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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » New YouGov polling finds firm backing for final Brexit decisio

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  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    johnt said:

    People make a great deal about the result of the 2016 referendum being respected before there can be another vote. The problem with that argument is that it relies on an assumption that Johnson’s deal is what people believed was ‘Brexit’ when they voted in 2016. The reality is that the Johnson deal has no mandate and for most people is not what they thought was ‘Brexit’. In fact, it seems to me that Brexit isn’t Brexit and Leave is not Leave.

    People I talk to are pretty certain that neither May’s deal nor Johnson’s deal are the Brexit they thought was on offer. So they don’t believe it has any form of democratic mandate.

    I suspect if Johnson’s deal is implemented without a public vote it will never be accepted as a democratic outcome by a very large part of the U.K. population.

    Sadly or happily it doesn't matter what people think is or isn't Brexit. They told the politicians to leave. Nor more nor less. Any flavour is legitimate and has a mandate.

    Doesn't of course mean that certain ways of leaving aren't absolutely mad and destructive.
  • Options
    NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    edited October 2019
    Gabs2 said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Gabs2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:
    Hungary ready to veto further extension making the Benn Act redundant, then put the Boris Deal to Parliament as the only alternative to No Deal? Cummings would be a genius if that happened
    Looks like Hungary are being wooed to veto to me.

    Or, at least, heavily flirted with to play mind games with the EU.
    Be careful what you wish for - faced with No Deal the HoC could be forced to Revoke A50.
    If they did that, Boris could resign in disgust and demand a General Election. It is hard to see what other government could be formed afterwards so he would get it.

    But we would still have revoked!

    So Boris stands on a platform of repealing the European Communities Act. Brexit vote goes to the Tory on a big turnout.

    Yep - and then we spend another few years trying to get out of the European Union.

    With a massive Tory majority and all its Remainers deselected.
    Wouldn't be "Tory" then. Something else. Good luck to them.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    Sure. Ireland is up a shit creek. Not clear why it would owe a favour to those that put it there and seem to be happy for it to be in that shit.

    And I suppose a country with a 5% growth rate has more of a cushion for bad economic things happening than one with typically 1% growth.
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
  • Options
    surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469
    edited October 2019
    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension then just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    On topic: this is another another poll that weights Leavers and Remainers back to the 52/48 split of three years ago.

    What's the logic of that when we know more Leavers than Remainers will have passed away and the new under-22 voters are more Remain oriented?

    How do you recalibrate though even my kids won’t answer a landline call, not every body is a silver surfer. I do think though that the attempt to pull the polls back to 52/48 is distorting the result
  • Options
    NorthstarNorthstar Posts: 140
    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    Sure. Ireland is up a shit creek. Not clear why it would owe a favour to those that put it there and seem to be happy for it to be in that shit.

    And I suppose a country with a 5% growth rate has more of a cushion for bad economic things happening than one with typically 1% growth.
    I don’t think Ireland owes us a thing. I think that feeling will be mutual in future given where we are at now.

    I think self-interest over the long term might have warranted a slightly different tack to the one Varadkar is taking, but the same applies to the UK’s negotiation position(s) too.

    These negotiations will go down in history as a brilliant case study in hands being overplayed again and again on all sides.
  • Options
    The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    MPs have a fresher mandate. They are elected to legislate and decide on issues through votes. A referundum, which is only advisory has no technical enforceability. Furthermore the current PM said in early 2016, that the advisory referendum could be used to get a better deal. If that fails we continue in the EU....
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Gabs2 said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Gabs2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:
    Hungary ready to veto further extension making the Benn Act redundant, then put the Boris Deal to Parliament as the only alternative to No Deal? Cummings would be a genius if that happened
    Looks like Hungary are being wooed to veto to me.

    Or, at least, heavily flirted with to play mind games with the EU.
    Be careful what you wish for - faced with No Deal the HoC could be forced to Revoke A50.
    If they did that, Boris could resign in disgust and demand a General Election. It is hard to see what other government could be formed afterwards so he would get it.

    But we would still have revoked!

    So Boris stands on a platform of repealing the European Communities Act. Brexit vote goes to the Tory on a big turnout.

    Yep - and then we spend another few years trying to get out of the European Union.

    With a massive Tory majority and all its Remainers deselected.
    I thought you were a princpaled person of Jewish faith who was unhappy about the prospect of corbyn being PM but you’re just another Tory troll
  • Options
    humbuggerhumbugger Posts: 377

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension that just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    That's no way to talk about EU members. Some decorum please.
  • Options
    johntjohnt Posts: 86

    Brexit is leaving the EU, nothing more, nothing less. The act of leaving, under any deal or no deal, has a mandate. The act of remaning is undenocratic. It is up to parliament whether they want to accompany the act of leaving with a deal.

    I am sorry but I think that is bunkum. The leavers have spent the last three years shouting that this or that isn’t a ‘true’ Brexit. To now try to change that and say anything is Brexit as long as we leave is just not credible. People are not that stupid, and to treat them as such will probably cause civil unrest.

    The problem is that the leavers have singularly failed to deliver the Brexit they said they would but now want the right to deliver a part Brexit of their choosing. Personally I am not sure the people of the U.K. will accept that outcome.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
    Well of course I am no constitutional lawyer but I'm going out on a limb to say all of that was frustrating but part and parcel of our democratic process.

    Or the leave side's Dominic Grieve would have challenged it in the courts.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,282
    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    “Eire”??

    Another new account with an ultra-antiquated view of the world.
  • Options
    NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Gabs2 said:

    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.

    Perhaps you've misunderstood what democracy is. Democracy is a method, not a result. Undemocratic is where *I* decide unilaterally what happens. Or where you alone decide.
    Democracy is about having a system that determines which of our diverging opinions holds sway. Note the use of the word "system".
    The system we normally use is elections to parliament, whereupon the members elected take decisions as they see fit. If you don't like that system, we can have a conversation about that, and you may find that I agree. Nevertheless, that's our system.
    If you want that system to no longer apply, I'll hear arguments for what should replace it, and we -- democratically -- can decide whether your proposal should be implemented. Until then, we have a parliamentary democracy, and I will use my vote in the democratic process to democratically vote for whomever the fuck I like. And if you don't like that process because you think the certain status quo ante should remain in law, then it is you, my friend, who is not the democrat.

    To repeat. Democracy is not about any one opinion set in stone even for a day. Democracy is not about policing other people's thoughts. Democracy is a method. And I'm so very very sorry to have to explain this to you, but even if someone is in a minority of one, they never have to set aside their own opinion.
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:
    Hungary ready to veto further extension making the Benn Act redundant, then put the Boris Deal to Parliament as the only alternative to No Deal? Cummings would be a genius if that happened
    Looks like Hungary are being wooed to veto to me.

    Or, at least, heavily flirted with to play mind games with the EU.
    Well then, if the Benn Act kills No Deal and the Hungarians play silly-buggers with the extension and the only Deal is unworkable, that only leaves one option

    VoNC followed by Revoke. I am sure Ms Swinson would write the letter
    Snap!
    :)
  • Options
    ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension then just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    Shush now. The European Union is comprised of free and democratic Member States.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138
    edited October 2019



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    Floater said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:
    Hungary ready to veto further extension making the Benn Act redundant, then put the Boris Deal to Parliament as the only alternative to No Deal? Cummings would be a genius if that happened
    Looks like Hungary are being wooed to veto to me.

    Or, at least, heavily flirted with to play mind games with the EU.
    Well then, if the Benn Act kills No Deal and the Hungarians play silly-buggers with the extension and the only Deal is unworkable, that only leaves one option

    VoNC followed by Revoke. I am sure Ms Swinson would write the letter
    Snap!
    Good luck with that

    Brexit really has driven some people mad.
    I agree - madness certainly explains the behaviour of the ERG and current govt. No one sane would act as they do...
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    Sure. Ireland is up a shit creek. Not clear why it would owe a favour to those that put it there and seem to be happy for it to be in that shit.

    And I suppose a country with a 5% growth rate has more of a cushion for bad economic things happening than one with typically 1% growth.
    I don’t think Ireland owes us a thing. I think that feeling will be mutual in future given where we are at now.

    I think self-interest over the long term might have warranted a slightly different tack to the one Varadkar is taking, but the same applies to the UK’s negotiation position(s) too.

    These negotiations will go down in history as a brilliant case study in hands being overplayed again and again on all sides.
    Ireland can't afford a hard border either as part of concession towards a deal or because there's no deal. The logic is with them not conceding because No Deal is the absence of an arrangement which may include a soft border later on. A agreed hard border means they are stuck with it.

    Actually Northern Ireland can afford a hard border much less again, but no-one cares about THEM. And certainly not Johnson with his dogs breakfast of a deal.
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    MPs have a fresher mandate. They are elected to legislate and decide on issues through votes. A referundum, which is only advisory has no technical enforceability. Furthermore the current PM said in early 2016, that the advisory referendum could be used to get a better deal. If that fails we continue in the EU....
    The (Remain supporting) government that implemented the referendum made clear to every household in the country that the result would be implemented. MPs elected on a combination of issues do not have a stronger mandate on a specific question than a referendum that asked the specific question.

    All of the excuses for ignoring democracy have been dreamt up after the referendum, which shows how illegtimate they are. Democracy depends on both sides abiding by a set of pre-agreed rules, not changing them after the fact.

    We lost. We need to make the most of it within that context.
  • Options
    NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    humbugger said:

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension that just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    That's no way to talk about EU members. Some decorum please.
    Hungary is an authoritarian and illiberal country. Orban has actively worked against the separation of powers needed to underpin a well-functioning democracy. It's too far to call it fascist, but Orban is clearly a scumbag of the highest order. Anybody who games the system to preserve the power of a certain group of people deserves our unmitigated contempt, whatever his policy platform.
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
    Well of course I am no constitutional lawyer but I'm going out on a limb to say all of that was frustrating but part and parcel of our democratic process.

    Or the leave side's Dominic Grieve would have challenged it in the courts.
    There is a difference between something being legal and something being democratic. Especially in an uncodified constitution.
  • Options
    NorthstarNorthstar Posts: 140
    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    Sure. Ireland is up a shit creek. Not clear why it would owe a favour to those that put it there and seem to be happy for it to be in that shit.

    And I suppose a country with a 5% growth rate has more of a cushion for bad economic things happening than one with typically 1% growth.
    I don’t think Ireland owes us a thing. I think that feeling will be mutual in future given where we are at now.

    I think self-interest over the long term might have warranted a slightly different tack to the one Varadkar is taking, but the same applies to the UK’s negotiation position(s) too.

    These negotiations will go down in history as a brilliant case study in hands being overplayed again and again on all sides.
    Ireland can't afford a hard border either as part of concession towards a deal or because there's no deal. The logic is with them not conceding because No Deal is the absence of an arrangement which may include a soft border later on. A agreed hard border means they are stuck with it.

    Actually Northern Ireland can afford a hard border much less again, but no-one cares about THEM. And certainly not Johnson with his dogs breakfast of a deal.
    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 19,996
    AndyJS said:

    O/T

    Useful information: if and when you use a phone box, be aware than none of them take the new £1 coins. You have to use 50, 20 and 10 pence coins.

    Does anyone use phone boxes anymore? Do they still exist?
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.

    Perhaps you've misunderstood what democracy is. Democracy is a method, not a result. Undemocratic is where *I* decide unilaterally what happens. Or where you alone decide.
    Undemocratic is also where an oligarchic elite also decides, such as parliamemt rigging the rules to stop a democratic vote being implemented. Democracy is about free and fair elections where both sides agree by the same set of rules, which are applied to both sides. Not implementing the result if one side wins while foot-draghing and sabotaging until you can overturn it if the other side wins.

    I strongly supported Remain and felt completely deflated the day after the vote. But democracy is more important than continuous EU membership. It has shocked me to my core how many of my fellow Europhiles clearly feel the opposite.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125
    nichomar said:

    nichomar said:

    nichomar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Yesterday was the hottest October day ever recorded in North Carolina, and today is expected to be a degree hotter reaching 100F.

    Meanwhile US talk radio is baying for the blood of the whistleblower (now called “the leaker”) suggesting the whole thing was preplanned by the Dems.

    That's the message I am getting from my Trump supporting friend in Florida. It was all schemed by Pelosi.
    So if we don’t ‘respect’ the referendum we are heading to a facist future? Evidence please
    Que?!
    Sorry no matter how you look at that I think I put it in the wrong place was actually wasting my time replying to the blue team supporter.
    Lol! So I guessed, but on PB you can never be sure.....
    Well there are times I do think there is a parallel universe out there that I’m not privileged to join.
    And if you sneer at pineaple on pizza, you'll never get admitted.....
  • Options
    Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    Good post! :+1:

    Seriously
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125

    AndyJS said:

    O/T

    Useful information: if and when you use a phone box, be aware than none of them take the new £1 coins. You have to use 50, 20 and 10 pence coins.

    Does anyone use phone boxes anymore? Do they still exist?
    They are mostly fitted with defibrilators round here.
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050
    Noo said:

    humbugger said:

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension that just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    That's no way to talk about EU members. Some decorum please.
    Hungary is an authoritarian and illiberal country. Orban has actively worked against the separation of powers needed to underpin a well-functioning democracy. It's too far to call it fascist, but Orban is clearly a scumbag of the highest order. Anybody who games the system to preserve the power of a certain group of people deserves our unmitigated contempt, whatever his policy platform.
    Your piousness lives in another era....now all we have is cynical populism.....
  • Options
    The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    Gabs2 said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    MPs have a fresher mandate. They are el.
    The (Remain supporting) government that implemented the referendum made clear to every household in the country that the result would be implemented. MPs elected on a combination of issues do not have a stronger mandate on a specific question than a referendum that asked the specific question.

    All of the excuses for ignoring democracy have been dreamt up after the referendum, which shows how illegtimate they are. Democracy depends on both sides abiding by a set of pre-agreed rules, not changing them after the fact.

    We lost. We need to make the most of it within that context.
    No, it was an advisory referundum. MPs have a personal mandate. They were elected in 2017, which is after your precious 2016 opinion poll. I cannot understand why having failed to get a better deal the UK is obliged to Leave. Its dumb. A bit like the deals where we have no say, which is really undemocratic...
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,226
    Adonis running for Vauxhall:

    http://www.adonisforvauxhall.com/
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,668

    AndyJS said:

    O/T

    Useful information: if and when you use a phone box, be aware than none of them take the new £1 coins. You have to use 50, 20 and 10 pence coins.

    Does anyone use phone boxes anymore? Do they still exist?
    They are mostly fitted with defibrilators round here.
    Ours is the village library :smile:
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 19,996
    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    Unfortunately you have to be party to crass anti-Irish sectarian bigotry to gain this ‘insight’. I’d probably rather miss out, on balance.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    FF43 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Poor wee Leo - fucked his tin pot country for a decade.

    You're an asset to this site IMO because you say out aloud what Johnson and his coterie clearly think. An attitude that the Irish must be all too conscious of.

    You add insight. Thank you.
    On a serious note getting caught between a UK focused on low tax/regulation post Brexit and an EU focused on the opposite would see Eire up shit creek, to put it mildly...

    High stakes for all concerned.
    Sure. Ireland is up a shit creek. Not clear why it would owe a favour to those that put it there and seem to be happy for it to be in that shit.

    And I suppose a country with a 5% growth rate has more of a cushion for bad economic things happening than one with typically 1% growth.
    I don’t think Ireland owes us a thing. I think that feeling will be mutual in future given where we are at now.

    I think self-interest over the long term might have warranted a slightly different tack to the one Varadkar is taking, but the same applies to the UK’s negotiation position(s) too.

    These negotiations will go down in history as a brilliant case study in hands being overplayed again and again on all sides.
    Ireland can't afford a hard border either as part of concession towards a deal or because there's no deal. The logic is with them not conceding because No Deal is the absence of an arrangement which may include a soft border later on. A agreed hard border means they are stuck with it.

    Actually Northern Ireland can afford a hard border much less again, but no-one cares about THEM. And certainly not Johnson with his dogs breakfast of a deal.
    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.
    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
  • Options
    TOPPING said:

    We discussed this the other day and just now. It is all about leavers taking control by getting a foreign power to overrule our parliament.

    Then again them's the rules of the EU so all's fair and all that.

    Yeah good point, if the Parliamentarians want to be in control they should ensure we leave the EU ;)
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    Adonis running for Vauxhall:

    http://www.adonisforvauxhall.com/

    He is already in the Lords!
  • Options
    Noo said:

    humbugger said:

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension that just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    That's no way to talk about EU members. Some decorum please.
    Hungary is an authoritarian and illiberal country. Orban has actively worked against the separation of powers needed to underpin a well-functioning democracy. It's too far to call it fascist, but Orban is clearly a scumbag of the highest order. Anybody who games the system to preserve the power of a certain group of people deserves our unmitigated contempt, whatever his policy platform.
    But you want Hungarian politicians to have a say over our politics within the EU and for Orban to hold veto powers on spending and other issues related to us?
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138

    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    Good post! :+1:

    Seriously
    Thanks. I live for the approval of posters here.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    edited October 2019
    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    I don't think your opinion is illegitimate. I think you support an illegitimate position. Just as I think someone that wants to bring back absolutist monarchh supports an undemocratic, illegitimate position.
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
    Well of course I am no constitutional lawyer but I'm going out on a limb to say all of that was frustrating but part and parcel of our democratic process.

    Or the leave side's Dominic Grieve would have challenged it in the courts.
    There is a difference between something being legal and something being democratic. Especially in an uncodified constitution.
    The actions were undertaken by the people who define and embody democracy. It doesn't get more democratic than that.
  • Options
    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
  • Options
    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    DougSeal said:



    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj.

    That is just a 2 per cent error in the value pi.

    It is quite simply one of the most accurate calculations in the history of politics.

    Most modern politicians struggle to get a numerical answer correct to within 200 per cent, let alone 2 per cent.
  • Options
    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    Unfortunately you are neither a cretin or a moron. Both of those could be forgiven . Rather you are a dishonest authoritarian who only agrees with democracy when you are winning. This is not about disagreement, it is about basic principles. I have them you do not.

    Indeed it is no surprise you invoke 1930s Germany so often in your arguments. I am sure you would have felt right at home there.
  • Options
    Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do you think I have the right to have a differing opinion? I think leaving the EU is wrong and I will use my vote to stop it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    .
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
    Well of course I am no constitutional lawyer but I'm going out on a limb to say all of that was frustrating but part and parcel of our democratic process.

    Or the leave side's Dominic Grieve would have challenged it in the courts.
    There is a difference between something being legal and something being democratic. Especially in an uncodified constitution.
    The actions were undertaken by the people who define and embody democracy. It doesn't get more democratic than that.
    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
    That’s beyond parody. The Irish are not trying to force us to do anything. The only imperialism round these parts is arguably that we are sitting in 6 of their 32 counties. If we had respected the democratic vote of the jurisdiction of Ireland in 1919 that ratified the all-Ireland republic declared in 1916 we would not be having this problem. It’s our own imperialism that has caused this mess. They are trying to find a solution that lets us keep NI. You should be thankful.
  • Options
    NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Gabs2 said:

    Democracy is about free and fair elections

    "Free" meaning all voters are allowed to vote in secret and for whomever they please. That means, people will be free to vote for things you don't like, that you think shouldn't happen. Seems to me if you believe in democracy, you believe in free and fair elections, which means you believe in my right to vote for a revoke party.
    There really is no fruitful discussion about this. I know my rights, and you cannot tell me what I'm allowed to believe or vote for. You might not like it, but that the toughest of tough shit. You know this because, as you are alluding to in your post, free and fair elections are a central pillar. They are the process by which we undertake democracy. Democracy is a process, not a particular outcome.
  • Options
    tysontyson Posts: 6,050

    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    Unfortunately you are neither a cretin or a moron. Both of those could be forgiven . Rather you are a dishonest authoritarian who only agrees with democracy when you are winning. This is not about disagreement, it is about basic principles. I have them you do not.

    Indeed it is no surprise you invoke 1930s Germany so often in your arguments. I am sure you would have felt right at home there.
    A gold model for pomposity Richard...
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    P

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
    It's not imperialism. It's Ireland promoting its interests. As you say we don't have to agree. Maybe the problem is Brexit which has put us in the position where we have no good choices.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,304
    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    TOPPING said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Gabs2 said:

    Noo said:

    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    At what point do youp it, given any chance. At what point does this "nascent dictatorshop[sic]" become a valid democratic opinion?
    After the result of the vote has been implemented. A democracy is where you count all the votes and all the votes count.
    Ok, so to be clear, you're saying that under your vision of democracy, my opinion is illegitimate. Is that right?
    .
    It's so nice to meet the arbiter of what legitimate positions are.
    Suppose I said to you that Brexit was an illegitimate, undemocratic position. Is that different because, well, I'm not you, the Chosen One?
    You are entitled to argue your case just as I am. Others can judge how compelling our cases are. That is the beauty of free speech and debate.
    Cool! That's wonderful to know.
    I choose revoke.
    Good for you. I argue that is an undemocratic position that is openly contemptuous of a democratic vote. It makes clear you only support democracy when you get the results you want.
    Do you think events in the HoC these past few years have been undemocratic?
    Some of them.
    Such as?
    The votes against every form of Brexit, the overturning of Erskine May, the long prorogation, the blocking of another GE.
    Well of course I am no constitutional lawyer but I'm going out on a limb to say all of that was frustrating but part and parcel of our democratic process.

    Or the leave side's Dominic Grieve would have challenged it in the courts.
    There is a difference between something being legal and something being democratic. Especially in an uncodified constitution.
    The actions were undertaken by the people who define and embody democracy. It doesn't get more democratic than that.
    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.
    Ah. Sozza. I didn't realise. And where exactly is this particular law laid down?
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    ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Fuck Eire
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    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138

    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    Unfortunately you are neither a cretin or a moron. Both of those could be forgiven . Rather you are a dishonest authoritarian who only agrees with democracy when you are winning. This is not about disagreement, it is about basic principles. I have them you do not.

    Indeed it is no surprise you invoke 1930s Germany so often in your arguments. I am sure you would have felt right at home there.
    You’ve changed your tune. Last month I was a moron. Now I’m a Nazi. You live and learn. Why don’t you call me a nonce as well? Save you time later, I have principles but they differ from yours. What you failed to learn is that people can hold different views without resorting to insults. That is the mark of the authoritarianism you claim to despise. You doth protest too much I fear.

    The other thing your education missed out on was he ability to count. “So often” would suggest a frequency of such posts. There are none.

    Oh, why I bother rising to your petulant childishness I have no idea..
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,817

    Adonis running for Vauxhall:

    http://www.adonisforvauxhall.com/

    Would be funny he split the remain vote with the Lib-Dems and let Con in. :D
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    NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    Noo said:

    humbugger said:

    If that fascist Orban has anything to do with the extension that just Pass GO and straight to REVOKE !

    That's no way to talk about EU members. Some decorum please.
    Hungary is an authoritarian and illiberal country. Orban has actively worked against the separation of powers needed to underpin a well-functioning democracy. It's too far to call it fascist, but Orban is clearly a scumbag of the highest order. Anybody who games the system to preserve the power of a certain group of people deserves our unmitigated contempt, whatever his policy platform.
    But you want Hungarian politicians to have a say over our politics within the EU and for Orban to hold veto powers on spending and other issues related to us?
    When Greece elected a far-left government, it didn't cause the EU to go far left. Ditto with the far-right Hungary. A bloc of 28 countries tends to even out temporary and localised extremes. At least, I hope the Hungarian extremism is temporary.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    edited October 2019
    There's no problem in my view with the UK playing off foreign parties to further its interest. There is a big problem with Johnson co-opting foreign governments in an attempt to subvert a democratic vote.

    Not quite on the treasonous scale of Richard Nixon alleged collusion with the Vietnamese in prolonging the war so he could win an election, I suppose.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:
    Hungary ready to veto further extension making the Benn Act redundant, then put the Boris Deal to Parliament as the only alternative to No Deal? Cummings would be a genius if that happened
    Looks like Hungary are being wooed to veto to me.

    Or, at least, heavily flirted with to play mind games with the EU.
    I think Hungary are the DUP of the EU. They know when to exert pressure to get bought off. By being the intransigent ones now, they can extract a price from the EU (to agree, last minute, to an extension) or the UK (to veto said extension).

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    ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503
    Reports man on Twitter with an opinion.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,611
    We’re going full on conspiracy theory now...

    https://www.politico.com/news/2019/10/03/trump-drug-industry-impeachment-026123
    President Donald Trump charged Thursday without evidence that the pharmaceutical industry was behind House Democrats' impeachment proceedings, suggesting it was payback for his administration's effort to lower drug costs....
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    The Indiana Bill never became law, so your example is incorrect.

    See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Pi_Bill
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,817
    Byronic said:

    Fuck Eire

    You drunk again? :D
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,611
    GIN1138 said:

    Byronic said:

    Fuck Eire

    You drunk again? :D
    Just engaging in fuckery, sounds like.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    Scott_P said:
    If that's true, that could actually be the beginning of the end for Trump.

    Ukraine is not going to lead to his downfall.

    Taxes might.
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Gabs2 said:



    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.

    And so what? Does that make it better? Can you point us to any current or historical polities successfully run as direct democracies, and if not, can you think why that might be? Do you campaign ceaselessly, or at all, for the introduction of more direct democracy in general in our constitution? Are you happy that a referendum on the death penalty would certainly reintroduce it?
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    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,079
    What an imbecile.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    rcs1000 said:

    If that's true, that could actually be the beginning of the end for Trump.

    Ukraine is not going to lead to his downfall.

    Taxes might.

    There is the potential for it to snowball now.

    The question is whether the avalanche would reach as far as these shores. There is a BoZo whistleblower story out tonight as well.

    How many more are waiting in the wings?
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    ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Gabs2 said:



    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.

    And so what? Does that make it better? Can you point us to any current or historical polities successfully run as direct democracies, and if not, can you think why that might be? Do you campaign ceaselessly, or at all, for the introduction of more direct democracy in general in our constitution? Are you happy that a referendum on the death penalty would certainly reintroduce it?
    Switzerland
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    Nigelb said:

    We’re going full on conspiracy theory now...

    https://www.politico.com/news/2019/10/03/trump-drug-industry-impeachment-026123
    President Donald Trump charged Thursday without evidence that the pharmaceutical industry was behind House Democrats' impeachment proceedings, suggesting it was payback for his administration's effort to lower drug costs....

    The goal is to fling a lot of shit, and hope that some of it sticks.

    It's not a bad strategy.

    In fact, it's an excellent strategy.

    But it's also one that strikes at the heart of the democratic system. When you can spread falsehoods with impunity, everyone's trust in the system diminishes. And when trust in the system is gone, things rarely turn out well.

    (Which, I would note, is true of the UK as well.)
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929

    isam said:

    As if the only options are parliament voting or another referendum!

    What other option do you see?
    It's not listed but default/Royal perogative
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,717
    At least Gove didn't mention punishment beatings at Nazi prison camps, unlike a certain former foreign minister. So we can mark this up as a diplomatic triumph, I guess.

    https://twitter.com/PeterRNeumann/status/1179824942021566468
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    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    DougSeal said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
    That’s beyond parody. The Irish are not trying to force us to do anything. The only imperialism round these parts is arguably that we are sitting in 6 of their 32 counties. If we had respected the democratic vote of the jurisdiction of Ireland in 1919 that ratified the all-Ireland republic declared in 1916 we would not be having this problem. It’s our own imperialism that has caused this mess. They are trying to find a solution that lets us keep NI. You should be thankful.
    On the one hand, it's a bit of a stretch to hold the current British Government responsible for what its predecessors, who are all long dead, got up to 100 years ago. We might just as well get the hump with Norway and demand reparations for the sack of Lindisfarne.

    On the other hand, this whole situation would be a great deal easier to resolve if the British Government agreed simply to let Dublin have Northern Ireland, an imperial and sectarian relic of a territory in which London has no selfish strategic interest and which is, indeed, arguably a very expensive and completely useless burden.

    Of course, it's possible that Mr Varadkar might not want to deal with several hundred thousand enraged Loyalists right now, in which case Northern Ireland could simply be floated off as an independent state and left to negotiate over its own border, which would represent just as effective a solution. Where there's a will there's a way.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,611
    There are no words.


    Apart from enormous douche.
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    ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Scott_P said:

    Wages are rising fast, employment is still near record levels, inflation has dived, interest rates are zero.

    If we are entering recession (like many other countries) it will (at least so far) be relatively painless.

    Not a game changer.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993

    DougSeal said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
    That’s beyond parody. The Irish are not trying to force us to do anything. The only imperialism round these parts is arguably that we are sitting in 6 of their 32 counties. If we had respected the democratic vote of the jurisdiction of Ireland in 1919 that ratified the all-Ireland republic declared in 1916 we would not be having this problem. It’s our own imperialism that has caused this mess. They are trying to find a solution that lets us keep NI. You should be thankful.
    On the one hand, it's a bit of a stretch to hold the current British Government responsible for what its predecessors, who are all long dead, got up to 100 years ago. We might just as well get the hump with Norway and demand reparations for the sack of Lindisfarne.

    On the other hand, this whole situation would be a great deal easier to resolve if the British Government agreed simply to let Dublin have Northern Ireland, an imperial and sectarian relic of a territory in which London has no selfish strategic interest and which is, indeed, arguably a very expensive and completely useless burden.

    Of course, it's possible that Mr Varadkar might not want to deal with several hundred thousand enraged Loyalists right now, in which case Northern Ireland could simply be floated off as an independent state and left to negotiate over its own border, which would represent just as effective a solution. Where there's a will there's a way.
    I always thought the best option was for Northern Ireland to become the Fifty First State.
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    FF43 said:

    At least Gove didn't mention punishment beatings at Nazi prison camps, unlike a certain former foreign minister. So we can mark this up as a diplomatic triumph, I guess.

    https://twitter.com/PeterRNeumann/status/1179824942021566468

    I guess the only consolation at a time of yet more national humiliation is that he did not say what he might have said had he been on what he was on last week in Parliament.

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    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138
    rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    The Indiana Bill never became law, so your example is incorrect.

    See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Pi_Bill
    That’s the point. It was never implemented. Neither has Brexit yet. Nor has the Easter Act 1928. Switzerland reran a referendum this year because the voters in 2016 were not given the full facts. South Dakota legislators unilaterally decided to overturn a statewide ballot passed in 2016. None of these has destroyed democracy. Although I am a Lib Dem I am uneasy at the prospect of straight revoke and would prefer another referendum. Either way I think it is fair to say I am some way from being the Nazi described by Mr Tyndall.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    Byronic said:

    Scott_P said:

    Wages are rising fast, employment is still near record levels, inflation has dived, interest rates are zero.

    If we are entering recession (like many other countries) it will (at least so far) be relatively painless.

    Not a game changer.
    History suggests there's about six month lag between PMIs and peoples' pockets.

    Mr Johnson would be wise to have his election now rather than next March.
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Byronic said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Gabs2 said:



    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.

    And so what? Does that make it better? Can you point us to any current or historical polities successfully run as direct democracies, and if not, can you think why that might be? Do you campaign ceaselessly, or at all, for the introduction of more direct democracy in general in our constitution? Are you happy that a referendum on the death penalty would certainly reintroduce it?
    Switzerland
    Naah, the Swiss vote in about 5 referendums a year. Governing Switzerland requires >5 executive decisions a year. Plus they are such a weird nation that if it works there, that is actually evidence that it *doesn't* work in general.
  • Options
    ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    rcs1000 said:

    Byronic said:

    Scott_P said:

    Wages are rising fast, employment is still near record levels, inflation has dived, interest rates are zero.

    If we are entering recession (like many other countries) it will (at least so far) be relatively painless.

    Not a game changer.
    History suggests there's about six month lag between PMIs and peoples' pockets.

    Mr Johnson would be wise to have his election now rather than next March.
    Agreed. I’m sure Boris knows this.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,079
    Byronic said:

    Scott_P said:

    Wages are rising fast, employment is still near record levels, inflation has dived, interest rates are zero.

    If we are entering recession (like many other countries) it will (at least so far) be relatively painless.

    Not a game changer.
    Says the guy who has absolutely nothing to worry about in a recession.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,668
    GIN1138 said:

    Byronic said:

    Fuck Eire

    You drunk again? :D
    It's after 9pm - need you ask?
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Brexession
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    NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Nigelb said:

    We’re going full on conspiracy theory now...

    https://www.politico.com/news/2019/10/03/trump-drug-industry-impeachment-026123
    President Donald Trump charged Thursday without evidence that the pharmaceutical industry was behind House Democrats' impeachment proceedings, suggesting it was payback for his administration's effort to lower drug costs....

    What he means is, he misplaced his cholinesterase inhibitors, and decided it was a dastardly plot against his presidency. Impeachment now.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    DougSeal said:

    rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:



    Yes you are guilty of Godwin and you should be ashamed.

    If you hold a vote and then do not abide by its result that is not democracy. It is the action of a nascent dictatorshop.

    In 1897 the democratically elected Indiana General Assembly voted to fix the value of pi at 3.2. That was of course impossible so it was not respected. In 2016 the British public voted on a manifesto that turned out to be so inherently contradictory they may as well have been voting to re-establish the Raj. I don’t advocate overturning the result without a supervening democratic vote, be it another referendum or an LD majority after a GE, but there is nothing undemocratic about that position.

    I know you disagree. It’s been done to death. We differ. I’m a cretin and a moron etc etc etc. Save your breath.
    The Indiana Bill never became law, so your example is incorrect.

    See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Pi_Bill
    That’s the point. It was never implemented. Neither has Brexit yet. Nor has the Easter Act 1928. Switzerland reran a referendum this year because the voters in 2016 were not given the full facts. South Dakota legislators unilaterally decided to overturn a statewide ballot passed in 2016. None of these has destroyed democracy. Although I am a Lib Dem I am uneasy at the prospect of straight revoke and would prefer another referendum. Either way I think it is fair to say I am some way from being the Nazi described by Mr Tyndall.
    Switzerland reran the referendum because they broke the previous question into two dependent ones:

    (1) Would you like a Ferrari?
    (2) Would you like to hand over £200,000?

    The point is that Pi did not become a law that was ignored.
  • Options
    NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    GIN1138 said:

    Byronic said:

    Fuck Eire

    You drunk again? :D
    It's after 9am - need you ask?
    Fixed that for you
  • Options
    ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Scott_P said:

    Wages are rising fast, employment is still near record levels, inflation has dived, interest rates are zero.

    If we are entering recession (like many other countries) it will (at least so far) be relatively painless.

    Not a game changer.
    Says the guy who has absolutely nothing to worry about in a recession.
    That makes me even more oracular. I have no inner bias.
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,781
    edited October 2019

    ...[T]he Irish...don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism...

    Pause

    Pause

    Pause

    No, I got nothing.

    :)
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,138
    P

    DougSeal said:

    FF43 said:

    Northstar said:

    That may be their logic. Seems to me though that the choice is between some variant of the Johnson deal (a softish border now that may get softer under a future FTA), no deal (a hard border now that may get softer under a future FTA), and their preferred option which is Ref2/Revoke etc.

    Johnson's deal doesn't offer a softish border, unlike May's Deal. The NI business forum said it was worse than No Deal in fact. I am not sure Johnson's proposition is even a deal beyond the short term, because the suggested FTA is unlikely to happen for many years if at all and there's no built in Plan B. On its current trajectory, the Boris Deal is a transition to No Deal later.

    The Irish would also be happy with SM+CU+VAT area.
    If the Irish wish to be in the SM+CU+VAT area then good luck to them, they should be in it.

    We on the other hand get to control what we be in. They don't get to control that. Trying to force stuff on other countries is called imperialism.
    That’s beyond parody. The Irish are not trying to force us to do anything. The only imperialism round these parts is arguably that we are sitting in 6 of their 32 counties. If we had respected the democratic vote of the jurisdiction of Ireland in 1919 that ratified the all-Ireland republic declared in 1916 we would not be having this problem. It’s our own imperialism that has caused this mess. They are trying to find a solution that lets us keep NI. You should be thankful.
    On the one hand, it's a bit of a stretch to hold the current British Government responsible for what its predecessors, who are all long dead, got up to 100 years ago. We might just as well get the hump with Norway and demand reparations for the sack of Lindisfarne.

    On the other hand, this whole situation would be a great deal easier to resolve if the British Government agreed simply to let Dublin have Northern Ireland, an imperial and sectarian relic of a territory in which London has no selfish strategic interest and which is, indeed, arguably a very expensive and completely useless burden.

    Of course, it's possible that Mr Varadkar might not want to deal with several hundred thousand enraged Loyalists right now, in which case Northern Ireland could simply be floated off as an independent state and left to negotiate over its own border, which would represent just as effective a solution. Where there's a will there's a way.
    There are Orange Order marches in County Donegal every year that pass off without a hitch - indeed are quite friendly affairs. The difference with their counterparts over the border is the absence of British rule.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Byronic said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Gabs2 said:



    Yes, it does. Direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy.

    And so what? Does that make it better? Can you point us to any current or historical polities successfully run as direct democracies, and if not, can you think why that might be? Do you campaign ceaselessly, or at all, for the introduction of more direct democracy in general in our constitution? Are you happy that a referendum on the death penalty would certainly reintroduce it?
    Switzerland
    Naah, the Swiss vote in about 5 referendums a year. Governing Switzerland requires >5 executive decisions a year. Plus they are such a weird nation that if it works there, that is actually evidence that it *doesn't* work in general.
    There may only be five *federal* refendums a year, but aren't there a reasonable number of *canton* level ones too?
This discussion has been closed.