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  • You're happy living in the EU?

    Ok.
    Yes. I'd rather live here than in Africa for instance. The question means different things depending upon how you interpret it.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Where is the 'yes, but I'd be happier outside' option?
    Aren’t the last four words of the question redundant for anybody living in an EU country?
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    HYUFD said:

    Clearly not given NI has twice given the unionist DUP most votes and seats in 2 post Brexit elections on a firm commitment to maintain the 'N' part and May is now reliant on that same DUP to stay in power.
    Depends on how annoyed Tmay makes the NI electorate, making a hard border or more likely, attempting to make one, either between the North and South, or along the Irish Sea will not be making anyone happy. While the DUP maintaining the Tories in power could backfire spectacularly (just ask any LibDem).
  • Where is the 'yes, but I'd be happier outside' option?
    Dunno.
    Perhaps they looked at Brexiteer Brits and assumed that their easygoing, placid contentment applies in every political outcome, so a differentiated question wasn't required.
  • not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,449
    Mortimer said:

    Good snippet in the Irish press from Matt's review: Conservative minister warning Irish politicians that if they push it the pressure on Mrs May to walk away will be huge.

    The EU have forgotten that we don't have a history of succumbing to pressure from a foreign power.

    Lol, walking away is not an option and everyone (including the EU) knows it
  • IanB2 said:

    Scotland?
    The Ruth Davidson party won there obviously.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    edited November 2017
    OchEye said:

    Depends on how annoyed Tmay makes the NI electorate, making a hard border or more likely, attempting to make one, either between the North and South, or along the Irish Sea will not be making anyone happy. While the DUP maintaining the Tories in power could backfire spectacularly (just ask any LibDem).
    If the outcome is a hard border in Ireland then a vote for a United Ireland would be a vote for a hard border with the U.K. Might also want to consider the economic effect for The North of moving the political power from Belfast to Dublin. Would surely suck business and jobs southwards
  • Yes. I'd rather live here than in Africa for instance. The question means different things depending upon how you interpret it.
    Brexiteer has painful accident as he transfers his dancing from the head to the point of a pin.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,431
    edited November 2017

    Completely OT.

    Today is the 75th anniversary of the first public screening of what is, for me, the greatest film ever made.

    Happy Birthday Casablanca.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEWaqUVac3M

    Casablanca a great parable for Brexit. I wonder how Rick 'citizen of the world' would have got on with our 'little Enganders'
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Varadkar is hoping that Brussels will bung Ireland some more money.
    Why do you suspect that?

    If there is one thing that we learn from Brexit, it is that tubthumping, nationalistic flagwaving beats anodyne economic issues.
  • OchEye said:

    Depends on how annoyed Tmay makes the NI electorate, making a hard border or more likely, attempting to make one, either between the North and South, or along the Irish Sea will not be making anyone happy. While the DUP maintaining the Tories in power could backfire spectacularly (just ask any LibDem).
    If the Irish veto progress to trade talks then that is them putting a hard border in place as it is them ensuring we have a hard Brexit. The Democratic Unionist voters won't blame London for Dublin's actions.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    IanB2 said:

    Scotland?
    The Unionist Tories, Labour and LD parties won 63% of Scottish votes. In 2015 the pro EU referendum Tories and UKIP won 50% of UK votes.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078
    HYUFD said:

    No, party manifestos are there for a reason, I would never vote for a party if I fundamentally disagreed with a key term of its manifesto as that is what the party intends to deliver in government. If I disagreed with that term that strongly I would vote for another party that did take a position on the issue in its manifesto I agreed with.
    You are unusual. Most voters never read a manifesto nor know what is in it. Manifestos are used by politicians after the event. "But it was in our manifesto!"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited November 2017
    OchEye said:

    Depends on how annoyed Tmay makes the NI electorate, making a hard border or more likely, attempting to make one, either between the North and South, or along the Irish Sea will not be making anyone happy. While the DUP maintaining the Tories in power could backfire spectacularly (just ask any LibDem).
    The DUP is a Unionist party backing the Conservative and Unionist Party, that is rather different from a Liberal Party backing a Conservative Party as was the case in 2010.

    The DUP won most votes and seats in NI on a platform of backing the May government's position on Brexit.
  • Brexiteer has painful accident as he transfers his dancing from the head to the point of a pin.
    If you asked Scots "are you happy living in the UK" then I'd expect similar results. The question doesn't ask what you and the EU imply it does.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    I find the results of this polling baffling, frankly.

    https://twitter.com/EU_Commission/status/934757414611685381

    It is a bit odd, but does seem to be ordered by degree of euroscepticism.

    I think the difference betwwen us and those further right on the scale is that we are net contributors, while they are net recipients.

    That, and also that many people are not that bothered.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited November 2017
    Discussion is as lively as ever and no doubt will continue to be so for quite some time to come.

    I hope that common sense prevails and the EU move on to trade in December

    Anything else could open a pandora's box of trouble for the EU and the UK

    However, I hope everyone continues their arguments, sometimes heated (even very heated) but do so constructively, not destructively.

    I am signing off shortly for 48 hours or so for my operation tomorrow but will be back to continue reading and occasionally contributing to the politics and economics in these unprecedented times
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    Barnesian said:

    You are unusual. Most voters never read a manifesto nor know what is in it. Manifestos are used by politicians after the event. "But it was in our manifesto!"
    As politicians are entitled to do, if you sign a contract you read the small print first, same as when you vote for a party you read the small print of their manifesto first if you are vociferously concerned by one issue to check that party shares your position on it.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited November 2017
    HYUFD said:

    The Unionist Tories, Labour and LD parties won 63% of Scottish votes. In 2015 the pro EU referendum Tories and UKIP won 50% of UK votes.
    You did say majority of SEATS., but find it convenient to switch between seats and votes.
  • I don't think its a coincidence that the district which has the highest proportion of Eastern European immigrants also had the highest Leave vote.
    So why don't you think we see the same pattern in other districts?
    http://theconversation.com/hard-evidence-how-areas-with-low-immigration-voted-mainly-for-brexit-62138
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078
    OchEye said:

    Depends on how annoyed Tmay makes the NI electorate, making a hard border or more likely, attempting to make one, either between the North and South, or along the Irish Sea will not be making anyone happy. While the DUP maintaining the Tories in power could backfire spectacularly (just ask any LibDem).
    What is the DUP position on UK remaining in the customs union? I know they are supporting the Government line on that but is it enthusiastically or reluctantly? It could be a breaking point.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    So why don't you think we see the same pattern in other districts?
    http://theconversation.com/hard-evidence-how-areas-with-low-immigration-voted-mainly-for-brexit-62138
    Indeed, the areas with declining populations, such as Copeland, were for Leave.

  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078
    HYUFD said:

    As politicians are entitled to do, if you sign a contract you read the small print first, same as when you vote for a party you read the small print of their manifesto first if you are vociferously concerned by one issue to check that party shares your position on it.
    You must be a politician (or a double glazing salesman). "Didn't you read the small print".
  • RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223

    Discussion is as lively as ever and no doubt will continue to be so for quite some time to come.

    I hope that common sense prevails and the EU move on to trade in December

    Anything else could open a pandora's box of trouble for the EU and the UK

    However, I hope everyone continues their arguments, sometimes heated (even very heated) but do so constructively, not destructively.

    I am signing off shortly for 48 hours or so for my operation tomorrow but will be back to continue reading and occasionally contributing to the politics and economics in these unprecedented times

    All the best Big G! Look forward to your return :smile:
  • Why do you suspect that?

    If there is one thing that we learn from Brexit, it is that tubthumping, nationalistic flagwaving beats anodyne economic issues.
    Ireland has been getting payoffs throughout its EU membership.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Roger said:

    Casablanca a great parable for Brexit. I wonder how Rick 'citizen of the world' would have got on with our 'little Enganders'
    In that the good guys escape with enormous difficulty from the clutches of a malign European Franco-German alliance by fleeing to their true friends in America and Africa, respectively. A parable indeed.
  • Ishmael_Z said:

    In that the good guys escape with enormous difficulty from the clutches of a malign European Franco-German alliance by fleeing to their true friends in America and Africa, respectively. A parable indeed.
    LOL. Exactly. I do love it when Roger tries to be clever and gets shot down.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,306
    edited November 2017

    If you asked Scots "are you happy living in the UK" then I'd expect similar results. The question doesn't ask what you and the EU imply it does.
    I'm not implying it means anything, hence my use of the word baffling.

    Still, interesting to discover that a referendum that we were told was the most important democratic decision any of us would make in our lifetimes, that would shape the very foundations of this country's future, that caused the murder of an mp, that caused a rise in racist hate crime (in England), that encouraged national newspapers to call people traitors and saboteurs, that has caused so much division that another referendum cannot be considered, was just about folk feeling a bit more happy than they already feel.

    Not getting an increased happiness vibe tbh.
  • RoyalBlue said:

    All the best Big G! Look forward to your return :smile:
    Thank you RoyalBlue - need to get back soon as I hope to do my 10,000 post before Nick (Palmer)
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    Barnesian said:



    You must be a politician (or a double glazing salesman). "Didn't you read the small print".

    I'm enjoying the cognitive dissonance:
    - When there is a specific vote on a single issue, democracy means going into the potential motivations of various groups of voters and arguing what they meant.
    - When there is a general vote on a manifesto with hundreds of issues inside (under a system where it's not even questioned that voting has dozens of even non-manifesto issues, such as tribalism, exclusion of the leading other choice and so on, as shown by polling), democracy means taking that vote as completely supportive of whatever single element in there the arguer decides to select.

    :)
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,096
    HYUFD said:

    The Unionist Tories, Labour and LD parties won 63% of Scottish votes. In 2015 the pro EU referendum Tories and UKIP won 50% of UK votes.
    If you review your earlier post, you will see that you said "seats", not "votes".

    Your conversion to the cause of fair votes is nevertheless welcome.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,451
    edited November 2017
    Dawn Butler, who says Theresa May “might be female but she is no friend of women”, and that the Tories have done nothing for women.

    If you want to look at what is wrong with our political system, dawn butler is a great example. Thick as shit, expense fiddler, and proven liar. Hits the trifecta, yet she is in a prominent position.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078

    I'm enjoying the cognitive dissonance:
    - When there is a specific vote on a single issue, democracy means going into the potential motivations of various groups of voters and arguing what they meant.
    - When there is a general vote on a manifesto with hundreds of issues inside (under a system where it's not even questioned that voting has dozens of even non-manifesto issues, such as tribalism, exclusion of the leading other choice and so on, as shown by polling), democracy means taking that vote as completely supportive of whatever single element in there the arguer decides to select.

    :)
    :):):)
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    But - the EEA isn't subject to the ECJ. I don't see how that's an issue?
    FoM - we could easily apply significantly more restrictions than we already do. If FoM was a key element of the answer, then we asked the wrong question in the first place. Notwithstanding the provisions of Articles 112-113 of the EEA Agreement, anyway.
    My understanding was that EEA members had the choice whether or not to implement EU regulations but if they did the regulations were subject to the ECH. The EFTA agreement itself is subject to the EFTA court
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    FF43 said:

    Fine, so let's go for that. The UK has the transition period to come up with a set of concrete and detailed proposals to ensure all goods crossing the unmanned border are EU compliant. Those proposals can be tested and if sufficiently robust, the deal goes ahead.
    Which is what you figure out in detailed discussions around a trade deal and in transition
  • I'm not implying it means anything, hence my use of the word baffling.

    Still, interesting to discover that a referendum that we were told was the most important democratic decision any of us would make in our lifetimes, that would shape the very foundations of this country's future, that caused the murder of an mp, that caused a rise in racist hate crime (in England), that encouraged national newspapers to call people traitors and saboteurs, that has caused so much division that another referendum cannot be considered, was just about folk feeling a bit more happy than they already feel.

    Not getting an increased happiness vibe tbh.
    So we are only allowed to vote for change in your eyes if we are downtrodden and miserable? Would you argue the same for Scottish Independence etc?

    Making folk feel a bit more happy than they already feel is precisely what 21st century western politics should be about. There is no reason in western nations that people can't already be happy but there's equally no reason we can't seek to make life even better.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    EEA-EFTA could work, so long as it satisifies the spirit of the Leave vote: https://www.flickr.com/photos/britishbuses/26675536455

    That means, freedom to make trade deals, ending ECJ jurisdiction, extra controls on immigration, and saving budgetary contributions.

    You can obtain small wins on most of those under EEA-EFTA, and absolutely on trade deals.
    Indeed (albeit at least two of the claims on that leaflet are going to be hard-to-impossible to meet - there is no outcome that gives us "£350 million per week back" or "is safer" (this is definitely the safest option)).
    And we could even make it subject to a confirmatory referendum later on, as we did when we joined the Common Market initially, following the precedent of actually trying it out (and bypassing politicians lies on either side).
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,096
    HYUFD said:

    The DUP is a Unionist party backing the Conservative and Unionist Party, that is rather different from a Liberal Party backing a Conservative Party as was the case in 2010.

    The DUP won most votes and seats in NI on a platform of backing the May government's position on Brexit.
    Now it's votes AND seats? Talk about moving goalposts....

    At least you are making the case for a voting system that actually has a post.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    HYUFD said:

    The DUP is a Unionist party backing the Conservative and Unionist Party, that is rather different from a Liberal Party backing a Conservative Party as was the case in 2010.

    The DUP won most votes and seats in NI on a platform of backing the May government's position on Brexit.
    Er! Please remind me, how many LibDem MP's were there in 2010 and how many now?
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    HYUFD said:

    Perhaps you should have asked them before 52% of the country voted to leave the EU
    I was asking you.
  • Nat MPs/MSPs really are thick as mince.

    https://twitter.com/EddieBarnes23/status/934775502593839104
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992

    I was asking you.
    I voted Remain
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,451
    edited November 2017

    Nat MPs/MSPs really are thick as mince.

    twitter.com/EddieBarnes23/status/934775502593839104

    Forget all the stuff about the deposit being racist / seixst / disablist , I think all those wishing to stand for public office should have to pass an IQ test. They must also give the correct answer to questions on AV, acceptable pizza toppings and merits of Radiohead.

    Oh and any that say iphoneX with iOS11 is great are banned from standing for life!
  • I find the results of this polling baffling, frankly.

    https://twitter.com/EU_Commission/status/934757414611685381

    Let me help you. From 'How the Eurobarometer Blurs the Line between Research and Propaganda', with the questions from this particular survey interposed:

    Respondents have a tendency to answer many questions with “I agree” or “yes,” regardless of the question’s content, a problem referred to as “acquiescence” (Iarossi 2006: 44–45). Therefore, by using only positively or negatively formulated choices, a survey can steer results in a desired direction..
    QC15.4: Please tell me to what extent you agree or disagree with each of the following statements. You are happy living in the EU

    The results of a survey may also be distorted by problematic question order. This occurs when questions posed earlier in an interview “seep” into later questions – particularly in consecutive questions. This phenomenon, which has frequently been demonstrated, is referred to in public opinion research as a contextual, halo, positioning or order effect. Consider the following example (Strack et al. 1988): American students were asked to rate their level of satisfaction in dating situations as well as their general satisfaction in life. The results of the two questions proved to be only very slightly positively correlated. However, if the question about dating was positioned directly before the question on general life satisfaction, the correlation became stronger (ibid.: 435). Thus, the activation of the previously requested information “seeped” into the response to the following question. In order to minimize contextual effects, pretests are necessary to ensure that questions are presented in a neutral, non-manipulative order.
    QC15: Please tell me to what extent you agree or disagree with each of the following statements.
    15.1: You are happy with your family life
    15.2: You are happy with your current occupation
    15.3: You are happy living in [our country]
    15.4: You are happy living in the EU
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited November 2017
    IanB2 said:

    If you review your earlier post, you will see that you said "seats", not "votes".

    Your conversion to the cause of fair votes is nevertheless welcome.
    Though of course the SNP won a majority of seats at Holyrood on a manifesto commitment for an independence referendum in 2011 they did not get a majority of seats at Holyrood on a manifesto commitment for an independence referendum in 2016 and it is only at Holyrood the SNP will ever get a majority of seats, they will never get a majority of seats at Westminster.

    (The Scottish Greens in their manifesto did not give a clear commitment to an independence referendum but said a referendum “should be determined by public appetite: Scotland should decide, when Scotland wants to decide. For example, a call for a referendum signed by up to 1m people on the electoral register”.
    “If a new referendum is to happen, it should come about by the will of the people, and not be driven by calculations of party political advantage.")
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited November 2017
    OchEye said:

    Er! Please remind me, how many LibDem MP's were there in 2010 and how many now?
    As I said the LDs were a Liberal Party backing a Conservative Party that is distinct from the Democratic UNIONIST Party backing the Conservative and UNIONIST Party.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    Forget all the stuff about the deposit being racist / seixst / disablist , I think all those wishing to stand for public office should have to pass an IQ test. They must also give the correct answer to questions on AV, acceptable pizza toppings and merits of Radiohead.

    Oh and any that say iphoneX with iOS11 is great are banned from standing for life!
    Don't know about the iphoneX, but the answers to the other three are surely:

    AV: the pinnacle of democratic choice
    Pizza Topping: any fruit you like
    Radiohead: good band, but no Coldplay.

    When do you let me know which safe seat I've been selected for?
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,954

    Let me help you. From 'How the Eurobarometer Blurs the Line between Research and Propaganda', with the questions from this particular survey interposed:

    Respondents have a tendency to answer many questions with “I agree” or “yes,” regardless of the question’s content, a problem referred to as “acquiescence” (Iarossi 2006: 44–45). Therefore, by using only positively or negatively formulated choices, a survey can steer results in a desired direction..
    QC15.4: Please tell me to what extent you agree or disagree with each of the following statements. You are happy living in the EU

    The results of a survey may also be distorted by problematic question order. This occurs when questions posed earlier in an interview “seep” into later questions – particularly in consecutive questions. This phenomenon, which has frequently been demonstrated, is referred to in public opinion research as a contextual, halo, positioning or order effect. Consider the following example (Strack et al. 1988): American students were asked to rate their level of satisfaction in dating situations as well as their general satisfaction in life. The results of the two questions proved to be only very slightly positively correlated. However, if the question about dating was positioned directly before the question on general life satisfaction, the correlation became stronger (ibid.: 435). Thus, the activation of the previously requested information “seeped” into the response to the following question. In order to minimize contextual effects, pretests are necessary to ensure that questions are presented in a neutral, non-manipulative order.
    QC15: Please tell me to what extent you agree or disagree with each of the following statements.
    15.1: You are happy with your family life
    15.2: You are happy with your current occupation
    15.3: You are happy living in [our country]
    15.4: You are happy living in the EU
    Posting this before someone else does...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362

    Thank you RoyalBlue - need to get back soon as I hope to do my 10,000 post before Nick (Palmer)
    All the best Mr G.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,306
    edited November 2017

    So we are only allowed to vote for change in your eyes if we are downtrodden and miserable? Would you argue the same for Scottish Independence etc?

    Making folk feel a bit more happy than they already feel is precisely what 21st century western politics should be about. There is no reason in western nations that people can't already be happy but there's equally no reason we can't seek to make life even better.
    Pretty sure that many totalitarian dictators also had a general intention to make 'the people' happy, as long as those people were of the right class, race, ideological bent etc. The question of how many eggs should be broken to make that omelette of happiness always has to be asked though.

    Would you say the UK is a happier place now than it was 18 months ago? What particular metrics of future happiness will be you be using to prove that your Brexit bridge to Shangri La is more than an illusion?
  • From the FT:

    The previous Taoiseach, the 66-year-old Enda Kenny, was less clever and articulate than his successor, but he was experienced and wily, as well as accommodating, and was given to defusing rather than exacerbating tension. With Anglo-Irish relations better than they had ever been, Brexit came as a shock to the Irish government, but Mr Kenny set out to be constructive by initiating work on electronic border technology that Mr Varadkar then cancelled.
    https://www.ft.com/content/eabdd85c-d12b-11e7-b781-794ce08b24dc
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992

    Discussion is as lively as ever and no doubt will continue to be so for quite some time to come.

    I hope that common sense prevails and the EU move on to trade in December

    Anything else could open a pandora's box of trouble for the EU and the UK

    However, I hope everyone continues their arguments, sometimes heated (even very heated) but do so constructively, not destructively.

    I am signing off shortly for 48 hours or so for my operation tomorrow but will be back to continue reading and occasionally contributing to the politics and economics in these unprecedented times

    Good luck BigG with the operation
  • Pretty sure that many totalitarian dictators also had a general intention to make 'the people' happy, as long as those people were of the right class, race, ideological bent etc. The question of how many eggs should be broken to make that omelette of happiness always has to be asked though.

    Would you say the UK is a happier place now than it was 18 months ago? What particular metrics of future happiness will be you be using to prove that your Brexit bridge to Shangri La is more than an illusion?

    The issue with totalitarian dictators is not their intention to make people happier, it is the fact that they are totalitarian dictators rather than liberal democrats.

    I don't think the UK is either especially happier or sadder than it was 18 months ago. Nor lacking a Tardis or portal to a parallel dimension is there a metric to prove that Brexit was better or worse than the alternative.

    I do however believe that long-term I have faith in the British people to make laws that suit themselves well more than I have faith in Eurozone politicians to set laws that suit Britain.
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362

    Pretty sure that many totalitarian dictators also had a general intention to make 'the people' happy, as long as those people were of the right class, race, ideological bent etc. The question of how many eggs should be broken to make that omelette of happiness always has to be asked though.

    Would you say the UK is a happier place now than it was 18 months ago? What particular metrics of future happiness will be you be using to prove that your Brexit bridge to Shangri La is more than an illusion?
    I'm happy reading the remain post on here this morning and since we voted leave the EU,the desperation is just brilliant in the post/Threads.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,096
    edited November 2017
    HYUFD said:

    Though of course the SNP won a majority of seats at Holyrood on a manifesto commitment for an independence referendum in 2011 they did not get a majority of seats at Holyrood on a manifesto commitment for an independence referendum in 2016 and it is only at Holyrood the SNP will ever get a majority of seats, they will never get a majority of seats at Westminster.

    (The Scottish Greens in their manifesto did not give a clear commitment to an independence referendum but said a referendum “should be determined by public appetite: Scotland should decide, when Scotland wants to decide. For example, a call for a referendum signed by up to 1m people on the electoral register”.
    “If a new referendum is to happen, it should come about by the will of the people, and not be driven by calculations of party political advantage.")
    Though of course...your earlier post was wrong?

    You are at least helping to illustrate why your local town council was maybe a challenge too far?
  • The issue with totalitarian dictators is not their intention to make people happier, it is the fact that they are totalitarian dictators rather than liberal democrats.

    I don't think the UK is either especially happier or sadder than it was 18 months ago. Nor lacking a Tardis or portal to a parallel dimension is there a metric to prove that Brexit was better or worse than the alternative.

    I do however believe that long-term I have faith in the British people to make laws that suit themselves well more than I have faith in Eurozone politicians to set laws that suit Britain.
    Faith based optimism, the best kind.
  • I see president macron is busy tackling the most pressings issues in France, reform of labour laws, nope, Islamic extemism, nope, wolf whistling, yeah, all over that one, going to criminalise it.
  • Forget all the stuff about the deposit being racist / seixst / disablist , I think all those wishing to stand for public office should have to pass an IQ test. They must also give the correct answer to questions on AV, acceptable pizza toppings and merits of Radiohead.

    Oh and any that say iphoneX with iOS11 is great are banned from standing for life!
    iphoneX: an abomination
    AV: an abomination
    Radiohead: an abomination (there is no merit to radiohead, and coldplay are worse)
    Pizza Topping: no cheese - melted cheese does disastrous things to my guts so I must avoid


  • Would you say the UK is a happier place now than it was 18 months ago?
    We know that.

    Yes.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/26/uk-has-got-happier-since-brexit-vote-does-area-rank/
  • calumcalum Posts: 3,046
    Most recent Catelonian poll points to independence parties losing their majority.

    http://www.larazon.es/binrepository/video_content_7531628_20171126035912.pdf
  • NEW THREAD

  • Speaking of happiness, here's one bunch of lads that are positively ecstatic.

    'I went to the DUP Conference and what I found was disturbingly familiar – this is our new Ukip

    ...So total is the destruction of what passes for British politics at the moment, it is occasionally overlooked that there is one small party that has emerged not merely unscathed but utterly triumphant from its smoking wreckage.

    To arrive at a party conference that is not some dystopian carnival of division, disappointment and resentfulness is decidedly odd these days. The DUP has never quite had it so good.

    It campaigned for Brexit. It got it. And by virtue of some truly unlikely political maths, it holds the balance of power in Westminster and has a highly controversial £1.5bn in its back pocket to show for it'

    https://tinyurl.com/yab74f8g

    Those with a hypersensitivity to metropolitan sneering should read no further.
  • I am with the board on this . The only way forward to solve the Irish question is the EEA option. Given this why dont we just get on with it
  • This Irish border question has been getting worse with the new boy:

    A new cold wind has been blowing from Dublin this week on the vexed issue of the Irish land border. The previous Irish position of preparing for a technological solution to minimise border disruption has been overturned. Enda Kenny, Taoiseach until June, had implicitly accepted that a border would be necessary, and had begun preparations, along with the British, to minimise disruption. Quiet contacts had been taking place between officials north and south of the border. As the new Fine Gael government team led by Leo Varadkar has found its feet all of that has begun to change.

    First the Irish Foreign Minister, Simon Coveney, said that no border is acceptable. Another government spokesman said that no technological solutions could make a border acceptable. Then in Brussels last week, Leo Varadkar said that the border was Britain’s not Ireland’s problem and that Irish work on technological solutions would cease.


    https://policyexchange.org.uk/irish-border-and-brexit/
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    IanB2 said:

    Though of course...your earlier post was wrong?

    You are at least helping to illustrate why your local town council was maybe a challenge too far?
    In the sense that the SNP did not win a majority of votes in 2017 nor did it win the majority of seats it needed in 2016 for an independence referendum no it was not wrong.

    As for my town council challenge I got almost 40% of the vote, am on the candidates list for the District council elections next year and am likely to be elected to the town council in 2019 when all seats are up.
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