SussexDon1inIreland wrote:I voted Leave
I have like the other 17.4 million been ignored
...

SussexDon1inIreland wrote:I voted Leave
I have like the other 17.4 million been ignored
...
I fear their heads are so far in the sand they need factor 50 for their feet...martin_p wrote:https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... h_2019.pdf
Here’s the unadulterated report for those who don’t like the Twitter commentary. It doesn’t really make any better reading I’m afraid. You can’t just stick your collective Brexit heads in the sand over this.
Get a hold of yourself man.SussexDon1inIreland wrote:I voted Leave
I have like the other 17.4 million been ignored
Democracy is dead
The politicians are all crooks expenses scandal 10 years ago and now this
I am never going to bother voting again and I concede defeat to the establishment who never expected us to vote against them but after 2.5 years I have been worn down by the one sided media the lies about no deal being a disaster which I don’t believe will be.
Mrs May - I actually believed you were going to deliver the Brexit you promised in your Mansion House speech
I actually believed you when you said over 30 times in the House of Commons “we are leaving on 29th March 2019”
I believed that our Civil Service would deliver on the will of the people.
I was wrong
I can’t I believe do anything about it
At least I don’t need to spend any more time reading about BREXIT because I lost even though I won
UTC
I don't need any lectures about homelessness. it's an absolute stain on our society, but it actually can get worse. Most of these people are largely dependent on charity, and evidence from the past suggests that charities suffer significantly when the economy suffers.Jakubclaret wrote:I suggest 1 night time you go into leeds/manchester or any city & peer under bridges or shop doorways basically anywhere where theres cover & you will see people at the rock bottom the poorest in society, i haven't imagined it its there, for some people life cannot get any worse, .
I told you to ignore that bit DarthRingo!A twitter randomer giving biased interpretation of government plans.
I gave up after the first two points which were so pedantic and semantics driven, although it’s a miracle I got past “Now we had a referendum about the EU. You know the advisory NON- BINDING one riddled with breaches of electoral law and foreign interference.”
But aye, you keep posting em.
And no Lancs, no issue. If anything I enjoy the humour of someone not only taking tweets like that seriously but then trying to use it to illustrate a point to others.
Whatever the debacle with brexit, your twitter examples do lift my spirits.
Based on your post and the inaccuracies in it, that is probably a good idea all round.I am never going to bother voting again
Who’s making attacks personal here? You’ll have to make allowances in your explanation as apparently I’m not very bright according to some.Lancasterclaret wrote:Worth mentioning again btw
You know you've won when the attacks get personal.
Whatever Brexit we end up with, the ones who voted for it are going to be the most ****** off when it magically doesn't solve anything.
YupCelebrating people deciding its not worth voting ? How very liberal...
If the £5 weekly food bill does go up, I'm sure they'll cope especially if more work opportunities exist, the £5 or £10 is small beer in the grand scheme of things, finding work to enable a lifestyle to enhance is probably the 1st step the rest will naturally follow.nil_desperandum wrote:I don't need any lectures about homelessness. it's an absolute stain on our society, but it actually can get worse. Most of these people are largely dependent on charity, and evidence from the past suggests that charities suffer significantly when the economy suffers.
Just as a simplistic example. If my weekly food bill goes up by £5, then one of the first economies I might make may well be to reduce my donations to the foodbank. But it's a far bigger and more complex issue than this. If more people are moving into poverty, how does that help those already below them?
I know other countries are worse off, doesn't detract from the issue in hand, just because "haiti north korea or DR congo" to name a few are more rock bottom doesn't really assist the situation domestically.Greenmile wrote:I suggest you do a bit of research on countries like Haiti, North Korea, or DR Congo, and have a re-think on where “rock bottom” really is.
You can’t have “more rock bottom”, or if you can, your argument that things can’t get any worse for the folk at the bottom falls apart at the seams.Jakubclaret wrote:I know other countries are worse off, doesn't detract from the issue in hand, just because "haiti north korea or DR congo" to name a few are more rock bottom doesn't really assist the situation domestically.
The only thing holding us back is immigration more to the point the inability to control the numbers.Greenmile wrote:You can’t have “more rock bottom”, or if you can, your argument that things can’t get any worse for the folk at the bottom falls apart at the seams.
You still seem to be labouring under the misapprehension that Brexit will lead to more jobs and better pay for low skilled Brits - this has been repeatedly debunked, but you’re not listening, are you?
...and big business telling the government they aren’t allowed to increase the minimum wage, remember?Jakubclaret wrote:The only thing holding us back is immigration more to the point the inability to control the numbers.
Not sure based on that post that you understand the point.Jakubclaret wrote:If the £5 weekly food bill does go up, I'm sure they'll cope especially if more work opportunities exist, the £5 or £10 is small beer in the grand scheme of things, finding work to enable a lifestyle to enhance is probably the 1st step the rest will naturally follow.
Something you've been told repeatedly the government has always had the power to do if said immigrants are not contributing positively to the economy. But successive governments have chosen not to. So why would policy change after brexit?. This policy is nothing to do with Brussels or the ECJ.Jakubclaret wrote:The only thing holding us back is immigration more to the point the inability to control the numbers.
That's not true, I'm against your kind because all you are interested in doing is exploiting cheap labour & anybody who questions it are xenophobic.Greenmile wrote:...and big business telling the government they aren’t allowed to increase the minimum wage, remember?
The same big business which will tell the government not to cut off their supply of cheap imported labour.
Edit - I don’t know why you don’t just admit you don’t like immigration for cultural reasons (ie xenophobia). It’s a much easier position to defend than this nonsense about sticking up for unskilled British workers.
Not to mention that any trade deal we strike to replace the ones we already have via the EU are likely to entail us offering work visas to their citizens, so leaving the EU will probably end up increasing immigration into this country, unless it makes us a much less enticing country to immigrate to, which won’t do much for those at the bottom, as you’ve already tried to explain.nil_desperandum wrote:Something you've been told repeatedly the government has always had the power to do if said immigrants are not contributing positively to the economy. But successive governments have chosen not to. So why would policy change after brexit?. This policy is nothing to do with Brussels or the ECJ.
I don’t exploit cheap labour. Why do you think I do?Jakubclaret wrote:That's not true, I'm against your kind because all you are interested in doing is exploiting cheap labour & anybody who questions it are xenophobic.
I struggle to understand your position on this still. You've repeatedly said that the referendum was just "Do we leave the EU" with no detail as to how we leave as a justification for no deal. Equally though, May's deal is undeniably leaving the EU and fulfils the referendum question but doesn't count somehow.RingoMcCartney wrote:Brexiteers ( tory and labour) that voted it down did so because they see it as brexit in name only. Given they stood on a manifesto that pledged to leave the European Union . Voted to trigger article 50 and enshrine leaving the EU on March 29th into law. They are, in my view being consistent and honourable.
Remoaner ( tory and labour) that voted it down, were being opportunistic and doing what they've down throughout the negotiations. Going back on the manifesto pledges on which they were elected. And despite the vast majority of MPs ( tory and labour) voting to trigger article 50, they're clearly wanting to thwart, undermine and in most cases stop the uk ever leaving the EU. They are in my view duplicitous, dishonourable and helping to ferment a deep, long term, even permanent, mistrust of politicians, parliament and democracy itself.
Who’s “we”? You and the voices in your head?Pstotto wrote:We didn't vote for Remainer May's Brexit we voted to leave the EU No Deal.
This has been the problem since day one. The Tory Party, and particularly the ERG within it, seem to view this slim majority as the whole country wanting a hard Brexit. Party politics has over-ruled the interests of the country for years.jrgbfc wrote:One thing that's bugging me recently is the way all the Brexiteers are talking as though they won with a massive majority so they have the right to hold the country to ransom. Newsflash, you won with a tiny majority and i'd say the country is pretty much split 50-50 now.
So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases, tantrums, parliamentary voting, calling brexiteers stupid etc?jrgbfc wrote:One thing that's bugging me recently is the way all the Brexiteers are talking as though they won with a massive majority so they have the right to hold the country to ransom. Newsflash, you won with a tiny majority and i'd say the country is pretty much split 50-50 now.
I accept that the result of the referendum has to stand. But if Theresa May and her party had shown a degree of competence then I think it's a situation that could have been sorted. Fact is she's bent over backwards to try and appease a dinosaur like JRM says it all really.GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases, tantrums, parliamentary voting, calling brexiteers stupid etc?
It's all led to the country being on the verge of a no deal because we've had to have a GE in the meantime, threats of another, no confidence votes by parliament and the Tory party itself.
Yeah, great, cheers for that one remainers.
That’s right snowflake, it’s all the remainers’ fault. If we hadn’t called brexiters stupid and hurt their feelings, we’d all have a backyard full of unicorns by now.GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases, tantrums, parliamentary voting, calling brexiteers stupid etc?
It's all led to the country being on the verge of a no deal because we've had to have a GE in the meantime, threats of another, no confidence votes by parliament and the Tory party itself.
Yeah, great, cheers for that one remainers.
Our representatives having votes in parliament (and court cases to ensure the laws of the land are followed rather than Parliament being ignored). The bastards.GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases, tantrums, parliamentary voting, calling brexiteers stupid etc?
It's all led to the country being on the verge of a no deal because we've had to have a GE in the meantime, threats of another, no confidence votes by parliament and the Tory party itself.
Yeah, great, cheers for that one remainers.
The chief court case that you are referring to (I assume the Miller case), in reality had v little to do with brexit. It was to test out the sovereignty of parliament and uphold our democracy, something for which in the future we might all be v grateful. [Tories, and in fact most of the country, would justifiably be outraged if Corbyn tried to bypass Parliament in the way May was seeking to do].GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases,.
GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:So it doesn't bug you that since the result was announced various remainers have done everything they can to undermine the result with court cases, tantrums, parliamentary voting, calling brexiteers stupid etc?
It's all led to the country being on the verge of a no deal because we've had to have a GE in the meantime, threats of another, no confidence votes by parliament and the Tory party itself.
Yeah, great, cheers for that one remainers.
Because when immigration gets mentioned you jump on the xenophobia soapbox, it's a default defensive stance, Q1 answered, even if you don't agree, & immigration has already plummeted post referendum due to the pound, & the trade deals which are likely to be clinched (outside of eu) are more likely to be skilled work which can only be filled by a smaller selective workforce & not just any old EU worker, Q2 answered even if you don't agree, I'm doing it this way to avoid the same repetitive questions & also remembering questions & answers, someone has to!Greenmile wrote:I don’t exploit cheap labour. Why do you think I do?
I’m just trying to explain to you that immigration will continue at current levels (or higher - see my post above) irrespective of Brexit. What part of that don’t you understand?
Why are so many leave voters so paranoid about being called stupid? I hardly ever hear or see anyone call leave voters stupid, but I constantly hear and see leave voters talking about how everyone else thinks they’re stupid.GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:calling brexiteers stupid etc?