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We must have our say

(59 Posts)
Whitewavemark2 Thu 18-Jul-19 18:06:46

With the latest figures from the government when Brexit takes place,, we must be allowed our say. None of us knew how much it was going to affect us.

Every fair minded person must recognise this.

GracesGranMK3 Sun 21-Jul-19 20:31:14

So what Jabberwok? Parliament is allowed to change its mind when circumstances change. So many know so much more than they did three years ago. At that time Johnson believed when we had left we could still have a place at the EU table. If that was the knowledge guiding the man who had possibly the greatest sway on the referendum we can, parliament can, change its mind.

Jabberwok Sun 21-Jul-19 18:42:26

By signing up to article.50, 80% of MP's endorsed and put into law our exit from the EU.

lemongrove Sun 21-Jul-19 16:06:22

Yes Urmston I read today that various countries have been putting out feelers ready to talk to Johnson about a deal,
And some have actively been talking to him behind the scenes.
I think we we see a better deal for the UK now ( no deal isn’t what Johnson wants but he is prepared to use it.)
Pity that May didn’t stand down last year.

GracesGranMK3 Sun 21-Jul-19 12:46:16

With one post you say "views are very entrenched now" as if you are making a reasonable point UG and in the next you declare, in the most entrenched (and rudest) of voices "We are leaving. Better get used to it varian".

Leaving with no deal is only wanted by a third of the country and yet, to make his own reputation a cynical Boris may indeed deny parliamentary democracy and decided to crash our economy and burn our democracy. On the other hand he may find it useful to take an extension.

The only thing that anyone knows is that no one can see the future and that those who see this as the greatest event in our country since the war will go on making their arguments on both sides. I do not want to become a dependency of the USA and nor do I want to live in a country ruled by the far right so perhaps UG you "need to accept" that you may not be able to completely change our country by just making one vote which wasn't legally binding.

Jabberwok Sun 21-Jul-19 12:23:16

D.C did not ask the nations advice! He made it quite clear that whatever the nation decided would be adhered to, first past the post! A leaflet was sent to every household, again making it crystal clear that the result of the 'once in a lifetime ' referendum would be respected and upheld! Guess what? 80% of parliament agreed and signed up for article 50!! It was YOU choose, and we will do it!

Urmstongran Sun 21-Jul-19 11:57:20

We are leaving. Better get used to it varian
Either via Boris or Nigel.

5 EU countries are now in talks with Boris. No Deal is focusing minds. It should never have been voted off the table.

Mind you I am beginning to wonder how many Prime Ministers we are going to have to go through before Brexit happens as the remainer MPs are already plotting the downfall of the next PM even before he takes up the position. Let us hope that at the next GE they are all wiped out.

varian Sun 21-Jul-19 11:49:04

According to ug- "Remain voters are ramping up their rhetoric now that we are certain to be Leaving."

Nothing is certain.

Urmstongran Sun 21-Jul-19 11:36:19

Maybe we should all just stop opining about Brexit. Views are entrenched now. The same supporters in each camp posting news or views that back up ‘our’ stance? Is it boring 3 years on or is it grist for the mill?

winterwhite Sun 21-Jul-19 11:19:37

These threads are like an opera with everyone singing their own part of the tune and hoping to sing louder than anyone else.
The referendum was not binding but an expression of public opinion - DC asked for the nation's advice and got a very mixed response.
Had it been intended to be binding it would have specified the percentage needed to secure a decision one way or the other. But it isn't likely that a second referendum now would produce a clearer result because so much anger and frustration has built up which hasn't much to do with the EU at all. The outlook seems very bleak to me.

Urmstongran Sun 21-Jul-19 10:42:40

could go down this route in the past, it is possible that in the right circumstances it could be done again

Could.
Possible.

Remain voters are ramping up their rhetoric now that we are certain to be Leaving.

Stop it. It’s part of the problem, not the solution, to talk this way.

Urmstongran Sun 21-Jul-19 10:39:14

A load of tosh GGMk2 if I may say so.
?
On this matter we shall have to agree to disagree.

lemongrove Sun 21-Jul-19 10:19:56

Whatever.

GracesGranMK3 Sun 21-Jul-19 10:11:29

You are talking like "Boris" lemongrass, and you appear to have picked up his superiority and twisting of the facts. You assume you are right even when it comes to my personally held views and you are suggesting I am saying something I know not to be true. You are, in fact, calling me a liar.

I can see your lack of imagination does not allow you to understand that finding ways to differentiate between groups of people who start with equal citizenship is a slippery slope to the division of those citizens. All citizens are currently equal unless you live abroad. For a leader who had the mind to do it this is a precedent to division. You may not see this but please do not suggest I am lying because I think that, having seen that a country could go down this route in the past, it is possible that in the right circumstances it could be done again and I feel those circumstances gathering over us. It is people who see the world as you do that I fear most.

lemongrove Sun 21-Jul-19 09:40:36

There is a difference between putting all who live in the UK
first and calling British citizens in EU countries ‘second class citizens’. But you already know this.
Your own status, being born abroad to British parents who happened to be living and working abroad doesn’t even come into this, many British people were born abroad but you are still British, as are others.
All this hyperbolic talk of ‘outcasts’ and Nazi Germany should be kicked into touch.

GracesGranMK3 Sat 20-Jul-19 23:03:38

If you are putting one group first, which you agreed with UG you should, you are logically putting another group second lemmongrove. You appeared to be doing just that. I am open to an explanation that shows this is not what Urmston simply says ( quite rightly) that we who live in the UK have to think of ourselves first. means.

lemongrove Sat 20-Jul-19 22:33:36

GGM3
Far from saying anything at all about ‘second class citizens’
( where the ‘ell did that come from?!) I said I hoped that British citizens abroad would continue to have the same rights as the UK is guaranteeing to all EU citizens here.
But of course, when voting had to think of the UK and all who live here first.

GracesGranMK3 Sat 20-Jul-19 22:21:38

Stop trying to be inflammatory GGmk and spouting hyperbolic nonsense by suggesting I would be sending anyone back to anywhere. Urmstongran Sat 20-Jul-19 14:49:40 ...

But as residents of the UK we as taxpayers here have to look to our needs first as we have chosen to live here. Urmstongran Sat 20-Jul-19 14:49:40

Urmston simply says ( quite rightly) that we who live in the UK have to think of ourselves first....first being the operative word. lemongrove Sat 20-Jul-19 19:45:57

During the first 13 years of my life, I lived abroad more than I lived in this country as, obviously, did my parents and you UG and Lemongrove are content to say that made me some sort of second-class citizen for that period. When I came back most of the young people I was at school with had parents working abroad so, according to your views that made their parents second-class citizens too.

I was not born in this country - my parents were working abroad at the time. Your rules would make them second-class citizens at that time. I do wonder how you would classify me - not being actually born here.

I don't think I need to fear you as individuals but straight after UG saying that I am trying to be inflammatory ... and spouting hyperbolic nonsense you both explain the new rules you believe in; the rules that start to separate out the outcasts from the Citizens. Many people agreed with this too the last time it happened - they called it looking after their own or the "New Order" (Neuordnung) thus finding of ways to declassify the citizenship of some groups.

No, I am not afraid or you knocking on my door but I am afraid of others who think like you.

Urmstongran Sat 20-Jul-19 21:14:16

Ooh now let me think about this.

There I was in the polling station on 23 June 2016. I’m wanting to vote to Leave.

Yet you think MaizieD I should stop and think ‘oh heck I ought not to use my one vote for what I want (even though I live in the U.K.) as it might affect all those others who decided to go and live abroad? Oh selfish me. I better not vote Leave. It’d be mean. You know what? I’ll put a cross right here, next to Remain so that all those nice people who chose to live abroad can rest easy’.

Yeah right.

lemongrove Sat 20-Jul-19 19:45:57

Urmston simply says ( quite rightly) that we who live in the UK have to think of ourselves first....first being the operative word.We do hope that British citizens living abroad will be granted the same rights continuing, as we are doing here for EU citizens.

lemongrove Sat 20-Jul-19 19:42:56

No it doesn’t, not at all.

MaizieD Sat 20-Jul-19 18:34:41

But as residents of the UK we as taxpayers here have to look to our needs first as we have chosen to live here

That says volumes about some Leavers' complete indifference to the way their vote has affected other people; people who didn't necessarily ask to be taken out of the EU.

Shameful...

quizqueen Sat 20-Jul-19 16:47:02

We never had a say when we were taken into the EU. Heath took us in without a vote in 1973. Wilson then had a referendum in 1975 and the usual scaremongering happened to make people afraid and the UK voted to stay in. That was before the Common Market morphed into the political entity it is today, rather than just the trading area we joined initially.

Urmstongran Sat 20-Jul-19 14:49:40

Stop trying to be inflammatory GGmk and spouting hyperbolic nonsense by suggesting I would be sending anyone back to anywhere. People who retire abroad have been called ‘ex pats’ for years. They made a choice to live in a different country.

Whilst we are part of the EU reciprocal health arrangements are in place. However once we leave in a few weeks, all bets are off. Sterling has tanked at the moment so it won’t exchange for as many euros. That’s part of the ups and downs in these situations.

People on a state pension are going to be affected. In Australia and Canada (maybe everywhere apart from the EU ? I don’t know) pensions are frozen with no cost of living rises once the recipients have upped sticks.

I agree people who retired out there whilst we were EU members are how concerned how it will affect their circumstances. But as residents of the UK we as taxpayers here have to look to our needs first as we have chosen to live here.

Go abroad permanently by all means but don’t expect situations won’t change over time!

GracesGranMK3 Sat 20-Jul-19 14:36:10

Urnstonegran just how far are you prepared to go in denying people their basic citizenship? "Ex pats", as you do quaintly call them, are British citizens living abroad. Why should they be treated in any way differently to citizens living in the UK.

Perhaps you think we should be "sending back" some of our citizens to somewhere outside the UK too. How do you actually define someone who should be single out for different treatment? And how far would you go when you stop calling them citizens and group them outside the citizenship you enjoy by renaming them.

Urmstongran Fri 19-Jul-19 22:37:17

A general election will, I think, polarise opinion. A big swing to the Lib Dems and a huge surge to the Brexit Party.