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I see this is going down the obfuscation rabbit hole so I'll spell it out really simply. In your little story, if you had the capability of walking away, when you walk away you have a car and no pound.Which is PRECISELY what you had before the discussion started.Right?
I went into a car showroom this morning. I wanted to see what I'd get if I traded in my car. The salesman said, "I hope you're not just going to walk away if you don't like my offer." I promised him I wouldn't do that, and said I wasn't leaving until we struck a deal. The bas**rd then laughed and became all cocky and offered me a quid! He said, "take it or leave it. Oh you can't leave it, can you? You promised! You have to take it, here's your quid. Now f**k off!"
If you’re looking for a brexit analogy, I think Kobe is simpler..Over time I and my family get pissed off with my job and the effect on my family life..Now, it is possible for me to quit and go freelance, on commission but delivering to my current employers. I talk with my family and we decide this is the best idea.I go to my employer and we agree terms for working freelance - commissions and a retainer, and limitations on working for their competitors. We agree in principle that once the exact terms are ironed out, I can leave at the end of the year.But my family thinks I should get better terms, or even stick two fingers up at my employer and walk away with nothing, as there are always “plenty of other jobs”..My employer says take as much time as I like, and stay on my regular terms.Do I risk having no job, or do I renegotiate terms for going freelance..? If there isn’t a resolution, do I forget it and stay put.?If that was ever to be the case, it’s a no brainer..
They did not vote for a deal, they voted to leave.
Because parliament didn't want to honour a democratic vote?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on September 26, 2019, 02:54:48 pmThey did not vote for a deal, they voted to leave.They did, vicariously..It’s like if you vote Tory in the next GE because you want Johnson to be the PM, then you are voting for what they say in the manifesto..There’s no point in repeating the same argument when you’re being contrary for the sake of it..
People of the United Kingdom did not vote to say they wanted a deal with the EU — they voted to leave.