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People want to "just get on with it" because of rapidly increasing political apathy. A double referendum should have been the plan from the start to be honest. From before the first vote. An initial vote to gauge public interest in leaving, followed by seriously looking into the practicalities of leaving if the vote was anywhere over, say, 40% leave and then a final vote a year or 18 months later to gauge final opinion. In our case the first vote was taken when there was barely any information available on what Brexit actually would entail. People didn't know what they were really voting on, on either side. Again I'm not saying the result would necessarily be any different now, just that the first poll - and what followed with our internal politics - was more than a bit of a shambles, and what we're left with is a government effectively "winging it" through the biggest political shift in three generations. But "we should just get on with it woteva", I guess? |
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the EU is so desperate, we dont need them.
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I don't think something that important should be decided with such a low margin... Many people who voted didn't actually know what they were voting for besides 'immigration' and 'money for the NHS'. That goes for both leave and stay voters. Not many knew the full implications of any vote they made...and I still can't believe the amount of lies told during the campaigns and that. Totally wrong. I would put myself in the 'just get on with it' camp...but only as I am so sick of hearing about the damn thing. Doesn't mean that I changed my mind and want to actually leave now. Still think it is a bad thing for the country and we will regret it, but such is life I guess. The whole thing was a shambles, no exit plan or anything. No vote should ever have been given until there was a plan for BOTH outcomes. Cameron is a cock. I know most expected a stay vote and he only gave the vote as he was scared of UKIPs popularity, but come the **** on. A huge vote like that with no plans at all, just assuming it will go one way?! Absolute tosser. |
I want a hard brexit so that people can learn to be smarter with their vote in future after they realise how ****ed they are.
That being said, the delicious irony of Leavers getting a soft brexit after buying into May's 'No deal is better than a bad deal' bull**** and ignoring all the u-turns she's done since she's been in power would be quite satisfying too. |
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Also it wouldn't change anything. Look at general election results...so many voted Tory to 'get the scroungers', ended up begin affected/due to be affected by ridiculous changes themselves, yet still bought into the 'scroungers' rhetoric and voted for them again :laugh: This is from experience rather than anything else. 3 of my friends voted Tory believing that the genuine disabled would not be affected by the ridiculous cuts, and 2 of those people have ended up with their (very disabled) parents losing their DLA and magically being cured by ATOS...one of whom has a terminal illness too and is having to go through tribunal, which they probably in all honesty wont even still be alive to see through til the end... People (on both sides..this is not exclusive to right wing voters) believe whats in the papers too much. Seemingly not realising that most, if not all, papers have their own agenda. |
Ignorance can only be cured with experience, people want a hard brexit so I say let them have it and learn from the experience they'll get.
It's spite but it's the only way people will learn. The fact that the Tories failed to achieve a majority is a sign that people CAN learn. |
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But then I'd obviously vote remain if there was a 2nd 'are u sure' referendum because even if I was uncertain 14 months ago (I wasn't), it'd be crystal clear now (it really is) that remain is the better of the two options. I'm just bored to **** with it! Everywhere you turn its just people pointing blame at others for the mess, theres never seems to be positive news about it, just maybes, ifs, and buts.. just get on with it is my stance tbh, and then the parties can all start working out how they'd bring us out of its mess, and we can start discussing that instead. I'm just getting second-hand embarrassment for the hardcore leavers atm, they've been right mugged off. |
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Although you are probably right, the Tories will probably blame everyone else for not agreeing with their every word, and that'll probably become the debate of the year. |
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I have seen a fair few people who are already moaning about how the other parties are 'making' the Tories **** up brexit, as the other parties will not work with them?! And saying Labour should be backing up May also and basically..not opposing her on anything as Brexit is the most important thing for the entire country. Conveniently forgetting that it was the Tpries who called the ridiculous election in the middle of the brexit rubbish...and all because of arrogance and thinking they would obliterate Labour. |
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The Tories failed to get a majority but they still did better than Labour despite all the broken promises. |
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Your last sentence seems like a petty jibe to me, I don't support Labour, I support whatever party alligns best with my views at the time. Crowing on about Labour won't change the fact that the Tories went from a strong Majority Government to having to make deals to form a Minority one. |
I wonder if the same people feel the same in 10 years when the EU is no more.
They are corrupts and thieves |
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- Access to the single market - 43 years of peace - ERASMUS+ opportunities for students to live and work abroad - Action on climate change with investment in renewable energies - European Medicine Agency - Clean air quality - International Academic Collaboration - European Arrest Warrant - European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development - EU Export Market (54% of UK goods and 40% of UK services) - Equal Pay Laws - Clean Beaches - The Customs Union - Cheaper Air Travel - Fisheries Funding - Consumer Rights Protection - Animal Rights Protection - Infrastructure Funding - Protected Status for UK foods - Research Funding - Biodiversity Strategy - Cheaper and easier holidays If you wish for me to elaborate and extend on any points I can. All or most of this will go. The only way to save at least half of this will be if Theresa May negotiates a good deal (unlikely) or if we have a second ref and the deal gets trashed and renegotiated democratically. Also I forgot to add EURATOM. Not all of the EU is bad. |
And I really don't get the mantra that we all need to jump on one boat and get behind Team Brexit, no. Not going to happen. Proof of that was Tories flopping.
I still have my EU flag waving outside my house. |
And before you all scream I'm Labour, I'm not. I'm a Liberal Democrat.
Although I was Tory till Brexit happened :blush: |
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