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barney
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 11:02
barney wrote:

He's being slaughtered in the MSM for his refusal to answer about trivial things he had said in the past.
Once again our views diverge Barney.. IMHO The funding of the NHS is not a trivial thing, brought home to me recently after an emergency stay of 9 days in hospital.
I obviously misunderstood what Farage said Ray.
I thought that I heard him say that he would advocate an insurance system that ran alongside the NHS, to take pressure from it by those who wished to pay.
I already have this insurance and have used it quite successfully, by both myself and Mrs b.
Rather than spend thousands on another holiday, I spent it having my knee replaced , thus not adding to the NHS woes.

If he advocated privatising the NHS, then I am 100% opposed.

My politics is about as far removed from Farage's as is possible, as is Claire Fox's but on this single issue of Brexit, he is correct.
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Re: Brexit

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Barney, what's your problem regarding a confirmatory vote aka second referendum. If your case is as good as you say and so beneficial to Joe Public you will win hands down and put the EU situation to bed for generations at least.

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Re: Brexit

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barney wrote: 13 May 2019, 14:08
I obviously misunderstood what Farage said Ray.
I thought that I heard him say that he would advocate an insurance system that ran alongside the NHS, to take pressure from it by those who wished to pay.
I already have this insurance and have used it quite successfully, by both myself and Mrs b …....
We are also in a Private Health Care Scheme, the most recent usage was when Mobietta had her cataracts sorted out within a matter of weeks whereas the feller down the road died while sitting out his 15 month waiting list on the NHS.

Efficiency and accountability from the Provider with the focus being on the patient but without Political or Trade Union influences is what is required but many would obviously require a ' free ' at the point of entry insurance policy.

I wonder if Donald Trump has similar thoughts to Mr Farage and if American Companies would be the main beneficiaries of such a scheme ?
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 15:06
Barney, what's your problem regarding a confirmatory vote aka second referendum. If your case is as good as you say and so beneficial to Joe Public you will win hands down and put the EU situation to bed for generations at least.
We had a vote and do not need another one as the outcome was conclusive.

Perhaps we should also replay the entire Premier League season because Huddersfield are unhappy about being relegated.
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barney
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 15:06
Barney, what's your problem regarding a confirmatory vote aka second referendum. If your case is as good as you say and so beneficial to Joe Public you will win hands down and put the EU situation to bed for generations at least.
But would it Ray. Every single sane adult can understand the basis of the democratic system. The system simply is, you have a vote and one side wins.
That is the same all around the world with the exception of dictatorships and banana republics.

Why would you need a confirmation vote?
The result was the result.
All that has changed is some people refusing to accept it.
I feel that this refusal by some to accept a legitimate vote is bordering on some kind of mental illness.
It's almost like a child with his fingers in his ears.

Just say there is another referendum and remain win 51/49?
Does that make it legitimate?.

Why would one result not be but the other is?

That way leads to anarchy.

The anti democrats have given rise to the brexit party.
Surely you can understand that.
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Re: Brexit

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I GIVE IN !!!!!

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Re: Brexit

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Manoverboard wrote: 13 May 2019, 15:14
Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 15:06
Barney, what's your problem regarding a confirmatory vote aka second referendum. If your case is as good as you say and so beneficial to Joe Public you will win hands down and put the EU situation to bed for generations at least.
We had a vote and do not need another one as the outcome was conclusive.

Perhaps we should also replay the entire Premier League season because Huddersfield are unhappy about being relegated.
Flippin great idea, but can we have free access to some of City and Liverpool's substitutes?
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 16:13
I GIVE IN !!!!!
Too late for that now Ray, June 2016 was when you should have given in.
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 16:13
I GIVE IN !!!!!
Great.!
Only another half million to go :thumbup:

Hopefully Chukka, Vince & Co will think the same after May 23rd.

Support Lexit :thumbup:
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Re: Brexit

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towny44 wrote: 13 May 2019, 19:13
Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 16:13
I GIVE IN !!!!!
Too late for that now Ray, June 2016 was when you should have given in.
NO not given in trying to get a reasoned resolution to Brexit, just to wearing out my keyboard in a vain attempt to get the ideologues to confront the reality. I would have more chance persuading Man United fans to now support Liverpool. Never mind eh!

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Re: Brexit

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I will never be convinced that it is ok to overturn a democratic vote before implementing it. If that is considered normal, then what is the point ?
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 20:35
towny44 wrote: 13 May 2019, 19:13
Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 16:13
I GIVE IN !!!!!
Too late for that now Ray, June 2016 was when you should have given in.
NO not given in trying to get a reasoned resolution to Brexit, just to wearing out my keyboard in a vain attempt to get the ideologues to confront the reality. I would have more chance persuading Man United fans to now support Liverpool. Never mind eh!
Ray, just because I always assume anyone who votes labour needs committing, especially when it leads to a Labour Govt., does not give me the right to protest that there should be another vote just to check if people have come to their senses.
Now I agree that there is always another GE vote in 5 years to enable sense to prevail, but if the strength of view is so strong then what you should have done, after we had successfully shown a united front and negotiated the best leaving deal possible, was start a new EU party, or maybe just voted for the LIB dems and changed Govt policy in a fair way via the legal ballot box rather than calling for an illegal re-count.
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barney
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Re: Brexit

Unread post by barney »

This subject really comes down to the basics of our voting system.

I cannot remember in my lifetime, that a losing side immediately refuted a result in a democratic vote.

Cast your mind back.
Literally the day after the result, politicians and pundits were on our screens declaring that they could not accept it and would campaign to overturn it.
They were clearly in shock at the time and maybe it could be expected.
However, to continue on the grounds of democracy is ludicrous.

Sure, things have changed.
The biggest one being the PM going against her own speeches at Lancaster House and Florence.
I, like millions of others thought that was that.
We would either leave the EU with and agreement or we would leave with no agreement.

Why ?
Because that is what she specifically said.


I have no issue with another vote, be it a general election or in time, another referendum.
But they would have to be on the issue of rejoining the EU, after we have left.
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Re: Brexit

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Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 20:35
towny44 wrote: 13 May 2019, 19:13
Ray Scully wrote: 13 May 2019, 16:13
I GIVE IN !!!!!
Too late for that now Ray, June 2016 was when you should have given in.
NO not given in trying to get a reasoned resolution to Brexit, just to wearing out my keyboard in a vain attempt to get the ideologues to confront the reality. I would have more chance persuading Man United fans to now support Liverpool. Never mind eh!
You have zero chance of that Ray. The millions of Utd fans world wide were all shouting for City and will be shouting for Spurs.
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Re: Brexit

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The Pied Piper or our own Donald ? :lolno: :lolno: TAKE YOUR pic
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Re: Brexit

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60149073_683968265393531_6170158525763813376_n.jpg
Ray Scully wrote: 14 May 2019, 18:11
The Pied Piper or our own Donald ? :lolno: :lolno: TAKE YOUR pic
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barney
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Re: Brexit

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All I can say is that he has clearly got a lot of people worried if they are trying to do such a concentrated hatchet job.
That level of salary and attendance is about par for the course for most EU MPs.
That is part of the reason why so many are outraged at the obvious waste.

Just wait until there are another 200 MEPs like Farage from all over Europe.
The game is up and the EU answer is..... More EU.
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Re: Brexit

Unread post by Kendhni »

barney wrote: 14 May 2019, 11:20
Cast your mind back.
Literally the day after the result, politicians and pundits were on our screens declaring that they could not accept it and would campaign to overturn
Cast your mind back slightly further, to, literally, a few days before the result, when Farage was on our screens saying "In a 52-48 referendum this would be unfinished business by a long way." which is a blatant declaration that he would not accept it and would campaign to overturn.

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Re: Brexit

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Kendhni wrote: 15 May 2019, 05:53
barney wrote: 14 May 2019, 11:20
Cast your mind back.
Literally the day after the result, politicians and pundits were on our screens declaring that they could not accept it and would campaign to overturn
Cast your mind back slightly further, to, literally, a few days before the result, when Farage was on our screens saying "In a 52-48 referendum this would be unfinished business by a long way." which is a blatant declaration that he would not accept it and would campaign to overturn.
But without the system behind him, he would have been told, good shot, you lost, get over it.
I found the statement and he actually said that if very close, he would continue his campaign.
No mention of overturning it.
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Re: Brexit

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A slight but significant difference considering he would have no power to overturn it.
Last edited by oldbluefox on 15 May 2019, 08:18, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Brexit

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oldbluefox wrote: 15 May 2019, 08:16
A slight but significant difference considering he would have no power to overturn it.
Don't get me wrong. I'm no fan of Farage.
But nobody can deny that he is effective.

The comparison to Trump, made by Ray is probably not a million miles away from the mark.

We all know where that led and why.
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Re: Brexit

Unread post by Kendhni »

barney wrote: 15 May 2019, 07:49
Kendhni wrote: 15 May 2019, 05:53
barney wrote: 14 May 2019, 11:20
Cast your mind back.
Literally the day after the result, politicians and pundits were on our screens declaring that they could not accept it and would campaign to overturn
Cast your mind back slightly further, to, literally, a few days before the result, when Farage was on our screens saying "In a 52-48 referendum this would be unfinished business by a long way." which is a blatant declaration that he would not accept it and would campaign to overturn.
But without the system behind him, he would have been told, good shot, you lost, get over it.
I found the statement and he actually said that if very close, he would continue his campaign.
No mention of overturning it.
I think you are clutching at straws trying to separate the two positions.

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Re: Brexit

Unread post by Kendhni »

barney wrote: 15 May 2019, 09:06
oldbluefox wrote: 15 May 2019, 08:16
A slight but significant difference considering he would have no power to overturn it.
Don't get me wrong. I'm no fan of Farage.
But nobody can deny that he is effective.

The comparison to Trump, made by Ray is probably not a million miles away from the mark.

We all know where that led and why.
He is a disrupter and sadly that is the only string to his bow - he has no more of an idea or plan to deliver brexit than any other politician or brexit leader. His chosen form of brexit has chopped and changed over the past 3 years - at the time of the referendum he was extolling the virtues of the Norwegian model, no he is jumping on the minority choice of 'no deal' - that was never ever part of the peoples referendum.

Farage is doing nothing more than whipping the people up to line his pockets.

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Re: Brexit

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Farage or no Farage the result was to leave the EU and Cameron promised he would honour the vote, of course he never expected a leave vote but as many have said before, be careful what you wish for, or in this case offer.
As regards no plan or idea about the sort of Brexit we should negotiate, that's not surprising since no one had ever left before, but I agree that I did not want or expect a no deal, although I always assumed the EU would play hard ball with a trade deal, however I never envisaged the acrimony that a withdrawal agreement would cause. I think Barney said way back that accepting that the WA discussions should be finalised before the trade talks was our first big mistake of very many our govt. have made in these discussions.
In summary we are at an impasse and I think our only way out is to revoke article 50 but also to have another referendum, we all know a lot more about the perils of leaving, however I hope our politicians have learned enough to be able to be able proceed to carve up the EU in much the same way they have stitched us up, once we invoke article 50 and start again on a clean sheet.......I am so confident that the result would still be to leave, and probably by a much higher margin.
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Re: Brexit

Unread post by Kendhni »

towny44 wrote: 15 May 2019, 09:45
Farage or no Farage the result was to leave the EU and Cameron promised he would honour the vote, of course he never expected a leave vote but as many have said before, be careful what you wish for, or in this case offer.
As regards no plan or idea about the sort of Brexit we should negotiate, that's not surprising since no one had ever left before, but I agree that I did not want or expect a no deal, although I always assumed the EU would play hard ball with a trade deal, however I never envisaged the acrimony that a withdrawal agreement would cause. I think Barney said way back that accepting that the WA discussions should be finalised before the trade talks was our first big mistake of very many our govt. have made in these discussions.
In summary we are at an impasse and I think our only way out is to revoke article 50 but also to have another referendum, we all know a lot more about the perils of leaving, however I hope our politicians have learned enough to be able to be able proceed to carve up the EU in much the same way they have stitched us up, once we invoke article 50 and start again on a clean sheet.......I am so confident that the result would still be to leave, and probably by a much higher margin.
I would not be a million miles from your position. Nobody expected brexit to win and therefore nobody had a brexit plan - of any sort. After the referendum David Cameron should have thanked the population for their advisory vote and put together a cross-party committee to properly explore and determine a plan and a strategy for leaving that would be acceptable to all parties, but primarily acceptable to the UK. This could have included investigatory relationships with other countries on future relationships with the creation of 'agreements in principle'. They could also have looked at expected impact to the economy, jobs, infrastructure requirements and everything else that comes with brexit. It should have explored and costed ALL brexit options that have been bandied about over the last 3 years.

Once a proper plan and strategy were devised then and only then should article 50 have been triggered. I have always said I could have been convinced either way but, at the time of the referendum I could see through the lies about immigration, the lies about sovereignty, the lies about Laws, the lies about the Lisbon treaty, the lies about the NHS ... the problem was that there was not a single truth in the brexit campaign that I could focus on. Similarly there was little in the remain camp that I could focus on - but there were some things I felt were truths (better working together, weakening of the UK union etc.). When negotiations fail I always believe the best path is to return to the status quo until something verifiably better can be determined. At the minute, 3 years down the line, with over a dozen brexit plans on the table and not one of them verifiably places the UK or its people in a better position.

If article 50 is to be revoked (and I am not even sure it can be - or how much that could cost) then it should be on a promise that the suggested cross-party committee and working group is created to look at how a clean break can be made form the EU (and that should include EU representatives). There should also be guaranteed promise, from all political parties, that within 5 years the question is put back to the people, but this time it is a head-to-head of a single brexit plan/strategy versus the EU plan/strategy (preferably with a threat to execute any politician or journalist found out to be telling lies).

The one thing I disagree with you though is that there has been no stitch up ... just a total incompetent mess by
- the electorate (some of which were more interested in giving the establishment a two-fingered gesture rather than voting for the issue and secondly because they were given a chance to get behind the government that was meant to deliver brexit, but failed to do so)
- the brexiteers (who had no plan or strategy and arrogantly thought the world owed them a favour)
- the remainers (who arrogantly thought they would win so didn't need to try too hard)
- those too lazy to even be bothered to vote for the most important political event that is likely to happen in their lifetimes.
I don't think the EU has stitched us up, they told us before the referendum what their negotiating stance was and despite that being labelled as project fear they have stuck rigidly to it ... we have stitched ourselves up good and proper - especially those demanding that brexit is delivered without a plan (and just saying 'leave' is not a plan).

Sadly there is a total dichotomy between Leave and remain and the job of the government is to represent the entire population not just a minority, or even a majority.
Last edited by Kendhni on 15 May 2019, 10:37, edited 4 times in total.

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