With all due respect Zlatan, I think you need to grow up a bit and refrain from adding stupidity to your other shortcomings.If I buy one will fellow bikers harang me whillst outcycling ?? Very odd.
Tom
With all due respect Zlatan, I think you need to grow up a bit and refrain from adding stupidity to your other shortcomings.If I buy one will fellow bikers harang me whillst outcycling ?? Very odd.
Please go and read what the EU does. It does provide money for science and infrastructure in disadvantaged areas of the UK. And that is a bad thing?So, if the EU doesn't have the power to address inequality (which wasn't my main argument) then it could be said to be fundamentally useless? It's a lot of money to pay for something which only compounds a already existing problem i.e. The instability caused by free movement of people to existing cultures already fragmented by technological developments & housing policy. In this context Take back Control makes sense. A recognition that we need to get our own house in order before we can engage fully with the wider world.
You are, 'anotherkiwi', and not for the first time, absolutely spot-on with your comment. If only those who have expressed such reasons for supporting 'Brexit' as being faults to be laid at the door of the EU when it is Westminster that holds responsibility could understand the truth of the matter.The EU has been complicit in nothing because it doesn't have the mandate to bring down crony capitalism. You are governed by your national government, the EU does not govern anyone.
Doesn't have any impact whatsoever on those people already marginalised. The point I'm making is that to effect change maybe the status quo has to be challenged. Democratic voting just seems to result in more of the same. The EU is seen as the embodiment of the status quo. Logical arguments don't work here. To leave the EU was an emotional, not a logical choice. If you go back to my very first posting, you will see that I am saying that logic is hopeless in the face of emotion. Unless the emotional aspects are addressed then logic just winds people up. Maybe this why this forum is not getting any logical reasons for Brexit. It is just the wrong question to ask.Please go and read what the EU does. It does provide money for science and infrastructure in disadvantaged areas of the UK. And that is a bad thing?
The problem is unfortunately yours, why not admit it, and things were not improved on here by your attitude, or the remarks you made, but why on earth would that affect your attitude to Ebikes?I know I,m a newbie on here and wont be staying long( thanks to those that helped on dvp thread) but really do think this thread, its attitude, atmosphere it creates, arguments and insults it leads to are undermining any positive attitudes towards ebikes. If I buy one will fellow bikers harang me whillst outcycling ?? Very odd.
'homemoz', I have close family in one of those countries and I visit from time to time. Their lifestyle is not hugely different to that of we here in the UK although they pay heavily in taxation for excellent welfare state benefits. Notwithstanding that common whinge, I doubt whether many of them would wish to emigrate to the UK. So, they are happy except for having to pay too much in taxes. Happiness is different things to different people, I guess, but I didn't draw up the criteria for such a comparative measurement so I don't know how much credence we should give to that league table.the World Happiness Report for 2016 lists quite a few Scandinavian countries in it's top 10.
Two interesting points, first of all the EU has never had the Sovereignty the Brexiters assumed it had to bring about social changes that were controlled by local Governments.So, if the EU doesn't have the power to address inequality (which wasn't my main argument) then it could be said to be fundamentally useless? It's a lot of money to pay for something which only compounds a already existing problem i.e. The instability caused by free movement of people to existing cultures already fragmented by technological developments & housing policy. In this context Take back Control makes sense. A recognition that we need to get our own house in order before we can engage fully with the wider world.
And therefore the right question to ask must be?Doesn't have any impact whatsoever on those people already marginalised. The point I'm making is that to effect change maybe the status quo has to be challenged. Democratic voting just seems to result in more of the same. The EU is seen as the embodiment of the status quo. Logical arguments don't work here. To leave the EU was an emotional, not a logical choice. If you go back to my very first posting, you will see that I am saying that logic is hopeless in the face of emotion. Unless the emotional aspects are addressed then logic just winds people up. Maybe this why this forum is not getting any logical reasons for Brexit. It is just the wrong question to ask.
AgreedI am actually in favour of a fully integrated EU & see myself as a European if not quite world citizen. However, when I was looking at the happiness table I was struck by the fact that practically all the countries in the top 10 have relatively low (to the UK) population density compared to size. It makes me wonder if rather than dismiss concerns about migration there is something else going on. Any population which is perceived as overcrowded seems to experience an upsurge in emotionally charged aggression i.e prisons. In the UK this is heightened by the fragmentation of social groups & the loss of a moral arbitor as in the Church or monarchy. I am not saying these are good things necessarily but rather that we have added to existing instability & this is the resulting chaos. There will always be people with extreme views but in a balanced society these are kept in check by accepted social rules and the law. Unless people feel heard they will rebel. Not the fault of the EU but not helped by it either. As I say, I can choose how I live, others are not so fortunate.
Agreed and the answer is obviousDoesn't have any impact whatsoever on those people already marginalised. The point I'm making is that to effect change maybe the status quo has to be challenged. Democratic voting just seems to result in more of the same. The EU is seen as the embodiment of the status quo. Logical arguments don't work here. To leave the EU was an emotional, not a logical choice. If you go back to my very first posting, you will see that I am saying that logic is hopeless in the face of emotion. Unless the emotional aspects are addressed then logic just winds people up. Maybe this why this forum is not getting any logical reasons for Brexit. It is just the wrong question to ask.
And to do this maybe we need to be going through exactly what is happening now i.e. Rob the liberal elite of it's power & have a people's revolution.Agreed and the answer is obvious
The question resolves itself and is
How to reform ourselves ie the Nation, it's attitudes and systems, and Controlling organisations.
Big problem!
The problem is this isn't a people's revolution, just a convulsion organised and paid for a a faction of that very elite, for a far from helpful to the people agenda.And to do this maybe we need to be going through exactly what is happening now i.e. Rob the liberal elite of it's power & have a people's revolution.
It's very difficult to say with certainty, since London is such an anomaly. We have the highest immigration effect with well over half the population not white British born, yet we have the highest satisfaction about immigration and voted solidly to remain in the EU with its immigration policies.However, when I was looking at the happiness table I was struck by the fact that practically all the countries in the top 10 have relatively low (to the UK) population density compared to size. It makes me wonder if rather than dismiss concerns about migration there is something else going on.
I do see your point. wales - one of the biggest recipients of eu funding - voted leave. so what to do when faced with uninformed voters taking out their frustration, wrongly, on bodies that have not done them any harm? clearly trying to educate them hasn't worked (too logical). what would an emotional response be? the emotional aspect of brexit was largely about xenophobia, greed taken to a self destructive level. it's a bit like trying to make a violently destructive person aware of boundaries. I'm afraid the only remedy is some pain. it's ironic but dead appropriate that it will hit those who mainly voted for brexit the hardest.Doesn't have any impact whatsoever on those people already marginalised. The point I'm making is that to effect change maybe the status quo has to be challenged. Democratic voting just seems to result in more of the same. The EU is seen as the embodiment of the status quo. Logical arguments don't work here. To leave the EU was an emotional, not a logical choice. If you go back to my very first posting, you will see that I am saying that logic is hopeless in the face of emotion. Unless the emotional aspects are addressed then logic just winds people up. Maybe this why this forum is not getting any logical reasons for Brexit. It is just the wrong question to ask.
Which is why I have been in favour of triggering Article 50.I do see your point. wales - one of the biggest recipients of eu funding - voted leave. so what to do when faced with uninformed voters taking out their frustration, wrongly, on bodies that have not done them any harm? clearly trying to educate them hasn't worked (too logical). what would an emotional response be? the emotional aspect of brexit was largely about xenophobia, greed taken to a self destructive level. it's a bit like trying to make a violently destructive person aware of boundaries. I'm afraid the only remedy is some pain. it's ironic but dead appropriate that it will hit those who mainly voted for brexit the hardest.
Yes, there is pain which hurts and one may need to take a painkiller. Then there is acute pain which may require several painkillers. An even more severe pain is the pain one gets in one's pocket which no amount of painkillers can relieve.I'm afraid the only remedy is some pain. it's ironic but dead appropriate that it will hit those who mainly voted for brexit the hardest.