I thought sb73 would like this to cheer him up!
World’s 400 Richest People Lose $127 Billion on Brexit
World’s 400 Richest People Lose $127 Billion on Brexit
Equally reasonable to assume then that their "apathy" meant only 36% felt sufficiently strong about leaving the EU. The grapes I'm both eating and drinking are sweet not sour, and imo making such a huge change to the existing arrangement as this, should require something more like 2/3 of the electorate (which should include any UK citizen) not 1/3.
You know what? To have supported Remain or to have supported Leave were both legitimate positions to take. Whether you based your voting decision around how the outcome would effect you and yours personally, or whether you based your voting decision on how the outcome would impact on the greater good were also both legitimate positions to take.
I respect everybody that voted, regardless of how they cast their vote and their motives. What I have no respect for is the bitterness of the sore losers and the assumptions they are making about those that voted Leave.
Having been a staunch supporter of getting out of the EU for the past 25-30 years, I was genuinely unsure of how I would ultimately vote until I was actually in the booth. I suspect it was the same for many of us. The battle inside of my head was won by as similarly a close margin as in the referendum itself. It is disappointing that some in the Remain camp are stereotyping Leave voters as unpleasant, selfish individuals.
On the turnout at this referendum: If c. 30% chose not to exercise their right to vote in something this important, is it not reasonable to assume their apathy meant that they were indifferent to the UK leaving the EU? If true, then you could well argue that only 34%* of those eligible to vote felt sufficiently strongly about remaining in the EU.
But that's kinda the point, Ossie. On something this important the non-voter is once again saying that they're ambivalent on the outcome. Whilst this is neither a ringing endorsement of Remain or Leave, a whopping three out of every ten voters were saying that they were prepared to let others decide their future for them, even if that meant a period of gross uncertainty.
You either believe in democracy or you don't. To have a referendum requiring 2/3rd support or giving more weight to younger voters etc. doesn't much feel like a democratic process. We'll be heading towards Silver Surfer Suffrage or something down that route. Cameron was an idiot for offering the referendum in the first place.
The best thing that Parliament can do now is force a General Election in the autumn and have one party standing on a Remain ticket. Let's then see if the electorate feels it's made a mistake or not. The problem is that our political elite seem more than ever out of step with the electorate.
Excellent post Ubes.
im sure a lot of those people create wealth for many others by making things and providing services that other people want. Totally different to parasites.I thought sb73 would like this to cheer him up!
World’s 400 Richest People Lose $127 Billion on Brexit
Yes.I forget but do Passports get checked leaving the UK for Europe?
It is .....but I feel fine
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Isn't it interesting that we have had a democratic process that produced a clear winner, the majority was over 1.2 million, yet there are petitions for another referendum, changing the process to have a 60% threshold for the winner and even to have London stay in the EU. Had the result been as forecast, 52-48 to remain would there have been the whingeing for similar changes? I think not.
It is mainly left-wing younger voters who seem to have great difficulty accepting the majority verdict whenever a vote produces a result they don't like. No doubt there will be G20 style protests in the next few weeks and, if there is some undoubted 'turbulence' in the economy we'll see even more unrest.
I think there may be some difficult times ahead in the next few months...
Many people really struggle with the concept of democracy, with many believing that you simply can't trust the public to give you the result you want.
The leaders of the EU are a prime example of this.
I get the impression that many youngsters these days are incredibly precious and feel the need to whine about being "wronged" at every opportunity.
I forget but do Passports get checked leaving the UK for Europe?
"Would the Brexiters have meekly rolled over and say 'mustn't grumble' had Remain won by a similar margin (or any margin at all?)................."
I do agree you cannot weight a vote in favour of young or the age of voters, or requre more than 50% at a general election, but requirement of a larger majority for a referendum on such a fundamental change as this is valid, particularly when there is a large % not voting. Not all the no voters were necessarily apathetic. Some may have been genuinely undecided (campaigning was emotive an full of lies which Farage has even admitted) , some may have refused to take part in what they felt was and unnecessary vote, others physically unable to vote when the day came.But that's kinda the point, Ossie. On something this important the non-voter is once again saying that they're ambivalent on the outcome. Whilst this is neither a ringing endorsement of Remain or Leave, a whopping three out of every ten voters were saying that they were prepared to let others decide their future for them, even if that meant a period of gross uncertainty.
You either believe in democracy or you don't. To have a referendum requiring 2/3rd support or giving more weight to younger voters etc. doesn't much feel like a democratic process. We'll be heading towards Silver Surfer Suffrage or something down that route. Cameron was an idiot for offering the referendum in the first place.
The best thing that Parliament can do now is force a General Election in the autumn and have one party standing on a Remain ticket. Let's then see if the electorate feels it's made a mistake or not. The problem is that our political elite seem more than ever out of step with the electorate.
Did 100% of 18 to 24 year olds vote
I saw it too and agree.I did see that Oslo, and I think it helps make my point that perhaps those who actually lived through the war might have been more inclined to vote Remain than than the baby-boomer generation that seem to have been instrumental in winning the referendum.
Totally Yorkshire. I said before the result on here that if we stayed in i would accept it and i would have.
My Facebook is a nightmare so i am not going on it for a bit as people thinking its the end of the world!
On another note i could not sleep last night and was up at 2;30am so i watched a bit of the sky news stations CNN Fox RT CCTV (you know the sky ones). I was shocked listening to all the US analysts who thought we were better off out. They said the EU was not good for us. They also said they would always trade with us and nothing would change "why would it" as one said. They have no agenda like the Leave/Remain teams and it was refreshing to hear their views.
I am not stupid about all this and i know things will change. As one of the US blokes said "England cannot just set up manufacturing plants over night, it will take years". Over the years we have devalued much of our manufacturing (Thanks Tony Blair. I was young once but older people voted him in) . I also blame the Tories for this as well.
As a country we need to stick together and move forward because things cannot go back to what it was.