what makes the current divide not only more toxic than it is but potentially pushing the issue into a far more darker realm of political discourse. The country decided. Remain was rejected. Once we leave then a campaign for rejoining, that has an absolute political legitmacy. Zero issues around that. But to wish for Remain on another ballot paper is simply beyond my comprehension. Do you not have any fears about what that could unleash in this country? Of the potential damage that it causes in the short, medium and long term?
"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." - 1984 - George Orwell. |
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silvertop Portishead 10 Sep 19 10.31pm | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
Good post but your last line somewhat contradicts your first line. Yes but i did say I posted that a million posts ago I.e. just after the vote. 3 years later and standing by a vote no matter how democratic is outweighed by the need to break the impasse with a second referendum.
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