The EU: In, out, shake it all about.... (105 Viewers)

As of right now, how are thinking of voting? In or out

  • Remain

    Votes: 23 37.1%
  • Leave

    Votes: 35 56.5%
  • Undecided

    Votes: 3 4.8%
  • Not registered or not intention to vote

    Votes: 1 1.6%

  • Total voters
    62
  • Poll closed .

Otis

Well-Known Member
I know them's the apples, but my daughter tells me pretty much everyone at her school is pretty angry because it is their future that is at stake here. They had a big debate at her school and it was a massive majority that wants to remain.

It's never going to work perfectly of course, because there will always be millions left out of any vote, but she did make a fair point and said that the vote nearly 3 years ago should have included 16 year old's too. 16 is deemed an adult in so many scenario's and any outcome is going to affect them more than most and for an awful lot longer.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
I know them's the apples, but my daughter tells me pretty much everyone at her school is pretty angry because it is their future that is at stake here. They had a big debate at her school and it was a massive majority that wants to remain.

It's never going to work perfectly of course, because there will always be millions left out of any vote, but she did make a fair point and said that the vote nearly 3 years ago should have included 16 year old's too. 16 is deemed an adult in so many scenario's and any outcome is going to affect them more than most and for an awful lot longer.

I suspect that there’s every chance our children will take us back in. Only with the acceptance of the monetary union known as the Euro. Which ultimately will mean all brexit will achieve is joining the Euro in the most complicated, long winded and damaging way possible.
 

Sick Boy

Super Moderator
I suspect that there’s every chance our children will take us back in. Only with the acceptance of the monetary union known as the Euro. Which ultimately will mean all brexit will achieve is joining the Euro in the most complicated, long winded and damaging way possible.

It’s quite likely that the EU would refuse as some member states wouldn’t want to go through the hassle again
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I know them's the apples, but my daughter tells me pretty much everyone at her school is pretty angry because it is their future that is at stake here. They had a big debate at her school and it was a massive majority that wants to remain.

It's never going to work perfectly of course, because there will always be millions left out of any vote, but she did make a fair point and said that the vote nearly 3 years ago should have included 16 year old's too. 16 is deemed an adult in so many scenario's and any outcome is going to affect them more than most and for an awful lot longer.

Young people become informed as they grow older and change their minds. The indoctrination of youth is easy
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member

So the people in the 60’s revolution all remained hippies did they? It’s ckmmon knowledge there is a migration towards capitalism once they see its benefits
 

tommydazzle

Well-Known Member
The situation we’re in is more akin to needing a car to drive to work in the morning when there isn’t another car anywhere for sale and the person selling this one and only car knows we need it.

It doesn’t matter how much we use the “we’ll just walk away bluff” brexit by it’s very nature calls that bluff long before we use it. Merely using it weakens our hand because it’s an admission that we’re bereft on any genuine, practical and workable ideas on how to get through the situation we’ve volunteered ourselves for.
I think my point is (and I'm playing devil's advocate here) that it wouldn't be a bluff! Remember hard Brexiteers see a golden future outside the EU. There are other cars out there in their world view. I'm not endorsing this but just observing that it seems a weak hand if you take this view.
 

Sick Boy

Super Moderator
So the people in the 60’s revolution all remained hippies did they? It’s ckmmon knowledge there is a migration towards capitalism once they see its benefits

What a great arguement that’s really relevant.

That’s weird though, I’m sure you’ve gone out before about the EU being a capitalist club
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Now it seems Mr Cable believes Mr Corbyn and Mrs May are in a conspiracy to play for time and mutually have agreed to engineer a hard Brexit
 

Johnnythespider

Well-Known Member
Young people become informed as they grow older and change their minds. The indoctrination of youth is easy
This doesn't really stack up does it, the young have grown up in a country that is part of the EU, it's what they know. Older people hanker after the country they grew up in before the EU, i don't think it has anything to do with i indoctrination.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
This doesn't really stack up does it, the young have grown up in a country that is part of the EU, it's what they know. Older people hanker after the country they grew up in before the EU, i don't think it has anything to do with i indoctrination.

Anyone under 50 has on that basis
 

martcov

Well-Known Member
A humorous Irish slant:

A NEW study has shown that the majority of Irish people have no fear about the potential impact to the economy in the wake of a No-Deal Brexit, as they are certain they’ll be too busy laughing their arses off at the Brits.

Fears over how Britain’s disorderly exit from the EU will cause chaos at the border with Northern Ireland, as well as mounting unease over multinational firms’ jitters, have been at the front of economists’ minds since the UK voted to fall into a financial and cultural dark age back in 2016.


However, the average Irish person sees Brexit as ‘a bit of a laugh’, and can’t wait to see the look on the faces of British people when the magnitude of their folly is finally unveiled.

“Our close economic ties to the UK are a problem, but our deep-rooted hatred of them is not,” said one Waterford man we spoke to.

“It has been some craic watching them fuck everything up for the last few years, and it’ll only get better when the plug is pulled and the lights go out. Granted, it could mean that I lose my own job in the next twelve months, and then there’s a big aul worldwide recession, acres of unemployment, blah blah blah… but the Brits, though. I can’t wait to see their faces!”

Meanwhile, EU officials have been warned to practice their straight faces for when Brexit hits, to ensure they don’t break down laughing on camera.“
 

martcov

Well-Known Member
So the people in the 60’s revolution all remained hippies did they? It’s ckmmon knowledge there is a migration towards capitalism once they see its benefits

I‘m 63 and I am convinced we are better off being tolerant and trying to live together in peace. Capitalism is fine... but there has to be some control of it as otherwise the poor get left behind- no profit where there is no buying power. Money is not everything. Leaving the EU will help the few not the many ( I pinched the end of that line ).
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
This doesn't really stack up does it, the young have grown up in a country that is part of the EU, it's what they know. Older people hanker after the country they grew up in before the EU, i don't think it has anything to do with i indoctrination.

Don’t be too hard on them, they only want their blue passports back (like they could have had anyway) and bendy bananas back (like they always have been).
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
This doesn't really stack up does it, the young have grown up in a country that is part of the EU, it's what they know. Older people hanker after the country they grew up in before the EU, i don't think it has anything to do with i indoctrination.
The older people voted to remain in the common market. They then found out about the future plans that became the EU. They were lied to. They know more about politics than those who haven't learned how bad politicians are. They were given the chance to vote leave on something we never had a vote to join.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I‘m 63 and I am convinced we are better off being tolerant and trying to live together in peace. Capitalism is fine... but there has to be some control of it as otherwise the poor get left behind- no profit where there is no buying power. Money is not everything. Leaving the EU will help the few not the many ( I pinched the end of that line ).

You live in the mostly highly capitalist country in the EU that the whole project was designed to benefit

You are the definition of a cosy right wing capitalist reaping riches at the expense of others.
 

Sick Boy

Super Moderator
You live in the mostly highly capitalist country in the EU that the whole project was designed to benefit

You are the definition of a cosy right wing capitalist reaping riches at the expense of others.

...so is capitalism not admirable now?! You seem to be flip-flopping here.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
...so is capitalism not admirable now?! You seem to be flip-flopping here.

No I find it amusing when someone plays the - I’m interested in the general public line - when all he’s interested in is zero interest rates and couldn’t give a fuck about the misery his ghastly Fourth Reich imposes on the debt ridden mess across Southern Europe
 

Johnnythespider

Well-Known Member
The older people voted to remain in the common market. They then found out about the future plans that became the EU. They were lied to. They know more about politics than those who haven't learned how bad politicians are. They were given the chance to vote leave on something we never had a vote to join.
That's not indoctrination though is it, i would agree that the EU of today is very different to the common market.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
By all sides. Maybe they’re more visionary and less cynical and believe in the best version of themselves and others and adults and life beat that out of them

No they are young without experience and ripe for manipulation
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
What utter nonsense.

So they have experience? You think all those who supported Jeremy Corbyn were aware of his anti Eu agenda?
 

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