Will Farage and Rees Mogg drain the 'bucket' from the inside then...
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Will Farage and Rees Mogg drain the 'bucket' from the inside then...
Indeed, it's inevitable with no co-ordinated effort to prevent it continuing worldwide.My point is that corrupt banking practices will continue regardless of whether we remain in the EU.
Er, can you actually point to any posts where someone have alleged that the Banks will be given a free hand after Brexit?I picked it out flecc, because others on here have suggested that BREXIT will give bankers a free hand to continue their corrupt practices. That BREXIT is somehow a conspiracy, sold to the unsuspecting in order to allow practices such as this to continue.
My point is that corrupt banking practices will continue regardless of whether we remain in the EU.
Of course, my post could also be read as a racist attack on the Germans, which is the default fall-back position.
Juncker by the wayWell he tried with the EU one but Junkers had got his snout in first..
The point is that while this is true up to a point, Brexit won't change the situation as the Government backed by the employers will simply let in workers of their choice into the country, and none of ours will be any better off, as bit by bit Holidays and other rights are whittled away.I can't actually remember one, what I can remember is me stating that there is a Conspiracy where the Conservative party and employers will destroy the progress made during our time as members of the EU, on Holidays, Environmental issues, in fact anything that prevents the Elite exploiting the lower classes and reducing them to subservient and willing worker drones
OG while I agree up to some point I think the free movement of labour has given many employers the opportunity to do exactly what you are concerned about ie the erosion of workers rights, and an opportunity for virtual slave labour
Totally agree with all that Gray....but its not just Corbyn making labour unelectable, the spectre of Blair has left floating labour voters unlikely to ever vote labour whilst ever he has a following amongst labour, which he plainly has. Corbyn's stance on defence and unilateral disarmament was last nail in his coffin.( even if you agree with him it still makes him unelectable in present atmosphere/generation)OG I can't really argue with any of your reasoning. Was merely pointing out that any system even the best of intentions can have unpredictable consequences. Throughout history the many have worked hard so that the few can be rich. All governments are complicit in this. In fact most of the people in power have probably never contributed anything material into the society they represent. They just take out. This is becoming more apparent as people leave university and go straight into politics. Unfortunately we don't have a credible opposition now in this country so as you say there is not much alternative. As far as I can see Jeremy Corbyn has no credibility as a potential PM even though he is sticking to his principles. This country is more likely to move further to the right because of him. This country needs a good opposition, but I can't see one. It will be interesting to see what happens in the Bye Election in Cumbria. That may give us a clue as to how the electorate is feeling.
Actually this does tend to indicate that change should never be fundamental in nature, experiments should be on the principal of changing one factor at a time.OG I can't really argue with any of your reasoning. Was merely pointing out that any system even the best of intentions can have unpredictable consequences. Throughout history the many have worked hard so that the few can be rich. All governments are complicit in this. In fact most of the people in power have probably never contributed anything material into the society they represent. They just take out. This is becoming more apparent as people leave university and go straight into politics. Unfortunately we don't have a credible opposition now in this country so as you say there is not much alternative. As far as I can see Jeremy Corbyn has no credibility as a potential PM even though he is sticking to his principles. This country is more likely to move further to the right because of him. This country needs a good opposition, but I can't see one. It will be interesting to see what happens in the Bye Election in Cumbria. That may give us a clue as to how the electorate is feeling.
Congratulations on your first sensible post.Totally agree with all that Gray....but its not just Corbyn making labour unelectable, the spectre of Blair has left floating labour voters unlikely to ever vote labour whilst ever he has a following amongst labour, which he plainly has. Corbyn's stance on defence and unilateral disarmament was last nail in his coffin.( even if you agree with him it still makes him unelectable in present atmosphere/generation)
Tories are trying to decide if brexit is electorally enforceable or not. If they decide it is it will happen, if they decide otherwise it will not. ( ie would taking us out lose Tories power ? That's their only concern.
Is there any connection whatever between the two events re voting ?This is the time of the year when the weather outside invites reflection. The two biiggest events of the year are of course brexit and President Elect Donald Trump.
Do you think history would have been different if Cameron had delayed the referendum to June 2017? Would Donald Trump have won?
When things start to swing they usually go back and forth for quite a while.Who knows, the EU vote could have swung the other way.
I don't think the referendum result would have been any different, whatever the EU countries did for Cameron. The anti-EU feeling had long been deeply ingrained into our working class society and and become even more widespread and strong than had been suspected.If David Cameron had delayed the referendum to 2017, Donald Trump's victory may have encouraged the EU to be more helpful to David Cameron. Who knows, the EU vote could have swung the other way.