But if those "innocent People" were swayed by lies, and might otherwise have voted differently, or chosen not to vote at all? A free and fair vote does not involve lies, and the lead-up to the Brexit vote did. — Pattern-chaser
But there's much more to the current crisis than these lies. They're just part of the problem. :fear: — Pattern-chaser
"lies" are part of what's to be expected — S
True, but the lies have been recognised by our courts as such, and where they contravened our law, cases are already in progress, or already over. People and organisations have been found guilty. — Pattern-chaser
But you're not bothered because the vote hasn't been formally declared invalid? — Pattern-chaser
It looks like you're taking a pretty partisan perspective on all this: defend everything to do with Leave; attack anything that might support Remain. That's a shame. — Pattern-chaser
Suppose people want to pay a) less taxes, b) less contributions to the EU, c) less immigration, d) economic stability and e) Bwiddish patriotism. It's quite obvious that a, b, c and d can be reached through other means than leave, yes?
So if we only ask do you want to remain or leave, people are going to have to weigh to what extent their a, b, c and d are reflected in those options. — Benkei
If I hold a gun to your head and tell you to either shoot a kid or his mum and you shoot the mum does that make you a mysogynyst? — Benkei
...It would seem like it might be a good idea to ask the electorate if they want to maybe stay and avoid the many downsides of just leaving without terms established. — Bitter Crank
I agree with all of that, but I don't think that now would be the best time. I think that we should give it a bit more time to see whether the pressure of having May's draft withdrawal agreement in its current form voted down will change anything, which I accept seems unlikely, but not impossible. — S
Baden's argument is that there's enough of a basis to render the referendum results invalid. — S
Yes, I wasn't clear enough that I was trying to make this point that a referendum every 15 minutes being impractical doesn't mean 2 years is impractical. That some interval being certainly impractical doesn't somehow extend to all intervals being impractical. I'm not sure who originally made the argument that accepting a second referendum would be a slippery slope to voting of Brexit every second of the day, but posters have already mentioned that by this logic only one vote could ever be held about anything. — boethius
They are not currently declared invalid by a sufficient authority, I'm quite sure no one is arguing that. — boethius
I don't know enough about the specific to make an opinion on this point, my main interest is arguing against the idea that a second referendum would be somehow anti-democratic or unethical/unreasonable for the parliament to decide to do. To be clear, I also don't see it as anti-democratic (in itself) to not have a second referendum, the wise representatives can always claim "they know more, even secret intel and negotiations, that can't be made public and they are sure means Brexit can't be undone without damaging the UK" (but this displaces the debate to whether the parliamentary system is sufficiently democratic, but is another debate). — boethius
Eh, you've already just conceded the principle and agreed that a new referendum would be a good idea:
The only difference apparently being you'd like to wait an extra couple of weeks, or at most months, before supporting my position (except in the "unlikely" case something changes). Glad you've come round. So, unless you want to argue with yourself, I think we're done again. — Baden
No, I've argued they're questionable not invalid. That should be clear from my use of qualifiers like "potentially" when talking about the result being changed due to the cheating that went on. And the result being questionable along with the rest of the context is enough to justify a new referendum, particularly with a no-deal being a real threat. But, again, you've conceded the principle of a new referendum being justified in the face of a no-deal, so the ethical argument is basically over. — Baden
We've finally arrived. Your point was that according to you the will of the people was to leave. So it should be the will of the people to shoot the mum but we know that's ridiculous. QED. — Benkei
But it would be anti-democratic, in a sense, for any democracy worth its salt to permit referenda to be rerun after only two years, as that would be an example of self-inflicted harm to that democracy, given all of the problems that it would cause. It wouldn't be sustainable. It would be shooting itself in the foot. — S
So again, having given up the principled arguments for the pragmatics of the likely situation, why do you keep repeating this stuff? — Baden
Yet you did. Then made a half-hearted attempt to unabandon it. Your position, whatever it is, is now utterly incoherent. — Baden
...It would seem like it might be a good idea to ask the electorate if they want to maybe stay and avoid the many downsides of just leaving without terms established. [i.e. a good idea to have a new referendum] — Bitter Crank
I agree with all of that, but I don't think that now would be the best time. I think that we should give it a bit more time to see whether the pressure of having May's draft withdrawal agreement in its current form voted down will change anything, which I accept seems unlikely, but not impossible. — S
But it would be anti-democratic, in a sense, for any democracy worth its salt to permit referenda to be rerun after only two years [What you will most likely support], as that would be an example of self-inflicted harm to that democracy, given all of the problems that it would cause. It wouldn't be sustainable. It would be shooting itself in the foot.* — S
No, they aren't. It seems you are happy to tolerate lies, but I'm not. Not lies that have been properly investigated, and court sentences handed out. — Pattern-chaser
Let's put it another way S, when you (most likely) support the new referendum, will you be supporting something anti-democratic or not? — Baden
Well, you can hardly blame others for supporting it either as long as it's not their ideal course of action (it's not mine, for example). In which case, I don't know what the criticism was. — Baden
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