Brexit: A change of heart?? |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
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Posted: April 28 2020 at 21:15 |
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Let the corruption of the 'centrist' technocrat leadership never be forgotten. They must atone, they must change. Running fear campaigns against the far right and attempting to evoke nostalgia for 'sensible' times is not going to help. No, those times were not sensible and many bad decisions were made, which have led to the present day situation.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17506 |
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Hi, My biggest concerns are that it was a hassle buying stuff from/in England, as Amazon in the UK will not process a very large numbers of Visa/MC cards at all ... and the ability to purchase something in there is a problem, and I seriously doubt that leaving the EU is going to help if the prices are going to rise ... which is what the rich in that country want ... more money from the outside ... a very old trick that has been used for hundreds of years to keep the royals in power and the rich in control, and you foot and pay for the bill. I can not buy, for example, any of the stuff off the BBC ... and they are not intelligent enough (same folks that did not like the Beatles and Rolling Stones 56 years ago - the worst business decisions EVER), to realize that they can sell over there and that there are people that like it and want it. No matter ... they already got their tea and crumpets and everyone is paying for them. Opinions are not the answer, I agree, but it does not mean any of them is necessarily wrong ... I might as well not bother even saying anything, or reviewing your work .... besides the fact that you could easily send me information for a listen ... I have never disliked your work, even though it's possibly a bit less of the kind I like that seems to have a more "classical" outlook, while yours is more modern ... but you're not gonna send me anything anyway ... just like the BBC and Amazon are not interested in fixing their issue and stop turning away customers!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Rick1
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 14 2020 Location: Loughborough UK Status: Offline Points: 2792 |
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Thanks, in part, to Covid-19 the crazy train called Brexit is now hurtling out of control. I have come to this discussion rather late but I voted remain, for reasons too numerous to mention.
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LAM-SGC
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 26 2018 Location: se Status: Offline Points: 1544 |
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I would have voted stay if I lived in the UK but I'm an Irish-Swedish lass in Sweden.
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Davesax1965
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 23 2013 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 2839 |
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Ah yes, forgot about Gordon Brown, ahemmmmm.
And true, fireworks aren't a good barometer. Neither are the opinions of people who aren't actually here. ;-) |
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20239 |
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Not so sure about that, since most of the Scottish oil, wool & meat, liquors and fisheries products would find easily 100% trade share with the rest of the EU, and they wouldn't care about having business rartchedly small market just south of their border. As for the NI, are the unionists still the population majority? in other words, do the republicans/catholics even have voting rights, or did Westminster make sure that they would never have their way?
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someone_else
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: May 02 2008 Location: Going Bananas Status: Offline Points: 24294 |
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It would not surprise me if time will give us better standards to measure against than the absence of fireworks from the folks downhill. No offence intended, I wish ye British the best now that you have escaped from the worst. May Britain become Great again and prosper not less than Iceland, Switzerland and Norway .
Edited by someone_else - February 03 2020 at 14:44 |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20029 |
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Gordon Brown must be flippin' old then.
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
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Scottish independence and them rejoining the EU is not going to happen. I've heard Nicola Sturgeon trying to explain how it would happen, but when pressed couldn't explain how she could achieve this with no sovereign currency, and many of Scotlands main trading assets (fishing/oil etc) were actually not Scottish, they're British.
Independence was only viable when the UK was part of the EU, and the Scots didn't want it then. The only reason the SNP wiped the floor with Labour in 2015, was not because of renewed interest in independence, but dissatisfaction with the way the Labour party were going. It was - I suspect - in many cases a protest vote. |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Chaser
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 18 2018 Location: Nottingham Status: Offline Points: 1202 |
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I don't know exactly what will happen, but I'm not convinced by the claim that Brexit means the inevitable break up of the UK. Unionists in Northern Ireland are no more inclined towards the idea of a united Ireland than they were before. Their whole issue with the Theresa may deal was that it pushed NI closer to the Republic and they didn't want that. And, whilst Brexit increases the case for Scottish independence politically, it makes it a much worse proposition economically. Bearing in mind that 80% of Scotland's trade is with the rest of the UK, it's impossible to believe that the creation of a hard border between Scotland and their main market will improve Scotland's economic position. The Scots can't have it both ways on this one. If they're saying that Brexit is bad because trade barriers between the UK are the EU are economically damaging, then that must also be the case for trade barriers between Scotland and the rest of the UK. |
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20239 |
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TBH, ever since the advanced election and BoJo's victory, I've got no qualms anymore about the issue.
Let's hope Scotland and North Ireland can escape this disaster soon enough (I doubt Wales will escape the English stranglehold) Theoretically it could be simpler for NI, since all they would have to do is reunite wityh the real Ireland. Not sure whether Westminster will give the Scots a second independance referendum, after conning them, by hodling the Brexit one after it. |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
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There were fireworks going off near where I live. I think it's sad that small numbers of people were behaving like it was some great unifying event, like the reunification of Germany. I'm kind of done with it all now. The sh*t's been sh&t. It's over now, and there's nothing we can really do about it.
I sincerely hope all us 'remoaners' were wrong all along, and it all turns out great, and of course, it's early days, but for now at least, I can't see how it can be a success. |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic Joined: October 05 2013 Location: SFcaUsA Status: Offline Points: 15242 |
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No political stance on this, just think this is freekin hilarious! |
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https://rateyourmusic.com/~siLLy_puPPy |
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Davesax1965
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 23 2013 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 2839 |
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Congratulations my ar$e.
I live in one of the highest points of the UK. From my bedroom window, I can see over thirty miles. There wasn't one firework to celebrate. Not one. Edited by Davesax1965 - February 02 2020 at 04:42 |
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someone_else
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: May 02 2008 Location: Going Bananas Status: Offline Points: 24294 |
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Congratulations !
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Davesax1965
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 23 2013 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 2839 |
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PS That's an excellent post from Dean, cheers.
I would point out, though, that, being a Northerner by genetics who's lived in the South of England (and incidentally been a European expat twice) that the map of Southern England contains just as much blue as the map of Northern England, now. ;-) |
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Davesax1965
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 23 2013 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 2839 |
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Factoid.
Tony Blair is the only Labour PM to have been born in the last 100 years. God help us. |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
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Sh!**ing hell!
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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3½ years ago I opined on this forum that the 52% of British people who voted to leave the EU would not be able to make it work without the help, support and expertise of 48% of us who voted to remain. Since then we have been subjected to childish name-calling (Remoaners) and we have been ignored and kept out of the leave negotiations with the EU. We were then blamed for the May's "Deal" failing to get through Parliament when it was the DUP and members of the fascist ERG who blocked it on every occasion, even the shaved pedigree malamute puppy in a suit voted against May's "Deal" (because he will do anything to grasp power and that was a political move not an ideological one). The 48% played no part in any of this fiasco apart from signing pointless online petitions and having a nice day out or two in London fruitlessly waving Bollocks to Brexit placards.
What we saw from Leavers post referendum was esprit de l'escalier without the charm or wit. Having won the vote they then scrabbled around looking for justification for that vote that wasn't based upon knee-jerk racism and alt-wrong nationalism because if they haven't had that Naked Lunch moment when it has dawned on them that they would have lost without the support of racist nationalists then, frankly, that can only be because they're either too pig-ignorant to care or are in truth, racist nationalists. I can never (and will never) accept that the end justifies the means. I've had Leavers tell me point-blank that Brexit was not about immigration when every single Leave campaign leaflet had immigration front and centre. I've had Leavers inform me that Brexit means we are taking back control of our borders when we've never not been in control of our borders because the UK never signed up to Schengen agreement. I've had Leavers tell me that a soft-border between NI and Eire is possible outside the EU when it was only ever made possible because both sides were members of the EU. The less brazen of them simply claim that despite all that, they voted to leave for completely different reasons, that for them at least, it wasn't about immigration. I'd imagine there are some who believe that the allies won WW2 because Churchill was a better painter than Hitler. Sometimes you have to look at who shares your views and make a choice about whether you want to stand alongside them or not. If I was a leaver (which I am not) I could no more share the same views as Rees Moog, Gove, Fartrage and Johnson than I would voluntarily listen to a whole Toto album for the first time (I would have written Kansas there but I have recently listen to Leftoverture [and hated it]). So now Johnson has "a mandate from the people" to "get Brexit done". Fine. We lost. Now go and do it. We will now hold every single person who wants the British Isles to leave the EU to account. We will hold you all to every single promise you have made or believed in. We want the golden unicorn that farts diamonds and emeralds out of its arse: We want beneficial trade deals with every major trading country in the World, and we want them without having to give away the Crown Jewels, the Elgin Marbles or the NHS; We want to see that extra £350million given to the NHS every week. We want you to recruit more Doctors and Nurses to replace those from foreign climes who are no longer welcome; We want you to keep the Union together just like you promised; We want to see you keep the border between NI and Eire exactly as it was; We want you to sort out the Scottish problem, and the Northern Irish problem, and the Welsh problem, and the Cornish problem, and every other parochial issue that will arise as a result of this; We want to see our wages increase, and we want to see them increase significantly to compensate for all this mess; We want so see the whole country prosper and grow, (and not just those who will profit from the ensuing chaos); And most of all, you've got to win us back because we're more than just a little pissed off with you at the moment, this rift is going to take a lot of healing and we're in no mood to hold out a friendly hand to help you. As the saying goes, you had your chance and you blew it. What we don't want to see is a return to how it was before we joined the EEC in 1973, because I was there and it was crap, apart from Progressive Rock and girls in short skirts the 70s were dire. The world is a vastly different place now than it was back then, and Britain is not the same country either and never can be (nor would we ever want it to be). We were never a "once proud nation", we were a bunch of arrogant colonialists cheered on by a propaganda-fed rabble. [On last year's University Challenge xmas special Paxman introduced the University of Bristol as being founded on the fortunes made from chocolate and tobacco, conveniently omitting the slave trade]. Sure there are things to be proud of in our history, but there is much we'd rather forget. The rose-tinted vision of Merry England was a fantasy back then just as it is now (remember that the Psychedelic 60s were fuelled by nostalgia of pre-war Victorian/Georgian romanticism that never actually existed); by 1973 the Empire was spent (literally, figuratively and metaphorically), the Commonwealth were glad to see the back of us and the economy was in steep decline. Every generation wishes it had been born in an earlier time, every era has revivals and resurgences, each one a romantic pastiche of an idealised vision of the past that never existed. Life was as crap back then as it is now, it was just a different kind of crap, with less gadgets and only three channels on the telly. So now all those turkeys in Northern England who voted for Xmas have to get off their arses and go out in the fields to pick turnips and sprouts for £5/hr or wash the grime off my Jaguar using freezing cold water for £10 now that the Eastern European immigrants are no longer welcome. Those people have to make good on their battle-cry of "them immigrants coming over here stealing our jobs" when they are no longer coming over here. We in the comfortable South where the streets really are paved with gold would expect nothing less from you now you've stooped to vote for the same bunch of feckless, over-privileged, upper-middle-class gonks that all my feckless, over-privileged, lower-middle-class southern neighbours vote for despite every one of them having to work for a living. At 62 years old I've gave up on the old "yeah, we disagree but we're still mates thou'" attitude a long time ago because it doesn't fing work; on this forum I've never accepted a "let's agreed to differ" plea in an argument because those arguments and debates were never 50:50/'either of us could be right' dichotomies; I never argued subjective opinion, I only ever debated objective fact and the same is true here. Brexit was an argument between subjective opinion (and believing in golden unicorns) and objective facts (and researching the truth). Some people get emotional about subjective things and things they believe to be true while others get emotional about objective realities and things that are proven to be factual. These are not equal and they do not balance each other out. A lot of what people believed to be true about Europe were shown to be wrong, or poorly understood but that didn't matter to them, it wasn't cognitive dissonance or any of that psychological bollocks, it was merely that they needed something to blame for things that were way beyond their control. Yes the EU is far from perfect, and yes every seat of government should be subject to reassessment and reform when situations change but in the EU we were a big fish in a medium pond, outside the EU we are a small fish in a mahoosive pond.
Oh, and Scotland... well, The English are not their auld enemy, the sassenachs (saxons) were lowland (Caledonian) Scots, not English. The border is a line drawn on a map by Kings and politicians. The English did not invade or conquer the Scottish, despite there being several minor skirmishes prior (and one post) to the Scots begging Queen Anne to bail them out of debt. Like the Brexit view of Europe, the English are a convenient scapegoat... I saw a comment of FB last week stating that post Brexit not only would there be a unification of Ireland, this could also include Scotland in some romanticised union of Celtic nations... as if 500 years of sectarian divide can be brushed aside in an instance... which is more byronic than brythonic. |
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lazland
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 28 2008 Location: Wales Status: Offline Points: 13627 |
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Well, the hung parliament bit was ever so slightly off of the mark To be fair, I don’t think anybody really saw that coming, certainly not in the decisive manner of victory he got. I should have done, though. I have written here before about the disconnect between Metropolitan Liberal cities and the rest of England (and most of Wales). It was a primary reason for the referendum result in the first place, and it is this which is now the real division in our society, not traditional left/right wing, something which the obsessive loons around Corbyn singularly failed to appreciate, and, in addition, the bonkers pledge by the Lib Dem’s to revoke Article 50 without so much as a confirmatory vote plus a not very good leader. It’s the arrogance of these people which pisses their fellow citizens off, and Johnson’s election, masterminded by the likes of Cummins, is a final repudiation of the politics and attitude of Blair, Brown, Cameron, and Clegg. Bloody good riddance too, imo. I might also add here something which I have also said many times here, much to the dismay of friends on the site. Whilst the concept of a united Europe might be popular, the EU itself most certainly is not, and this is the case in many parts of Europe, not just in the U.K. It is an incredibly undemocratic, bureaucratic, and bullying institution. I did not vote for this “new dawn”. I voted Plaid as usual, although without much enthusiasm, as that lot are turning into a bunch of Metropolitan Liberals, excepting the bollocks they come out with is in Welsh, rather than English. I am becoming somewhat politically homeless really, unless the Labour Party can get its act together, expel the Trots and various Loons, and reconnect with normal people. However, I do think that a period of relatively stable government might be a good thing now after the chaos of the past couple of years, certainly from the perspective of my work.
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