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Starmer thinks no one will remember....

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footythoughts Flag Beckenham 15 Apr 23 10.28am

Originally posted by HKOwen

Brexit was not primarily a vote on economic factors IMO, it was about self determination.

Certainly, and at what point will people then realise that the systems in place ensure that we still don't have that anyway? Much of what the EU was blamed for was just UK government using it as a covenient get out. Much of what would've been EU immigration has been replaced by Non EU, is that a benefit of leaving?

The only meaningful change is a lack of right to live in the EU, meaning that people are trapped within our housing market as opposed to having options. Brexit is only useful if a government is in power that makes the most of it as an opportunity. I'm of the view that there is nothing to suggest that will happen in the coming decades. As such whether being better in or out is still very much an open question going forward. For instance in a future scenario where the EU or other union of nations decided to clamp down on outside immigration for whatever reason and we didn't (about as likely as the opposite scenario occuring) would people still laud our self determination or would we forget about all that with joining a union of countries suddenly becoming a great idea again?

 

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footythoughts Flag Beckenham 15 Apr 23 10.33am

Originally posted by EverybodyDannsNow

Starmer is a shyster - as much of a liar as Boris and about as principled as Truss.

He's going to fumble what should have been the simplest GE victory in recent history.

He's a like to be liked type, so is frankly wishy washy on just about everything. Still, parties are more often voted out rather than in, and even where the opposition may not be much better, it would take quite a national effort not to draw a firm conclusion come the election based on the past few years of governance.

 

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Matov Flag 15 Apr 23 10.33am Send a Private Message to Matov Add Matov as a friend

Originally posted by HKOwen

Brexit was not primarily a vote on economic factors IMO, it was about self determination.


And there were/are huge economic upsides to it. But our political class have simply not been willing to make it a success. This is the issue.

Mea culpa, I genuinely hoped that this country would make a real go of Brexit but the Tories have been a joke. How we are still in the ECHR and why we have still not revoked entire swathes of EU legislation is simply beyond me.

Utterly betrayed.

I have actually had a bit of 180-degree turn of late based on the revelation of just how cucked our structure of Governance actually is. Brexit is ultimately pointless if we do not have the leadership to pursue it to its logical conclusion. And we don't. Institutionally, the UK is unwilling to pursue a seperate future.

And given all the crap from the US these days, then maybe our future has to be European. Throw in how much more willing our European brothers and sisters are to resist, even if their efforts are largely unfocused, at least that energy is there.

If we do go back into the EU then I will not be resisting it. I did have some hopes that the Reform Party, with Farage at the helm, might offer a genuinely new future but that is plainly not happening.

Brexit has not failed. Our system has failed it.

 


"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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HKOwen Flag Hong Kong 15 Apr 23 11.09am Send a Private Message to HKOwen Add HKOwen as a friend

Good points Matov

 


Responsibility Deficit Disorder is a medical condition. Symptoms include inability to be corrected when wrong, false sense of superiority, desire to share personal info no else cares about, general hubris. It's a medical issue rather than pure arrogance.

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Mapletree Flag Croydon 15 Apr 23 11.10am Send a Private Message to Mapletree Add Mapletree as a friend

Originally posted by footythoughts

He's a like to be liked type, so is frankly wishy washy on just about everything. Still, parties are more often voted out rather than in, and even where the opposition may not be much better, it would take quite a national effort not to draw a firm conclusion come the election based on the past few years of governance.

Tell that to the Labour left. He is far cleverer than people give him credit for

 

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footythoughts Flag Beckenham 15 Apr 23 11.12am

Originally posted by Matov


And there were/are huge economic upsides to it. But our political class have simply not been willing to make it a success. This is the issue.

Mea culpa, I genuinely hoped that this country would make a real go of Brexit but the Tories have been a joke. How we are still in the ECHR and why we have still not revoked entire swathes of EU legislation is simply beyond me.

Utterly betrayed.

I have actually had a bit of 180-degree turn of late based on the revelation of just how cucked our structure of Governance actually is. Brexit is ultimately pointless if we do not have the leadership to pursue it to its logical conclusion. And we don't. Institutionally, the UK is unwilling to pursue a seperate future.

And given all the crap from the US these days, then maybe our future has to be European. Throw in how much more willing our European brothers and sisters are to resist, even if their efforts are largely unfocused, at least that energy is there.

If we do go back into the EU then I will not be resisting it. I did have some hopes that the Reform Party, with Farage at the helm, might offer a genuinely new future but that is plainly not happening.

Brexit has not failed. Our system has failed it.

They prefered coasting along in the EU, while simultaneously blaming it for decisions they would have often themsleves made anyway. We showed ourself the door and appeared to think that'd it'd be easy to us to carve out a path or get better deals than a massive union we just left. While I'm not saying there aren't angles we could've gone with it, it requires talent and dedication to getting to that point that isn't a feature of a government.

Also, just to add if 'European brothers are sisters' is to mean 'white', then I do think it's sensible to highlight that having a strict immigration policy - which of course our government could now do if it wanted - is not the same as some kind of all white future. It takes about five minutes to see that people who go all in down that route often end up being into sweeping demographic hatred (possibly because they arbitrarily write off swathes of countrymen) that never seems to end (jews especially appear to especially hated for instance) and often branches out into dehumanisation and more. A realistic way of treating others and belief system is worth propogating passing down, this stuff not so much.


Edited by footythoughts (15 Apr 2023 11.26am)

 

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Mapletree Flag Croydon 15 Apr 23 11.13am Send a Private Message to Mapletree Add Mapletree as a friend

Originally posted by Matov


And there were/are huge economic upsides to it. But our political class have simply not been willing to make it a success. This is the issue.

Mea culpa, I genuinely hoped that this country would make a real go of Brexit but the Tories have been a joke. How we are still in the ECHR and why we have still not revoked entire swathes of EU legislation is simply beyond me.

Utterly betrayed.

I have actually had a bit of 180-degree turn of late based on the revelation of just how cucked our structure of Governance actually is. Brexit is ultimately pointless if we do not have the leadership to pursue it to its logical conclusion. And we don't. Institutionally, the UK is unwilling to pursue a seperate future.

And given all the crap from the US these days, then maybe our future has to be European. Throw in how much more willing our European brothers and sisters are to resist, even if their efforts are largely unfocused, at least that energy is there.

If we do go back into the EU then I will not be resisting it. I did have some hopes that the Reform Party, with Farage at the helm, might offer a genuinely new future but that is plainly not happening.

Brexit has not failed. Our system has failed it.

The first part is nonsense. Upsides were never even a pale shadow of downsides. And it was always obvious this would end up making us even more of a vassal of the US. See my posts from 8 years ago. And the trouble is the US has a broken legal system in thrall to its highly divisive politics

 

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newickeagle Flag Newick, E Sussex 15 Apr 23 11.20am Send a Private Message to newickeagle Add newickeagle as a friend

It also needed a ditching of the bigoted dogma, all things European bad blah blah blah. Handled sensibly, it may have worked. It has been handled by numb skulls.

 

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HKOwen Flag Hong Kong 15 Apr 23 11.25am Send a Private Message to HKOwen Add HKOwen as a friend

Originally posted by Mapletree

Tell that to the Labour left. He is far cleverer than people give him credit for

He is certainly more devious than given credit for.

I do give him credit for dealing with Corbyn robustly though.

I can see a fun times ahead as the left and right of the party, Rayner and Reeves for example start fighting in public as the election gets nearer

 


Responsibility Deficit Disorder is a medical condition. Symptoms include inability to be corrected when wrong, false sense of superiority, desire to share personal info no else cares about, general hubris. It's a medical issue rather than pure arrogance.

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Matov Flag 15 Apr 23 11.28am Send a Private Message to Matov Add Matov as a friend

Originally posted by HKOwen


I can see a fun times ahead as the left and right of the party, Rayner and Reeves for example start fighting in public as the election gets nearer


Rayner will be kept on until after the GE. If Labour win it with a working majority, then she is gone in the first reshuffle.

 


"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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Matov Flag 15 Apr 23 11.37am Send a Private Message to Matov Add Matov as a friend

Originally posted by newickeagle

It also needed a ditching of the bigoted dogma, all things European bad blah blah blah. Handled sensibly, it may have worked. It has been handled by numb skulls.

Again, a major mea-cupla on my part in that I never truly understood the scale of how our ruling political elites hid behind the EU in terms of blaming it for their own incompetence.

It effectively allowed an entire swathe of modern British politicians to have a get-out-of-jail-free card when it came to hiding their sheer uselessness because they could always just blame Brussels.

In many ways that is perhaps the most dangerous, and lasting, impact of the EU on the UK.

BUt given the trend of many EU countries to move towards the Right, and not the mealy-mouthed kind the modern UK Conservative Party represents, then maybe we need to be back in the fold. That the political battle to shape the next 100 years is actually being fought in Brussels? That a Pan-European Right is the only hope of truly resisting globalism? The EU is still as awful as ever but at least it does, at its very core, have something approaching a vision.

 


"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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nead1 Flag 15 Apr 23 11.40am Send a Private Message to nead1 Add nead1 as a friend

How anyone can think there were/are "huge economic upsides" to Brexit is entirely beyond me. All the evidence points in entirely the other direction and intuitively, it is easily understandable that if you erect trade barriers with by far your largest trading partner, it is going to have a significant impact. From all the recent figures released, the evidence seems clear cut enough.

As to the ECHR, it is nothing to do with the EU - entirely separate and set up post WW2 with major British input.

As an aside, all the issues with the small boats is also a direct result of Brexit. Previously, under the Dublin agreement, people arriving would have been sent back to the country of entry to the EU - often Greece or Italy. The smugglers have certainly recognised what the UK has done and increasingly, it seems, the public are waking up to it as well.

Its also interesting that Sunak has gone out of his way to foster stronger links with France and the broader EU. He and Hunt know better than anybody the impact all this is having from a pure economic perspective. Starmer will likewise, and if elected, will probably carry on down the same kind of path as Sunak/Hunt I suspect.

 

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