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....
hilary
- 15 Aug 2017 17:19
- 7288 of 12628
Because they didn't have much choice in the matter. The residents of Oberwil-Lieli did have a choice, and they exercised their rights. And so they should.
I wouldn't expect to buy a house and have a bunch of asylum seekers move in next door, and I suggest that anybody who pretends they think differently is telling porkies.
cynic
- 15 Aug 2017 17:25
- 7289 of 12628
oh i see; not like your brothers in eu then?
seems to me that have very cleverly "bought" yourself the best of both worlds as an irish/switzer
are you not being just a tad hypocritical or even sanctimonious?
hilary
- 15 Aug 2017 17:36
- 7291 of 12628
are you not being just a tad hypocritical or even sanctimonious?
I thought I'd been very careful not to disclose how I felt about Brexit. Are you reading something between the lines that I never wrote?
cynic
- 15 Aug 2017 18:37
- 7292 of 12628
heaven forfend!
to be honest, i thought your feelings on brexit had been broadcast pretty loud and clear
i hope you are not also one of those who'ld campaign for a 2nd referendum primarily because you did not like the result of the first
hilary
- 15 Aug 2017 19:38
- 7293 of 12628
So you did add 2 plus 2 and got 5.
I asked a couple of questions, tried to get some sensible answers, and I'm accused of being a Remoaner??!!?? Seriously, I voted because I had a vote, but I couldn't care less whether you stay or leave the EU because I took steps some time back to mitigate my position.
As things go (and I never thought I'd say this), but I'm inclined to side with Fred and Stan. :o)
cynic
- 15 Aug 2017 19:41
- 7294 of 12628
whatever
i merely asked you a question
personally, i would never ever want to live in switzerland, despite its welcoming of uk tax asylum seekers
hilary
- 15 Aug 2017 19:52
- 7295 of 12628
personally, i would never ever want to live in switzerland
Phew. That's a relief.
MaxK
- 15 Aug 2017 21:16
- 7296 of 12628
hilly, you are a remoaner, no doubt!
Still, that's your position and you are free to argue it.
What you are not fee to do, is negate it: It was a free vote, and you lost..get over it!
hilary
- 15 Aug 2017 21:30
- 7297 of 12628
hilly, you are a remoaner, no doubt!
Somebody else who has trouble understanding English. What part of 'I asked a couple of questions, tried to get some sensible answers, and I'm accused of being a Remoaner' exactly was too difficult for you to understand?
What you are not fee to do, is negate it. you lost..get over it
Well, given that I exited the UK before this mess happened, I'm not the one who needs to negate it exactly, and I'm not entirely sure what it is that I'm supposed to have lost. But, for someone who 'won', how is it that your glorious leader, Maggie May, seems to be making such a fcuk up of something so simple?
Just curious, I'm sure you'll understand.
Dil
- 15 Aug 2017 23:42
- 7298 of 12628
hils your post earlier about not wanting to buy a house and then have a bunch of asylum seekers move in next door .... isn't that what happens already in the UK but you can also add a bunch of free loading EU citizens / criminals into the mix too.
I knew you felt the same way as us really :-)
Dil
- 15 Aug 2017 23:46
- 7299 of 12628
As for 74% of 18-24 voting in then talking to my kids mates and the youngsters at the pub that's probably about the same reaction I got but the big problem was most of those I talked to didn't bother vote.
Best guess is maybe 25% of them voted if that.
Fred1new
- 16 Aug 2017 07:58
- 7300 of 12628
Max,
You say the "remoaners" have lost. Ummmm.
But tell me exactly what have the Brexiters won.
To vote for something, which hasn't been specified and little knowledge of possible consequences of, strikes me as close to insanity or stupidity.
The Brexiters when they voted behaved like kids being offered sweets out of a bag in the dark.
Ie. optimistic suckers.
Like going to the chemist with a headache and grabbing and swallowing the first pill they can see off the shelf and left wondering why they are spending the rest of the week S------ themselves.
-=-=-=-=-=
Fred1new
- 16 Aug 2017 08:00
- 7301 of 12628
hilary
- 16 Aug 2017 08:52
- 7302 of 12628
Dil,
The comment about the house....
I'm pretty confident that the main reason asylum seekers and other illegal immigrants go to the UK en masse is because they think they'll be given a home and benefits which they can't get elsewhere. In France you can't claim benefits of any kind, or access their healthcare system, until you've contributed into the system for 4 years. They congregate in Calais because they know they'll get something in the UK.
Martini said previously that he wanted an accountable UK government. Well you've already got an accountable UK government. Why haven't they changed the law previously to stop giving the handouts so freely? And why not build a detention centre in the Hebrides for illegals and asylum seekers (that's what happens in Australia)?
Surely, with no prospect of work, no prospect of a home and benefits, and the risk of being detained in the backend of nowhere would be a deterrent? You don't need to leave the EU for that.
Which leads me on to the eastern European part of the question...
I thought that UK border control did do criminal record checks on EU residents. And as for eastern European benefits tourism, a change in the UK law along the lines above would prevent that. What you can't do, however, is stop EU citizens going to the UK to work and pay taxes.
hilary
- 16 Aug 2017 08:58
- 7303 of 12628
Dil,
Regarding the low turnout of 18-24 year olds....
I read somewhere that the turnout was thought to be 36%. The margin of 'victory' for leave over remain was 1.2m votes. Had the youngsters turned out to vote at the same levels as they did in this year's general election, and assuming the 74% figure of those voting to remain is correct, and was extrapolated, then the remain camp would have won.
hilary
- 16 Aug 2017 09:06
- 7304 of 12628
Fred,
But tell me exactly what have the Brexiters won.
A 20% weaker currency, higher inflation (that outstrips earnings), and a more expensive weekly shopping basket together with more expensive holidays to countries with clean air that they don't want to visit any more. :)
Dil
- 16 Aug 2017 09:14
- 7305 of 12628
Hils , Cameron tried to get a deal on immigration before the vote and look what happened. It's not just asylum seekers who fancy our benefits system but many EU citizens too who up until now we've been unable to do anything about. I've got no problem with anyone coming to this country to work but I have got a problem with us having no control over who we have to let in.
Dil
- 16 Aug 2017 09:26
- 7306 of 12628
As for youngsters voting , spoke to them again before general election and 80% were brainwashed by crap they had read on social media. Nearly every single one of them thought the Tories were about to sell off the NHS but couldn't tell me who to and they also thought that if they voted Labour then uni would be free from September and past debts written off. A lot of them are still in uni or finished this summer but their level of education is shocking.
Something happened just before the election and one of my kids told me they didn't know what or who the monarchy was. To the best of my recollection here are the answers I got from 16-24 year olds.
1 said the Queen / Royal Family
4 said they didn't know or didn't care
1 said a building
2 said something to do with the government
1 said the Vatican
1 said the Pope
It was so unbelievable I then asked 10 older people and only one got it wrong and she's as thick as Diane Abbott.
Forget about lowering the voting age maybe they should raise it to 30 !
Dil
- 16 Aug 2017 09:33
- 7307 of 12628
And Fred , what we were voting was clearly specified on the ballot paper .... leave the EU or stay in.