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Referendum : to be in Europe or not to be ?, that is the question ! (REF)     

required field - 03 Feb 2016 10:00

Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....

cynic - 03 Dec 2018 02:41 - 10458 of 12628

so stan, how will you vote if there is a referendum?
try answering without having first referred to to the commissariat

Stan - 03 Dec 2018 08:10 - 10459 of 12628

Mr Garnet you seem more dense then I thought but being the patient type I will persevere..so once again...

Alf,

We can't possibly have merely "a 2nd referendum" as everyone in the Country have had the time in between that referendum to be "informed" of some important elements that were not explained by the outers before the last one and the 1st "informed referendum" that should now happen...how many more times do you need to have this explained to you?

Fred1new - 03 Dec 2018 08:53 - 10460 of 12628

Stan.

You have to make allowances for Manuel, for as he moves into decrepitude he still remains in his childlike attention-seeking phase, like quite a lot of so-called "up and at "em" brigade" throwing their toys out of the pram.

Nanny won't be proud of him.

Stan - 03 Dec 2018 09:14 - 10461 of 12628

Quite Fred quite.

Dil - 03 Dec 2018 09:57 - 10462 of 12628

Think you put the e's in wrong place Stan.

Clocktower - 03 Dec 2018 14:16 - 10463 of 12628

EL reading that the back stabbing Gove has suckered you to support TM`s position beggers belief.

Better you watch Mogg in House of Commons live.

cynic - 03 Dec 2018 14:50 - 10464 of 12628

stan clearly can't make up his own mind how to vote in the event that there is a(nother) referendum, but just dances around the issue as fred's little puppet

it was interesting to hear today from a small group of important and very well educated saudi businessmen that they all thought uk would be well shot of brussels and was strong enough in the longer term to flourish

Fred1new - 03 Dec 2018 15:07 - 10465 of 12628

Manuel,

Still crawling in SA.

Be careful you never know when you will have served your purpose for them.

ExecLine - 03 Dec 2018 15:41 - 10466 of 12628

Some of the objections to the backstop may merely be technicalities. However, even as technicalities, they are important and require consideration.

Membership of the EU does allow member states to be able share security information. Leave and you aren't any longer a member.

eg. So a non-member has a potential lack of access to certain levels of (sensitive) security information.

Well, this might be a factual technical possibility but it can, does and will work both ways, if it has to.

But it does NOT have to work like that if it isn't sensible. Mutual sharing of sensitive security information need not necessarily have to stop - even though the backstop agreement analysis says it could.

Clocktower - 03 Dec 2018 16:23 - 10467 of 12628

EL, why do you think Colum Eastwood and Michelle O'Neill say the Brexit backstop must remain in the deal?

Sinn Fein want it to stay forever, with the deal - they will get their way imo.

As for security - why did the last minister resign? Have you missed that news.

From Day 1 the UK should have said - we are leaving - You do XXX amount of trade with us, we only buy X from you, these are our terms if you want us to continue to support you - not beg them for a deal - we should have dictated the terms fron day one.

Fred1new - 03 Dec 2018 16:31 - 10468 of 12628

Do you mean a little like remaining a member of the EU, paying your dues and sharing the benefits of membership?

Clocktower - 03 Dec 2018 17:21 - 10469 of 12628

You have made it clear that you never accepted the results that 52% vote to leave - do you not understand the word LEAVE Fred?



cynic - 03 Dec 2018 19:47 - 10470 of 12628

it amazes and amuses me that fred can rant so much when he can't ever be bothered to vote for what he says he believes

psst! i would guarantee that even the marxist brotherhood would not renege on its arms contracts with saudi on the grounds of righteous outrage against the kashoggi murder

ExecLine - 03 Dec 2018 19:52 - 10471 of 12628

Clocktower

You seem to be making quite strong personal attacks on anyone you deem doesn't see things exactly like you do. If you want to argue, debate or whatever, then "great". I think we all love doing it, actually, but do stop making most of your comments so angry or personal, please. :-)

Gove isn't 'back stabbing'.
Gove hasn't suckered me.
Fred does understand the word LEAVE (obviously).

Oh, and FYI, I do think TM has been a very, very poor negotiator and I'm a great fan of JRM and I do like the oratory of BJ.

I do accept, that JRM has reminded us, that under the backstop, it just might be that the EU levy some special taxes (on Ireland or whatever?) - which we might get to be on the receiving end of. Then we might get to receive "taxation without representation". Annexe 2. Article 3. Sub-section 2.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6FUeEOcApw

Nevertheless, some sort of 'backstop' is required. TM has not been negotiating well at all. She merely wants to coerce her way through her Brexit ministers, the cabinet and the EU too. She didn't seem to want anything back in return for her £39 bn. Nobody seems to know exactly what it is for.

cynic - 03 Dec 2018 20:04 - 10472 of 12628

EL - you and i choose to disagree, but no matter

Stan - 03 Dec 2018 21:27 - 10473 of 12628

Alf waffling is assuably a sign of his total inability to engage intelligently.

Fred1new - 03 Dec 2018 21:47 - 10474 of 12628

Exec.

Do you mean TM is a short-sighted stubborn incompetent?

Stan - 03 Dec 2018 22:05 - 10475 of 12628

Fred that sounds like a disciption of Alf 😃

Dil - 04 Dec 2018 01:21 - 10476 of 12628

Exec , there is no need of a back stop from a UK perspective it's there for the sake of the EU only.

We have said we will not put up a hard border so it's their problem if there is no deal and they know it. Ireland won't put up a hard border either so they get us to sign up for this crappy back stop deal.

Most of the rest of the deal I can live with for now but the back stop is one step too far.

I was not convinced by Gove's interpretation although the out comes he suggest are probably possible I think they are highly unlikely in reality.

If the deal gets passed you can bet your bottom dollar on us ending up having to use it or it being used as a major tool against us in trade negotiations.

Best outcome in the weeks ahead is May goes and the party gets behind a new leader who gives the EU an ultimatum that the back stop goes or we walk away on the 29th March with no deal and we start new negotiations from there.

Stan can stick his second referendum where the sun doesn't shine as whatever the result it won't solve a thing whichever way you vote.

Another leave vote and we are back where we are now and a remain vote and we spend another two years arguing about the terms we stay in on while leavers campaign for another referendum.

Cerise Noire Girl - 04 Dec 2018 08:09 - 10477 of 12628

Really Dilbert, I did think that you'd know how these things work by now!!!

After the Great British public have returned the correct vote in the next referendum, that'll be it. You'll be staying in the EU, there won't be any more referenda, and you'll just have to get over it, because no prime minister will ever be stupid enough again to think the public are capable of making the right decision.
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