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I am a remaniner but I also agree the referendum result has to be respected. The problem the whole time is those who are Eurosceptics in politics have never had any idea about how we would survive on our own two feet, as evidently showed in the past 3 years. It also gave birth to may extreme views held by a lot of people about immigration. Yet what they have no idea about is we need immigration (as do all countries) to keep business and jobs going. What people don't realise is instead of Poland, Romania and Spain it's likely to be India, China and South Korea.

 

My problem with the current government is we pay these people to govern our country and look out for the countries best interests. I'll always respect the referendum result and I agree the country voted to leave. What I will never agree with is a no-deal scenario which yes backs "democracy" but it leaves our country at serve risk and could easily be avoided all for some ideological purpose which benefits few and leaves many of the country at risk.

 

I mean I've said it before but the country went mad when KFC closed for 2 weeks, everytime there is a fuel shortage people go mad, can you imagine Barbara and Linda fighting over a loaf of bread in ASDA? It's just sheer madness and can easily be avoided with some calm heads at the table instead of a bunch of ideological knobheads who have so much influence.

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It really doesn't.

 

Leave lied, didn't get a big enough majority, didn't get youth support, sisn't get 3 nations.

 

Revoke.

In other words, those of us who thought he was an idiot before still think he's an idiot.

 

Indeed I thought he would bellow out that it was an advisory non binding vote and Boris is an absolute clown 😉

It really doesn't.

 

Leave lied, didn't get a big enough majority, didn't get youth support, sisn't get 3 nations.

 

Revoke.

 

:lol: I like your persistence algernon

The hardest bit will be coding the random answer from vidcapper that's not related to the question. The text will be easy, but randomness codes are always hard!

 

At least i'm a little random. With you, it's Marxism all the way - I hate to tell you this, but repetition doesn't magically make socialism a better system... :P

 

Wow this is interesting. Look who posted in this thread. :o

 

Poster Posts

 

Algernon Monqueef 176

Common Sense 138

Suedehead2 76

Rooney 48

vidcapper 46

 

I'm only 5th? :o

 

Also the prople spoke back in 1970. 70% pro EU. Sorry :( That correlated with the papers praising the EU, rather than attacking it oover and oover with lies and smears since :)

 

1. The referendum was in *1975*

2. There was no EU in 1975 anyway - it was the EEC, known as the Common Market.

 

There's no way it can be argued that the 1975 & 2016 referenda were equivalent - the EEC had far less power then the EU does.

A deal comes with a transition period where we are still effectively an EU member state. The deal on the table is a bag of shite but far far better than no deal.

 

As long as I can emigrate to Germany in 10 weeks time without having to jump through a billion hoops because our government is a useless shower of f***s then as far as I’m concerned the UK can do what it wants. The brain drain is already well underway. The price for Brexit is measurable in more than just €€€ value and the cultural and educational loss is also catastrophic.

 

I look forward to voting yes again for Scottish freedom and restoring my EU citizenship that way as it’ll be far quicker than waiting to become a German citizen to restore my rights

So that begs the eternal question which we keep asking you: Why do you blindly support someone who wouldn't hesitate to strip you of your benefits and make your life even more miserable for you if he could?

 

Just doesn't make sense.

 

 

AFAIK he has never said he'll do that.

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

 

 

I am a remaniner but I also agree the referendum result has to be respected. The problem the whole time is those who are Eurosceptics in politics have never had any idea about how we would survive on our own two feet, as evidently showed in the past 3 years. It also gave birth to may extreme views held by a lot of people about immigration. Yet what they have no idea about is we need immigration (as do all countries) to keep business and jobs going. What people don't realise is instead of Poland, Romania and Spain it's likely to be India, China and South Korea.

 

My problem with the current government is we pay these people to govern our country and look out for the countries best interests. I'll always respect the referendum result and I agree the country voted to leave. What I will never agree with is a no-deal scenario which yes backs "democracy" but it leaves our country at serve risk and could easily be avoided all for some ideological purpose which benefits few and leaves many of the country at risk.

 

I mean I've said it before but the country went mad when KFC closed for 2 weeks, everytime there is a fuel shortage people go mad, can you imagine Barbara and Linda fighting over a loaf of bread in ASDA? It's just sheer madness and can easily be avoided with some calm heads at the table instead of a bunch of ideological knobheads who have so much influence.

 

Spot on. You've put this far more eloquently than I ever could.

 

Immigration will not go down. That is a given. There are an abundance of jobs(IMPORTANT jobs. I know, I worked in healthcare for three years) that British people just don't apply for in large numbers, and if it's not Europeans filling those jobs it's going to most like be Asians.

Edited by mald487

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

 

Did *he* make that no-insulin claim, or was that just something that was tacked on as part of PF...

 

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

Wonderful. So thick he’d actually prefer to die an agonising and painful death than stay in the EU. What an actual roaster

 

Why on earth are these weapons allowed a vote? They clearly can’t be trusted

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

 

That's not inspiring. That's terrifying. Losing your limbs to own the libs.

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

 

 

My LORD at the level of brainwashing! Revoke. This is not sensible. This is beyond a harmful joke now. Just imagine the levels of propaganda that were needed to convince some weapon he would rather die than remain part of a free trade union... I bet he has no similar problems with the UK.

At least i'm a little random. With you, it's Marxism all the way - I hate to tell you this, but repetition doesn't magically make socialism a better system... :P

I'm only 5th? :o

1. The referendum was in *1975*

2. There was no EU in 1975 anyway - it was the EEC, known as the Common Market.

 

There's no way it can be argued that the 1975 & 2016 referenda were equivalent - the EEC had far less power then the EU does.

 

1. Far more info with the first ref, and not random soundbites and massive lies. It counts for more. Want to overturn it? 70%.

2. Socialism shits all ovee the vile evil late stage capitalism, which is just feudalism rebranded.

 

That's not inspiring. That's terrifying. Losing your limbs to own the libs.

 

We're not deal with sane rational thinking people remember.

 

Good luck to the fella. If he's that dense and unwilling to admit this is a shit show then he deserves what ever he has coming to him!

Anyone seen this last night on BBC News?

 

The passion with which some Brexiteers want to leave the European Union reached new highs – or depths, depending on your point of view – with this chap interviewed by the BBC on the street of Birmingham.

 

He’s got diabetes but he still wants to leave the EU, even if it means he can’t get his insulin anymore (presumably in the event of a no deal).

Only this morning I was comparing the UK's threats to the EU to leave without a deal to someone threatening to pull the plug on their life support machine to spite the nurses whose job it was to keep them alive. Maybe it wasn't such an exaggeration after all.

Did *he* make that no-insulin claim, or was that just something that was tacked on as part of PF...

 

I noticed no-one has confirmed or denied whether the man himself said this... and I find it impossible to believe that we do not make insulin at all here.

We do make insulin in the UK, for about 0.5% of the people who need it. Not nearly enough. We need to import it.

 

It's just another one of those things that 'businesses don't expect to be a problem' until it is because our politics would be throwing us into uncharted waters. So for people who rely on it for their health, they absolutely are at risk.

Not nearly enough. We need to import it.

 

This is the recurring theme. The oversimplification by Brexiteers is so frustrating.

 

"Oh we have that I´m sure"

 

:banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

 

I read something earlier this week by someone who is dependent on a particular medicine. He asked his pharmacist about the implications for his medication of a no-deal withdrawal and was reassured that it was made in the UK. Not fully satisfied, he asked where the ingredients came from. They come from elsewhere in the EU. The same, of course, will apply to many things made in the UK.
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