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Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:34:09 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:25:25 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:19:54 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:12:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:08:16 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?I understood that I voted to leave the European union. No deals, none of the different models offered in BSTs post. Any of those would be a bonus granted. No preconceived ideas on anything, just to leave. If you want to twist that to fit into your narrative (I'm sure you will as you always do, kind of understand the opinion certain members of the fb group have of you now)I'm just saying that nobody promised you no deals. I'm not twisting that - unless you know of a promise of no deal that WAS made by somebody at the time of the referendum that I don't know about? And as I asked earlier, wouldn't therefore no deal be a betrayal of what was actually promised to the voters?Since a campaign group has no grounds to make promises as it has no legislative power, noSo we shouldn't have believed anything Vote Leave said? The Leave campaign was pretty much all promises.Man you like to twist don't you. I assume that because you agreed with remain everything they said or did is beyond reproach? As for leave, not my place to say is it?
Quote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:25:25 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:19:54 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:12:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:08:16 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?I understood that I voted to leave the European union. No deals, none of the different models offered in BSTs post. Any of those would be a bonus granted. No preconceived ideas on anything, just to leave. If you want to twist that to fit into your narrative (I'm sure you will as you always do, kind of understand the opinion certain members of the fb group have of you now)I'm just saying that nobody promised you no deals. I'm not twisting that - unless you know of a promise of no deal that WAS made by somebody at the time of the referendum that I don't know about? And as I asked earlier, wouldn't therefore no deal be a betrayal of what was actually promised to the voters?Since a campaign group has no grounds to make promises as it has no legislative power, noSo we shouldn't have believed anything Vote Leave said? The Leave campaign was pretty much all promises.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:19:54 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:12:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:08:16 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?I understood that I voted to leave the European union. No deals, none of the different models offered in BSTs post. Any of those would be a bonus granted. No preconceived ideas on anything, just to leave. If you want to twist that to fit into your narrative (I'm sure you will as you always do, kind of understand the opinion certain members of the fb group have of you now)I'm just saying that nobody promised you no deals. I'm not twisting that - unless you know of a promise of no deal that WAS made by somebody at the time of the referendum that I don't know about? And as I asked earlier, wouldn't therefore no deal be a betrayal of what was actually promised to the voters?Since a campaign group has no grounds to make promises as it has no legislative power, no
Quote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:12:58 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:08:16 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?I understood that I voted to leave the European union. No deals, none of the different models offered in BSTs post. Any of those would be a bonus granted. No preconceived ideas on anything, just to leave. If you want to twist that to fit into your narrative (I'm sure you will as you always do, kind of understand the opinion certain members of the fb group have of you now)I'm just saying that nobody promised you no deals. I'm not twisting that - unless you know of a promise of no deal that WAS made by somebody at the time of the referendum that I don't know about? And as I asked earlier, wouldn't therefore no deal be a betrayal of what was actually promised to the voters?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 07:08:16 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?I understood that I voted to leave the European union. No deals, none of the different models offered in BSTs post. Any of those would be a bonus granted. No preconceived ideas on anything, just to leave. If you want to twist that to fit into your narrative (I'm sure you will as you always do, kind of understand the opinion certain members of the fb group have of you now)
Quote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 07:00:57 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was. If you then proceeded to make up your own version of what you though you were getting, wouldn't that be even more fool you?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:55:50 pmQuote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?If you were weak minded and daft enough to believe promises made by campaign groups with no official political power then more fool you. The ballot paper was simple enough to explain what the choice was.
Quote from: Ldr on January 17, 2019, 06:50:50 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though I can only quote what the official Leave campaign were saying themselves. Not even they were promising No Deal. So for people to say that's what they understood it to mean at the time of voting...where did that idea come from? Was no official campaign to be believed and people were just supposed to make up their own versions?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on January 17, 2019, 06:38:32 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.I understood, as anyone should, that both leave and remain campaign groups had no authority to make promises and for you to paint such in the same way as a manifesto is disingenuous. I expect that from you though
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on January 17, 2019, 06:06:16 pmBST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.You should have read Vote Leave's promises. Then you'd have known better.
BST, as I saw it it was a vote to leave with no deal. I didn't think we'd have to 'deal', other than to tie up loose ends, such as settlement figures etc. I expected these to be carried out after Brexit, not delaying it.
BST.I'll say again. The Leave vote was to leave! Leavers were voting to leave. The definition of leave is depart from, go away from, go from, withdraw from, retire from, take oneself off from, exit from, take one's leave of, pull out of, quit, be gone from, decamp from, disappear from, abandon, vacate, absent oneself from, evacuate. That is the definition (I believe) the Leavers based their decision to leave.
You seem to me to overemphasize the impact the leave campaign had on the Leavers. In my opinion, the vast majority of people had made their mind up to leave not because of Turkey joining and an NHS bus advert being displayed, but largely because of immigration control and sovereignty. I don't see what will have convinced those people to have changed their minds now, and perhaps their number may even have increased, not least because of the attitude of many of the Remainers.This can be confirmed by the apparent increased support to leave now.
So BB. That poll in the week of the vote that showed that 48% of voters thought the £350m/week claim was correct?You portray the poll as though 48% of leavers voted because of the bus slogan! I'm surprised you think the thick, stupid, misinformed, selfish Leavers would have the integrity to care about the future of the NHS. And...why would Putin pour money into paying for Leave's social media campaign of lies if it was pointless? Why would Dominic Cummings stick £3m to Cambridge Analytica to identify people who were vulnerable to having lies pumped into their Facebook feed?You reckon they were all wasting their time and everyone had made up their minds?