No I don't imagine you would. You and some others here call it recklessness and stupidity. And thus we have ourselves an excellent platform for a discussion.
I have never used these words, preferring a discussion on facts.
This post on the Guardian is a better reply to your 'having balls' argument:
With political discourse in this hallucinogenic phase, the gap between metaphor and reality is beginning to yawn. Among the latest examples is the idea of a “clean break” Brexit. In an editorial on 15 December, the Sun used the phrase to welcome the prospect of leaving without any kind of withdrawal agreement. A week later it returned to the theme, suggesting “we are better off negotiating … after a clean break, with our £39bn and our leverage intact”. At the same time, the polling company YouGov asked respondents if they believed that “Anything less than a clean break from the EU will be a betrayal of the referendum vote”. Nationally, 48% agreed, and 35% disagreed. On New Year’s Day, Mick Hume, editor-at-large of Spiked,wrote that “a No Deal, clean-break Brexit is the only available option which comes close to fulfilling the demand of 17.4 million Leave voters”.
“Clean break” is a familiar idiom: a ready-made shorthand. According to theMacmillan Dictionary, it means “a sudden complete end to something such as a relationship or a period of time spent in a place”. The example sentence is as follows:
After the divorce, I decided to make a clean break and moved to a new town. This is metaphorical, of course. Concretely, a clean break refers to a physical rupture – of a bone, or piece of wood or stone – that leaves behind no fragments or jagged edges.
And it’s easy to see the appeal of the metaphor. It suggests a new start, unencumbered by the problems of the past. The opposite of a “messy break-up”. But can it be appropriately transferred to Brexit? It should be pretty clear that we aren’t ending the period of time we’ve been spending off the coast of France. So the geographical usage is out. The Sun, and people sympathetic to its position, must instead be thinking of relationships. But here’s the thing: it will not be possible for the UK to end all contact with the EU. European countries will still be our economic, diplomatic and cultural partners. Our populations are intertwined. There is no way to delete Europe’s number and unfriend it on Facebook. The relationship will certainly continue; what will change is the conduct of it, which will probably become more contested and bureaucratic outside the purpose-built structures of the EU.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jan/04/lie-clean-break-brexit-politicians-britain?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other