0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on September 26, 2019, 04:10:32 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 26, 2019, 03:59:24 pmSo 48% said Red.When asked later, about 30% said blue and 22% said some other colour.So it has to be blue then, yes?Yes. The majority still want out. A mixture of the Government's incompetence and parliament's desire to remain has resulted in the split between the Blues and the other colour, but Red is in the minority and should clearly have been eliminated from the contest.So you KNOW then that of the 52% who said that Red wasn't their favourite colour, none of them would prefer Red to Blue given a binary choice?And how do you know that?
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 26, 2019, 03:59:24 pmSo 48% said Red.When asked later, about 30% said blue and 22% said some other colour.So it has to be blue then, yes?Yes. The majority still want out. A mixture of the Government's incompetence and parliament's desire to remain has resulted in the split between the Blues and the other colour, but Red is in the minority and should clearly have been eliminated from the contest.
So 48% said Red.When asked later, about 30% said blue and 22% said some other colour.So it has to be blue then, yes?
And around we go again.Do you agree that May's deal would have been Brexit? Would we have left the EU under that deal?
And do you agree it was your own team that f#cked you over?
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 26, 2019, 08:14:59 pmAnd around we go again.Do you agree that May's deal would have been Brexit? Would we have left the EU under that deal?Not the way the public voted, no.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on September 26, 2019, 08:19:30 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 26, 2019, 08:14:59 pmAnd around we go again.Do you agree that May's deal would have been Brexit? Would we have left the EU under that deal?Not the way the public voted, no.What do you mean.?Your consistent argument is that the public voted to leave, and if MPs had approved May’s deal, we would have left..How else should we have left to be leaving as the public voted.?Where does it say on that ballot paper you posted earlier that leave refined what deal woulld mean Brexit, and what wouldn’t.?
Quote from: IDM on September 26, 2019, 08:23:17 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on September 26, 2019, 08:19:30 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 26, 2019, 08:14:59 pmAnd around we go again.Do you agree that May's deal would have been Brexit? Would we have left the EU under that deal?Not the way the public voted, no.What do you mean.?Your consistent argument is that the public voted to leave, and if MPs had approved May’s deal, we would have left..How else should we have left to be leaving as the public voted.?Where does it say on that ballot paper you posted earlier that leave refined what deal woulld mean Brexit, and what wouldn’t.?Of course we'd have left if Mays deal had been voted in. The public had no say in the matter of how we would leave by then. The public voted to leave. They didn't vote to leave with a deal.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on September 26, 2019, 04:46:41 pmQuote from: foxbat on September 26, 2019, 04:38:29 pmthe (criminally run ) referendum was only advisoryA once in a generation decisionThe referendum on Thursday, 23rd June is your chance to decide if we should remain in or leave the European Union.The Government believes it is in the best interests of the UK to remain in the EU.This is the way to protect jobs, provide security, and strengthen the UK’s economy for every family in this country – a clear path into the future, in contrast to the uncertainty of leaving.This is your decision. The Government will implement what you decide.If you’re aged 18 or over by 23rd June and are entitledto vote, this is your chanceto decide.Registration ends on 7th June. Find out how to register at Aboutmyvote.co.ukand register online atGov.uk/register-to-voteIf you would like to knowmore about any of the information in this leaflet,go to: EUReferendum.gov.ukNot what it says on here?The Government making those promises is long gone. Take your complaints to them.
Quote from: foxbat on September 26, 2019, 04:38:29 pmthe (criminally run ) referendum was only advisoryA once in a generation decisionThe referendum on Thursday, 23rd June is your chance to decide if we should remain in or leave the European Union.The Government believes it is in the best interests of the UK to remain in the EU.This is the way to protect jobs, provide security, and strengthen the UK’s economy for every family in this country – a clear path into the future, in contrast to the uncertainty of leaving.This is your decision. The Government will implement what you decide.If you’re aged 18 or over by 23rd June and are entitledto vote, this is your chanceto decide.Registration ends on 7th June. Find out how to register at Aboutmyvote.co.ukand register online atGov.uk/register-to-voteIf you would like to knowmore about any of the information in this leaflet,go to: EUReferendum.gov.ukNot what it says on here?
the (criminally run ) referendum was only advisory
ALThat text shows just how slipshod Cameron was.It's a tenet of our system that no Govt can bind the hands of a future Govt. Once Cameron resigned, that promise was legally worthless.
AL.What you are proposing is EXACTLY what Corbyn is saying he would do if elected.
AL."Looking back we can see what they SHOULD have done but now that has gone. As a leaver I would have been happy to have leave or remain on the ballot paper, and then the choice of a specific pre negotiated deal or a no deal on the second part of the ballot."But no.That's utterly undemocratic for the reasons that I've been explaining to BB.I'll say it again.That approach is IDENTICAL to having a first vote that asks the question:Is your favourite colour Red or Something Else.Something Else wins 52:48. Then you say. Ok, to find out what the real favourite is, let's have a second vote on Blue or Green.That way, if Red has 48% Blue has 30% and Green has 22%, the vote will choose Blue and people will be told Blue is the country's favourite colour.You see how bad that is?The truly fair way to do it is to have a multiple stage vote.Round 1: Red, Blue and Green on the ballot. Everyone votes, Green comes last and is eliminated.Round 2. You vote again on a straight run off between Red and Blue.That's the ONLY fair way to find out what is the overall favourite outcome in a multi-option situation..The utter stupidity of 2016 was to have a single stage vote on a question that didn't have a straight Red/Blue question. It is precisely THAT mistake that has put us in this shocking situation. Because no-one actually knows what outcome would be acceptable to a majority of the population. All we know is that a large minority wants Remain, a smaller minority wants No Deal and a smaller still minority wants Leave with a deal.