That's an odd charge. The topic of this conversation is Brexit, which is why that's the focus of my posts. I'm not under any obligation in order to maintain consistency to research and comment on other referenda that were closely fought and narrowly won through illegal means (and I don't know of any off-hand). Which were you referring to? Name one. — Baden
Off-topic but feel free to name them, so I at least have a chance to respond. — Baden
It isn't a moral argument in the context in which you applied it, which didn't involve any crime or immoral act on the part of those who you aimed the comment at. — Baden
The issue is what an ethical response would be and that's what I was explicating. — Baden
So again, you're filling your posts with irrelevancies. — Baden
It doesn't matter what political viewpoint I take or whether it appears opportunistic to you. The argument that a referendum that may have been won by cheating should be repeated so as not to deny those cheated a chance to change their minds stands on its own merits. — Baden
Nor have they ruled that it can't be. Which is why we're having this discussion. — Baden
An extremely weak case from which when you extract all the irrelevancies and accusations concerning the motives of your opposition still boils down to nothing more than "tough luck". — Baden
Those who are strongly against a new referendum are strongly against it because they might lose one that's run fairly and without illegality or cheating. Again, a very weak position morally. — Baden
And if a significant number wouldn't vote the same way, which polls do show (see my last post), why should they be denied that opportunity? Oh I know, "tough luck" because murderers have to go to prison. You're going to have to do better than that. — Baden
No (and I have no idea where you got that from. Where did I suggest we "create" more lies?). — Baden
I suggest an unfair referendum where one side conducted their campaign dishonestly and illegally (in part) be rectified with a fair referendum where both sides conduct their campaigns honestly and legally. — Baden
I explained several times already they were officially found in violation of campaign rules. — Baden
Fascinating. — Baden
No, I don't think that it's in the least bit odd to be charged of inconsistency in any debate on this forum. And the relevance is that if you're found to be guilty of inconsistency, then that calls into question why anyone should accept your argument here when you yourself don't even accept it when it's reasonably applied in other contexts. — S
. It looks like really it's unilaterally beneficial and others might be benefited from leaving, especially those poorer nations that would benefit from having their old weaker and more easily controlled currencies still in place. — Hanover
Sure, but what was written on the bus wasn't one of them. I pointed out the violation of the rules seemed to deal with spending more than the cap permitted based upon what might be a mischaracterization by Leave regarding how money was spent. — Hanover
That's what I'm arguing on the basis of, the possibility of a no-deal scenario. May's deal does not have parliament's support and there is no deal B both according to her and to Europe. If May's deal had been passed, we wouldn't be having this conversation as there would be nothing left to talk about. So... — Baden
You can't fix lies by bringing about bigger lies, just as you can't put out a fire by pouring fuel onto it. You're ethics are whack and you need to go back to the drawing board. — S
Ok, but in terms of the overall question of whether a rerun of the referendum is justified, it doesn't matter where the violation was. They cheated and that undermines the legitimacy of the result. — Baden
In my view the outcome AND the fact there were lies and people were badly informed are immaterial as the referendum should be totally ignored in light of the fact nobody knows what the fuck the question meant when they voted and nobody knows what it was that the voters voted for or against. — Benkei
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All it said on the bus was "... let's fund our NHS instead" it didn't say "we will". — TWI
In any case when, or if, we leave the EU that money may well fund the NHS. So far it's not a lie. — TWI
A lie, assuming it was one, isn't a campaign violation. It's just what happens in political events. — Hanover
If you overturned every election every time a lie were found, we'd never have had a single leader. — Hanover
Yes, but Baden doesn't seem keen on talking about that logical consequence. Perhaps because it either exposes his double standard or renders his position absurd. — S
All it said on the bus was "... let's fund our NHS instead" it didn't say "we will". In any case when, or if, we leave the EU that money may well fund the NHS. So far it's not a lie. — TWI
That is a fair point. It might to an extent. It then depends on much weight to give to that. In any case, it's the only sensible objection I've seen here so far. — Baden
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