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  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    edited June 2016


    IF that happens (still uncertain), why should anyone on the Leave side accept the result?

    What reason could we have for not accepting it?! Not liking the potential reason people may have used to sway their vote? I don't care about immigration but plan to vote Leave, should I not accept a Leave win because I don't agree with people using immigration as a basis to vote Leave?

    Reasons for people voting were discussed earlier, and it bears repeating - people vote for stupid reasons sometimes, or based on misconceptions, faulty assumptions and ignorance. Their votes still count.

    I'm not convinced by this poll either, it's not that massive a swing, and I expect Leave to win, if more narrowly than before, but if people vote Remain, it doesn't matter what decided it for them.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Is Juncker still coming over to dispense his wisdom?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    tyson said:

    Tic tac.....the greatest episode of TV ever.

    What a way to.......??? Just showing I'm a Sopranobeliever

    I still think Breaking Bad was slightly better than The Sopranos, but loved both shows
  • KentRisingKentRising Posts: 2,917

    Margaret Thatcher realised they didn't help, so she abolished or merged many of them and put comprehensives in their place.
    Which is why so many people move to Kent and Bucks and over counties that still have the grammar system in order to have the opportunity for their kids to go to grammars. Grammars - loved by parents, hated by the ideologues, including the elite who send their own kids to private schools.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243

    Which is why so many people move to Kent and Bucks and over counties that still have the grammar system in order to have the opportunity for their kids to go to grammars. Grammars - loved by parents, hated by the ideologues, including the elite who send their own kids to private schools.
    Yep. Same for Lincolnshire.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    TOPPING said:

    Still not sure what that means

    Europe trading = approx EUR70bn/day.
    Margins are a fraction of a penny in some cases (surprised the euro denominated cash equity trading volumes numbers are that high but thats not a number I track)

    given the high fixed cost of a cash equity desk and the trend towards electronic trading it's brutally competitive and chronically unprofitable unless you are really big in a specific product.
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024
    SeanT said:

    My mum's not going to do a Google search. I'm not agreeing with some peoples perception, just reporting on it.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831
    edited June 2016

    I'm still sticking with my prediction of Remain to win by 12%-15%

    A decisive win for REMAIN would be better than a small one.

    Would seal our fate forever in the Superstate and we could all begin the process of coming to terms with it (rather than trying to resist the inevitable)
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    Andrew Lilico might be rivalling Louise Mensch for the twitter idiocy/offensive crown.
  • BenedictWhiteBenedictWhite Posts: 1,944

    Margaret Thatcher realised they didn't help, so she abolished or merged many of them and put comprehensives in their place.
    Except that it appears that we have a lot less grammar educated top politicians and more privately educated ones now.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. Eagles, I've never seen any of either Breaking Bad or The Sopranos.

    I'm still waiting for a drama to be made about the Macedonian dynasty of the Eastern Roman Empire.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    I still think Breaking Bad was slightly better than The Sopranos, but loved both shows
    Both great, really great, but still overrated, in my view. But then I like things with more of a fantasy/sci-fi bent - you can do everything other excellent shows do, but also include cool fantastical things.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited June 2016
    Stick to your guns, Nunu.
  • Sunday Torygraph declares for Leave (because readers).
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    I'm still sticking with my prediction of Remain to win by 12%-15%

    What odds?
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454

    I'd still be careful reading into one poll. Not sure the swing is that significant - I still fully expect a remain win but It will be close
    If and its avery big if that this tragedy has had any effect on this poll then its effect will have worn off by Thursday
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    I'm still sticking with my prediction of Remain to win by 12%-15%

    Until the 10pm YG
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    What the referendum has shown, like the IndyRef before it, is that referendums are a really bad idea.

    The poison that has been introduced will not quickly disperse.

    We live in a representative democracy. If there is unease about the result, either way, at the next GE parties are free to stand on a platform of leaving if we have not.

    if there is still a functional Tory party it should not stand on a platform of another referendum

    If that means a UKIP majority, so be it.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    alex. said:

    "I was absolutely flabbergasted by the level of contempt she had for a victim of a horrible tragedy."

    Perhaps you should have been more careful in your posting if you didn't mean it...
    I believe he's saying the fact that she was murdered does not redeem her in his mother's eyes - and that he found that surprising
  • MP_SEMP_SE Posts: 3,642
    Ko Barclay has given around £500,000 to UKIP. I would have been very surprised if they came out for anything other than Leave.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,525

    Margaret Thatcher realised they didn't help, so she abolished or merged many of them and put comprehensives in their place.
    Margaret Thatcher in 1977:
    "People from my sort of background needed Grammar schools to compete with children from privileged homes like Shirley Williams and Anthony Wedgwood Benn."
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    I'm still sticking with my prediction of Remain to win by 12%-15%

    While not my preferred outcome, if it is Remain I hope it is that strong - that way no one can complain about the result (credibly) and the only people still in a war will be Tories.
    Stunning.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    One more thing (!!) - can some Leavers at least understand why the stuff downthread about a deregulated, offshore City frightens the life out of some of us Remainers?

    Why do you think the official campaign and its funders are keeping quiet about it?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    The crucial Colonel Mustard Sunday Telegraph reader still deciding whether he loathes or just hates the EU!
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. Gin, Rome's everlasting success was once deemed inevitable.

    The EU's going to fall. It's a question of when. The longer it is, the more things will have integrated, and the worse the impact will be. Right now, it'd lead to economic problems and perhaps civil strife.

    In a decade or two, we could be looking at small scale military action.

    A decade or two after that...

    A vote to Remain for fear of the probable short term pain is a vote to embrace the agony of later years. I suspect it'll happen in my lifetime.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569

    Until the 10pm YG
    BMG the gold standard
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349

    As I forecast, the slender Leave lead has gone. And Leave needed a big lead going into Thursday. It's over, I can see a convincing Remain victory which will get Can and co off scott-free and it'll be business as usual going forward. Thanks to the nut with his homemade gun.

    One thing I'm certain of is that if Remain win, which looks likely, it will not be business as usual. The rift has opened, much like in Scotland with independence, and our EU membership will be a bigger issue in future than it has been in the past. Cameron has not achieved any meaningful reform, his party is split in two, about half the public want out, many troubling EU issues will be back on the table after the referendum, and many within the EU will interpret a Remain vote as a vote for more Europe.

    I think our leaving the EU is more a matter of when now than if.

  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831
    Scott_P said:

    What the referendum has shown, like the IndyRef before it, is that referendums are a really bad idea.

    The poison that has been introduced will not quickly disperse.

    We live in a representative democracy. If there is unease about the result, either way, at the next GE parties are free to stand on a platform of leaving if we have not.

    if there is still a functional Tory party it should not stand on a platform of another referendum

    If that means a UKIP majority, so be it.

    Aren't we supposed to have a referendum anytime there is a new transfer of power to the EU?

    Don't see that policy lasting much longer than 24th June do you? ;)
  • tysontyson Posts: 6,121
    SeanT said:

    A fair point. I had just watched the tv coverage of Jo cox's sister making that fine speech, so maybe I was being oversensitive. Unusual for me.

    Also as I'm in Italy I'm not getting the apparently annoying 24/7 Diana stuff, at all.

    It's all very sad. Whatever one's opinions. Whoever wins now, their victory will be tainted. And undermined my suspicion. And so this issue won't go away, AT ALL


    Don't back track on this one seanT. Lowlander's comments were utterly vile, and something that should not have been aired. Not because I don't believe own free speech, but because it is just upsetting for someone to say that they could hold Jo Cox in contempt after she has been brutally killed.

    The fact that it drew some of the usual characters out of the ether- Plato, MikeM, etc.... just made it worse.
  • PaulyPauly Posts: 897
    Scott_P said:

    What the referendum has shown, like the IndyRef before it, is that referendums are a really bad idea.

    The poison that has been introduced will not quickly disperse.

    We live in a representative democracy. If there is unease about the result, either way, at the next GE parties are free to stand on a platform of leaving if we have not.

    if there is still a functional Tory party it should not stand on a platform of another referendum

    If that means a UKIP majority, so be it.

    Democracy is a bad idea? We can have BOTH direct and representative democracy. Very many of the arguments against one form often apply to the other.
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    SeanT said:

    A fair point. I had just watched the tv coverage of Jo cox's sister making that fine speech, so maybe I was being oversensitive. Unusual for me.

    Also as I'm in Italy I'm not getting the apparently annoying 24/7 Diana stuff, at all.

    It's all very sad. Whatever one's opinions. Whoever wins now, their victory will be tainted. And undermined my suspicion. And so this issue won't go away, AT ALL


    Correct.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,525
    The Sunil on Sunday comes out for LEAVE:

    Oh, I already have, haven't I? :lol:
  • BenedictWhiteBenedictWhite Posts: 1,944

    One more thing (!!) - can some Leavers at least understand why the stuff downthread about a deregulated, offshore City frightens the life out of some of us Remainers?

    Why do you think being regulated closer to the coal face is worse than being regulated from farther away?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    chestnut said:

    What odds?
    TSE's prediction corresponds to the 55% to 60% Remain band on Betfair. Avaliable to back at 4.3 or Lay at 4.5

    Sounds a bit low to me.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited June 2016
    GIN1138 said:

    A decisive win for REMAIN would be better than a small one.

    Would seal our fate forever in the Superstate and we could all begin the process of coming to terms with it (rather than trying to resist the inevitable)
    Unless we join the eurozone we will never be in the Superstate and the only chance of that is a big Remain win, even on tonight's poll probably gone now as a possibility
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    edited June 2016
    nunu said:

    My mum's not going to do a Google search. I'm not agreeing with some peoples perception, just reporting on it.
    I must have misread your earlier post stating

    "your mum's views are similar to mine"...

  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569

    Margaret Thatcher in 1977:
    "People from my sort of background needed Grammar schools to compete with children from privileged homes like Shirley Williams and Anthony Wedgwood Benn."
    Like on the EU, Thatcher said one thing, and did another

    Margaret Thatcher holds the prize as the secretary of state who closed or merged the most grammar schools for a comprehensive alternative.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/education-the-end-of-the-grammar-school-1179844.html
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. kle4, dragons pave the way to victory.

    As do frisky elves.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Adventures-Edric-Hero-Hornska-Book-ebook/dp/B01DOSP9ZK
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    Margaret Thatcher realised they didn't help, so she abolished or merged many of them and put comprehensives in their place.

    The single best thing that ever happened to me - apart from being born to my extraordinary parents - was to go to the last ILEA grammar school. There were expectations. You were expected to go to university. I was exceptionally lucky.

  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    GIN1138 said:

    Aren't we supposed to have a referendum anytime there is a new transfer of power to the EU?

    Don't see that policy lasting much longer than 24th June do you? ;)

    I expect it to last until it is repealed...
  • weejonnieweejonnie Posts: 3,820
    Just remember the Survation poll was run at peak emotion after the murder (as well as peak 'Britain First' outburst - but see how Mair pled) - we have 5 days for things to settle down.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    edited June 2016

    TSE's prediction corresponds to the 55% to 60% Remain band on Betfair. Avaliable to back at 4.3 or Lay at 4.5

    Sounds a bit low to me.
    It's not a 7-2 shot. Certainly longer.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    Betfair, Leave at 3 again
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Pauly said:

    Democracy is a bad idea? We can have BOTH direct and representative democracy. Very many of the arguments against one form often apply to the other.

    We can have direct democracy. Our experience of it is division, hatred and violence, with no resolution of the question.

    I will be happy with less of that.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    Which is why so many people move to Kent and Bucks and over counties that still have the grammar system in order to have the opportunity for their kids to go to grammars. Grammars - loved by parents, hated by the ideologues, including the elite who send their own kids to private schools.
    TSE was educated privately I believe, the privately educated are often amongst the most staunch supporters of comprehensive as it reduces the competition
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Scott_P said:

    What the referendum has shown, like the IndyRef before it, is that referendums are a really bad idea.

    The poison that has been introduced will not quickly disperse.

    We live in a representative democracy. If there is unease about the result, either way, at the next GE parties are free to stand on a platform of leaving if we have not.

    if there is still a functional Tory party it should not stand on a platform of another referendum

    If that means a UKIP majority, so be it.

    I think the mistake was not having referenda in getting to where we are now. But I agree that politicians shouldn't offer them when they are not comfortable with one side winning. Cameron only promised this because he wanted to shoot the Ukip fox. As it turned out, he probably didn't need to do it.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223

    What was his take on Glesga? Think I missed it.
    It was actually Edinburgh, I think.
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024
    alex. said:

    I meant my mum's whoops
  • tysontyson Posts: 6,121
    PlatoSaid said:

    Stick to your guns, Nunu.

    Little surprise that you think Oxfam is a waste of space, time and money or worse.

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    The single best thing that ever happened to me - apart from being born to my extraordinary parents - was to go to the last ILEA grammar school. There were expectations. You were expected to go to university. I was exceptionally lucky.

    Yes, without grammar school I'm not sure I'd be doing what I'm doing now. My parents played a big part in it of course, but grammar school made it possible for me to receive an education usually reserved for the middle and upper classes at no cost to my parents who could never have afforded private education for me.
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    LOL@Ronaldo...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569

    The single best thing that ever happened to me - apart from being born to my extraordinary parents - was to go to the last ILEA grammar school. There were expectations. You were expected to go to university. I was exceptionally lucky.

    I've said many times, the reason I've done so well out of life was my parents (and grandparents) made a lot of sacrifices so I could attend a private school.

    It was only later in life I appreciated my luck.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    HYUFD said:

    Unless we join the eurozone we will never be in the Superstate and the only chance of that is a big Remain win, even on tonight's poll probably gone now as a possibility
    So we will continue to sit on the margins with our power and sovereignty seeping away as the Eurozone dominates the EU, subject to all the rules but with no control over them. It is a bleak vision you paint of our future.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,525
    HYUFD said:

    TSE was educated privately I believe, the privately educated are often amongst the most staunch supporters of comprehensive as it reduces the competition
    He will now claim he's "working class Northerner!" :lol:
  • BenedictWhiteBenedictWhite Posts: 1,944
    Scott_P said:

    What the referendum has shown, like the IndyRef before it, is that referendums are a really bad idea.

    The poison that has been introduced will not quickly disperse.

    We live in a representative democracy. If there is unease about the result, either way, at the next GE parties are free to stand on a platform of leaving if we have not.

    if there is still a functional Tory party it should not stand on a platform of another referendum

    If that means a UKIP majority, so be it.

    No, the problem isn't that we have had too many but not enough.

    The tone of the debate is the issue not the debate itself. It has been filled with nasty vile attacks with people calling others nasty things like little Englanders, making offensive signs at people they disagree with (EG Bob Geldoff mocking fishermen).

    If the debate were conducted by 8 year olds rather than 5 year olds the quality would be much better.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    Well Gove's just put enormous hostage to fortune in the event of Brexit

    https://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/744270819384246272
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    Survation is 51-49 Leave pre weighted.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,525
    Ilford still has a Grammar School, BTW. I went there in the late 80s/early 90s.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. Tyndall, quite.

    Power and money will continue to flow to Brussels. People will continue to be angered by rates of immigration and being called xenophobic or racist for wanting fewer to be allowed in.

    Could be a purple patch for UKIP.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    I'm listening to Sam Cooke live at the Harlem Square Club. Side Two is the best 20 minutes of music ever recorded. Look it up.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    Well Gove's just put enormous hostage to fortune in the event of Brexit

    https://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/744270819384246272

    It will come anyway
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited June 2016

    Ah grammar schools! The way for the working classes to better themselves... What ever happened to them?
    Jo Cox went to one in the late eighties and nineties so there are still a few around
  • It was actually Edinburgh, I think.
    Oh, I think I read that. Sorry, its hard to type through the tears of laughter at the utter ineptitude of Cristiano Ronaldo this evening. Pleasing.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. Eagles, no, he hasn't. We won't have another vote if we Leave and then there's a recession.

    It's the opposite (but still wrong) of what the BBC business editor did when he asked Carney if he [Carney] could guarantee we wouldn't have a recession if we voted to Leave.
  • I also hate the fact that Leavers who have waited years for this feel that something utterly wrong and appalling may change the outcome of this referendum. What the hell is happening to our country?

    I agree entirely. This whole thing has made me feel sick. It makes me ashamed to support my own side, and it makes me for the first time look at my country and grimace. For remain to win off the back of a murder is the most horrific end to this whole campaign. As Sean says, it will resolve nothing.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801


    I've said many times, the reason I've done so well out of life was my parents (and grandparents) made a lot of sacrifices so I could attend a private school.

    It was only later in life I appreciated my luck.

    Sacrifices they were able to make, how does that translate to a single earner family with two children on a bookkeepers hourly wage? Grammar school gave me (and my sister) a chance of the education you received that my parents would never have been able to afford whatever sacrifices they made.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    No, the problem isn't that we have had too many but not enough.

    The tone of the debate is the issue not the debate itself. It has been filled with nasty vile attacks with people calling others nasty things like little Englanders, making offensive signs at people they disagree with (EG Bob Geldoff mocking fishermen).

    If the debate were conducted by 8 year olds rather than 5 year olds the quality would be much better.

    On that note...

    http://chokkablog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/06/the-blame-game.html
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    Well Gove's just put enormous hostage to fortune in the event of Brexit

    htps://twitter.com/suttonnick/status/744270819384246272

    He can say it would have happened anyway, due to Osborne or the global situation. Granted, he would have denied that 6 months ago, but our memories are short.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited June 2016
    tyson said:

    Don't back track on this one seanT. Lowlander's comments were utterly vile, and something that should not have been aired. Not because I don't believe own free speech, but because it is just upsetting for someone to say that they could hold Jo Cox in contempt after she has been brutally killed.

    The fact that it drew some of the usual characters out of the ether- Plato, MikeM, etc.... just made it worse.
    I think that there is a legitimate critique of the aid and NGO sector in development, and the seminal work "Lords of Poverty" is a book that should be read by all in the field. There are other more recent works too.

    Nonetheless Jo Cox seems to have worked in Brussels lobbying the EU for more favourable trade arrangements with developing countries, and in New York campaigning for humanitarian aid in warzones to help refugees stay in protected zones locally. Both highly laudable, and indeed advocated by several Leavers on this site in discussions the other day.

    I also note that she voted for Liz Kendall in the leadership election.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. (Miss?) QC, I think laughing at Ronaldo is something around which the site can unite ;)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    Democracy by its very nature lets the voters decide so whatever they conclude goes
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Nothing, since we don't know for sure that is the reason, or it is real, or will be maintained, and the reasons people decide their vote are already petty, so there's no difference.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    SeanT said:

    It's an unanswerable question. The country will not stand for permanent immigration at net 200,000-400,000 a year, or whatever. And if we stay in Europe that kind of migration will continue.

    So the whole debate is going to get MORE poisonous.

    UKIP will prosper. Tories will bicker. Labour could potentially disintegrate.

    Yes. Winning with real EU reform and and solution to the immigration "problem" would be entirely different from winning with none of that.

    Cameron has achieved no meaningful reform of the EU, and has no solution to limiting immigration within the EU. Next Friday all our EU problems will still exist, about half the country are mad as hell about the EU, and I would say that at least half of the Remainers have cold feet about the EU. Does anyone really think these issues will evaporate soon?
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    kle4 said:

    He can say it would have happened anyway, due to Osborne or the global situation. Granted, he would have denied that 6 months ago, but our memories are short.
    I'm guessing that he's referencing the IMF report.
  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071

    I'm listening to Sam Cooke live at the Harlem Square Club. Side Two is the best 20 minutes of music ever recorded. Look it up.

    From 1963? It's awesome. I second the recommendation.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,102
    eek said:

    It will come anyway
    Exactly. What are the chances the economy will go tits up even if we do vote remain. Must be quite likely.
  • CornishBlueCornishBlue Posts: 840
    It says more about the current state of mind in the West rather than the age-old virtues of democracy.

    We are in trouble. And it's not democracy that's the problem.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    MaxPB said:

    Sacrifices they were able to make, how does that translate to a single earner family with two children on a bookkeepers hourly wage? Grammar school gave me (and my sister) a chance of the education you received that my parents would never have been able to afford whatever sacrifices they made.
    Indeed, I want all children to have the opportunities I had, I just wish I knew how.
  • LowlanderLowlander Posts: 941
    tyson said:


    Don't back track on this one seanT. Lowlander's comments were utterly vile, and something that should not have been aired. Not because I don't believe own free speech, but because it is just upsetting for someone to say that they could hold Jo Cox in contempt after she has been brutally killed.

    The fact that it drew some of the usual characters out of the ether- Plato, MikeM, etc.... just made it worse.

    Again, I posted because I had a surprising experience which may reflect wider public opinions and might have an impact on an election which people are trying to predict and who have money staked on the outcome.

    If you don't like the real world, perhaps it would be better not to expose yourself to real world opinions and find a Safe Space to spend your time in where rainbow lollipops drop from the sky and rivers of lemonade can be sailed in chocolate boats.
  • BenedictWhiteBenedictWhite Posts: 1,944

    Like on the EU, Thatcher said one thing, and did another

    Margaret Thatcher holds the prize as the secretary of state who closed or merged the most grammar schools for a comprehensive alternative.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/education-the-end-of-the-grammar-school-1179844.html
    That does not mean she was right to do so. (I am in two minds myself. If I had the money I would start a Grammar and secondary modern. You would not be able to get on unless you could lay bricks, do a foreign language as well as be good at maths and the physical sciences.)
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569
    edited June 2016
    New Poll

    Yougov-ITV have Leave 44:42 up

    Which is Leave's lead slashed by 5%

    Which is Remain +3 Leave -2

    Unsure of the fieldwork dates
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    So we will continue to sit on the margins with our power and sovereignty seeping away as the Eurozone dominates the EU, subject to all the rules but with no control over them. It is a bleak vision you paint of our future.
    It is what I always felt would happen though
  • BenedictWhiteBenedictWhite Posts: 1,944

    The single best thing that ever happened to me - apart from being born to my extraordinary parents - was to go to the last ILEA grammar school. There were expectations. You were expected to go to university. I was exceptionally lucky.

    That is the one thing private schools have over the state system.

    Expectations. It also breeds confidence.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    MaxPB said:

    Sacrifices they were able to make, how does that translate to a single earner family with two children on a bookkeepers hourly wage? Grammar school gave me (and my sister) a chance of the education you received that my parents would never have been able to afford whatever sacrifices they made.
    While I did pretty well out of my bog standard comprehensive.
  • tysontyson Posts: 6,121
    HYUFD said:

    Jo Cox went to one in the late eighties and nineties so there are still a few around
    I went to a grammar school and my six form Latin class mate was Graham Brady- he was a year older than me, but they combined classes since there was only 3 of us...
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855

    Parents HATE grammar schools. That's why there's no rush to bring them back. Think about it. Chloe gets into grammar school. Her parents are ecstatic. Sam, Will and Emma don't. Their parents are not pleased at the rejection and that their children get a second class education. The setup means there are more second class students than first class ones. Which is a problem when those parents vote.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    HYUFD said:

    Democracy by its very nature lets the voters decide so whatever they conclude goes
    I would speculate (always the way to go on this site) that people making their mind up for Remain on the basis of the murder, will be largely using it as a way of a justification of a vote they really wanted to make anyway. If someone really wanted to vote Leave, it isn't difficult to come up with a different rationale, even within the context of the murder.

  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,034


    If Remain wins because of a killer (who either supports Remain or is insane), then it is not democracy.

    You guys have spent the last couple of days telling us it won't shift more than a handful of votes now it going to become excuse to ignore the result if you lose.

  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831
    glw said:

    Yes. Winning with real EU reform and and solution to the immigration "problem" would be entirely different from winning with none of that.

    Cameron has achieved no meaningful reform of the EU, and has no solution to limiting immigration within the EU. Next Friday all our EU problems will still exist, about half the country are mad as hell about the EU, and I would say that at least half of the Remainers have cold feet about the EU. Does anyone really think these issues will evaporate soon?
    Nobody will want to go through the trauma of another referendum though. Most people will want to put this strange summer out of their minds I think.

    Course, there will (hopefully) be a significant shift from the Tories so that Cameron and Osborne are forced out (and UKIP will continue but will evolve as a post independence party) but I don't see another referendum in my lifetime (30-40 years) and that includes when we join the Euro.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    It says more about the current state of mind in the West rather than the age-old virtues of democracy.

    We are in trouble. And it's not democracy that's the problem.
    It's not as, absent the murder, the result was going to be decided on a sober and detailed assessment of the respective merits of the case.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,569

    It's not as, absent the murder, the result was going to be decided on a sober and detailed assessment of the respective merits of the case.
    David, I've replied to your email
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801


    I think that there is a legitimate critique of the aid and NGO sector in development, and the seminal work "Lords of Poverty" is a book that should be read by all in the field. There are other more recent works too.

    Nonetheless Jo Cox seems to have worked in Brussels lobbying the EU for more favourable trade arrangements with developing countries, and in New York campaigning for humanitarian aid in warzones to help refugees stay in protected zones locally. Both highly laudable, and indeed advocated by several Leavers on this site in discussions the other day.

    I also note that she voted for Liz Kendall in the leadership election.

    Absolutely, the ire that seems to be aimed at her is something I don't understand. I don't agree with much of what she stood for, however, it is clear she tried to make a change for the better in a lot of places and for a lot of people that have no advocates at the top. For that she should be lauded. That her murder may lead to a Remain vote is hugely lamentable, but it is no reason to besmirch her legacy. The ire belongs in the direction of the nutter who murdered her and those who seek to politicise and take advantage of her murder.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @tag_freeman: Double-page editorial in tomorrow's Mail on Sunday: "For a safer, freer, more prosperous & even greater Britain, we urge you to vote Remain"
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    GeoffM said:

    From 1963? It's awesome. I second the recommendation.

    That's the one. Bring it on home to me.

  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,453
    Mr. Alex, or ignore the murder. It doesn't alter the UK's position in the world or the relationship we have with the EU, it's simply a tragedy for the family and friends of the victim.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,349

    It says more about the current state of mind in the West rather than the age-old virtues of democracy.

    We are in trouble. And it's not democracy that's the problem.
    Oh yeah we have a lot bigger problems than the EU.
  • Mr. (Miss?) QC, I think laughing at Ronaldo is something around which the site can unite ;)

    If my Twitter feed is anything to go by, this has temporarily healed our divided nation. Every single post reads HAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

    I really hate Cristiano Ronaldo. Come on the Hungarians.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204

    Betfair, Leave at 3 again

    Are you laying it ?
This discussion has been closed.