I understand that you think it would be utterly wrong. I am not convinced of your arguments for that.Since the UK voted to leave, and therefore not remain in the EU, then the option to remain in the EU has no rightful place being on that ballot, as it completely goes against the will of the people, as expressed by the majority who voted to leave in the referendum. It would be utterly wrong of you or anyone else to risk undoing or invalidating that result. What do you think gives you that right? — S
My assessment from thousands of miles of way is that the decision to leave was ideological and wasn't based upon a review of the pros and cons of leaving versus staying. It's for that reason that I really don't think any of your data points would be very persuasive to someone in favor of leaving. It's about autonomy, self-governance, self-reliance, and a general view that Brits believe they know what's best for Brits better than anyone else. The opposition will interpret all that as racism and xenophobia I'm sure though. — Hanover
My position is that the question asked in the plebiscite was inappropriate for a binding vote. The solution is to have a vote with options that are appropriate for a binding vote. — andrewk
It's pretty clear that the complexities and complications of Brexit were not foregrounded enough by the overly complacent and disparate Remain campaign. That's their fault, but added to that, the Leave campaign has been shown to have lied and cheated, and in the end only won by a slim margin. So, there's a possibility that some who voted did so on the basis of incomplete or false information, and there might be enough who realize that now and have changed their minds to call the result into question. If that is the case, a second referendum will overturn the first and reverse the decision fairly and squarely. If it's not, it won't. And far from being betrayed, those of the 17.4 million who voted to leave and now realize they made a mistake will have a chance to rectify it. Just as if you buy a product and realize it doesn't function as advertised, you generally have a right to change your mind, if you vote for a change of policy in a referendum and there's a reasonable case to be made that you voted on the basis of false or incomplete information, you should also be given a chance to change your mind. And in a free and fair referendum, which involves a chance to not change your mind too, I don't see what's unethical. So, turning the tables, what's your justification for denying those who think they have made a terrible mistake in voting for Brexit a chance to rectify it (given that those who don't think they did have every opportunity to repeat their vote)? — Baden
The charge that the referendum is being re-run until the result required is achieved is weak on two counts. One, if a majority continue to oppose remaining, it doesn't matter how many times the referendum is re-run, it will always fail. — Baden
Two, in practice, it would be almost impossible for any government to propose a quick third referendum given both that the justifications for the second won't apply with the same force and there is no time for it. You fall (or glide if you're lucky) off the cliff at the end of next March and there can be no simple glide back on. A second referendum is justified by the stark, imminent and in many ways unexpected threat of a no-deal scenario in a way further referendums can't be. Peak information and opportunity is now. — Baden
I expect so, yes. More so under the Tories. Theresa May has said that the focus will be on high-skilled workers. — S
That's kind of saddening: that we respond to the burden of taking care of our neighbors by turning into rightwing populists. Or maybe it's just that the rightwing populist movement is a sign that the stress of immigration is becoming too high? — frank
You're getting moralistic about it. I was trying to understand it mechanically. Clinton's point was that the pattern is repeating in multiple places. — frank
I'm assuming Brexit is pretty big news globally now, so what are people's thoughts on it? I think there should be a people's vote. — Evil
Is it not ultimately the responsibility of voters to do their own research before such an important vote, and to make up their own mind? — S
That's the equivalent of it being made clear to you that there are no refunds for this particular product that you've purchased, but then you go back and demand a refund anyway. Yes, at the campaign stage, both campaigns could have - and ideally should have - been clearer, more honest, more balanced, and so on... but honestly, what did we expect? We know that politicians lie and twist the truth, we know that they have an agenda to push. Are we really so naive as to believe anything different? Are we really so naive as to believe anything different? We've made our bed, now we have to lie in it. — S
Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me. — S
What do you propose? — S
Maybe referenda are not such a good idea? Sometimes referenda begin as a way for the "popular will" to be expressed, but most often referenda are started and fueled by some particular interest. California is a good example: A now decades-past referendum on lowering property taxes has degraded California's once excellent public services which depends on property tax revenue. Real estate interests were the instigators and beneficiaries. — Bitter Crank
Who started Brexit? What was their expected benefit? — Bitter Crank
I'm just happy the Brits, every now and then, are taking the pressure off us Americans for being the biggest shitshow country — Maw
es, every time I'm tempted to show my contempt for the US, and the President it chose, — Pattern-chaser
I’d wager that the consequences of a no deal Brexit are worse than the consequences of cancelling Brexit. — Michael
If we're not to choose him again in 2020 the Democrats had better start getting their act together pretty soon and come up with some viable candidates, people who don't already have a mound of controversy in their past, people who aren't 80 years old or whatever already, and people who have some charisma, with an ability to appeal to some of the people who would otherwise vote for Trump. — Terrapin Station
So Beto. — Michael
What would you blame for him being defeated by Cruz last month? — Terrapin Station
There hasn't been a Democrat Senator in Texas since 1993. Cruz won it in 2012 by 16pp, but only beat Beto by 2.6pp. That's a big swing. I don't know how much of that is down to Beto being Beto, but he probably appealed to a lot of people who usually vote Republican.
If he can pull that off in the swing states that Trump won then he can beat Trump. — Michael
Well, if he can't beat Trump in any of the traditionally conservative states, doesn't that make him score low in the "ability to appeal to some of the people who would otherwise vote for Trump" metric? — Terrapin Station
Putting all the wrangling to one side we are left with the fact that the majority of voters in the referendum indicated a wish to leave the EU. — TWI
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.