Having read a little bit more on this topic, seems like to me lose/lose so far for remainers/leavers... the longer the UK is in this limbo, the more political stall and quagmire that it creates, the more chance it has for adverse effects to trickle throughout the economy and for other political complications (such as with the EU and other countries) to occur with Leaving... so actually, having this development in the mix only
extends that poor side -effect... which is bad for all parties concerned really...
I worry if there is an economic crisis tomorrow... does this affect the UK's ability to adapt to an ever-changing economical environment? This being the most drastic example really, but recently we had cyber attacks in the US that affected a good number of major website. I could see something larger scale happening more in other places too if those attacks were to evolve over time, especially if the primary targets are communications monopolies here that have their hands in everything. What if such attacks were to effect the financial systems in some manner that would impact the health of the market in some manner?
We could have other economies have a downturn as well just in other countries... when we had the recession, In the US we had the stimulus packages (send every taxpayer a check) to help reverse the trend of consumer apathy and alleviate the public's discontent... which helped the market to rebound. Anyway, this situation makes me little bit nervous for the UK, because it feels like any such measures would take longer to be done if your political system is in a state of transition...
With regards to the High Court's Ruling, is this a case where these politicians that were for this vote are creating more roadblocks for the vote to please their anti-brexit base?... and actually, in a way, is this actually
expediting things (i.e. beneficial) because by putting it through the courts, it's forcing some action on part of the major stakeholders in this to get up and on their feet and act on this thing (to actually Leave), i.e. get all the paperwork out of the way and put the ball in the other person's court... seems like a typical political move in that manner.
I figured with a parliament (and from what little I've read) that is mostly anti-Brexit, perhaps there is a hesitation to move this thing along, i.e. they would not want their name on this thing that could have a negative impact on their approval rating or their party... and really, they don't support it anyway so hard to
want to take responsibility for the implementation of this thing. I mean it sounds great on paper, all these changes that Brexit can do for the UK if it were to be done
properly... but it is
a lot of changes it sounds like... which means a lot of politics... and in the US, we have that issue, where here's this great idea... but nobody wants to be at the front of that and to claim responsibility when it fails. Usually it's the second or third party after that points the finger at them and then comes in to fix it when the most politically correct action has become more apparent... which is what happened with the Affordable Health Care Act (universal healthcare/Obamacare). It was a great idea at the start until everyone got their bloat in there and started adding things like abortions, etc to influence the vote.... that meant that it never got the care and dedicatopm it deserved because they wanted it to get through and worry about the details later, and when it was finally implemented, it was a XXX page horrible monstrosity... I remember downloading it on my computer and the husband and I actually went through and read it a good bit. Holy Moly