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Post by Admin on May 30, 2023 16:39:50 GMT
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Post by Admin on May 31, 2023 13:37:30 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jun 1, 2023 16:38:18 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jun 1, 2023 18:23:11 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jun 6, 2023 17:35:51 GMT
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Post by Admin on Aug 4, 2023 20:25:15 GMT
'The truth about the big Brexit lie is getting painful for Leavers' Story by Brian Reade www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/the-truth-about-the-big-brexit-lie-is-getting-painful-for-leavers/ar-AA1eO3wYIt seems like only yesterday that half of this country was crying out for freedom. Every night our tellies would show angry talking heads in Wetherspoons, on Question Time and in the Commons, telling us that if Britain was ever to be great again it had to throw off the shackles of the EU and forge its own independent path. Which it did. Although, the “being great again” bit has yet to come true. But no worries. At least Britain is a separate entity from the EU, and, as all Leavers wished, it is now legally a third country. So how come many of the same people are now outraged that Brussels respects their democratic will? From next year the EU is bringing in visas for travellers from all non-EU countries to check they don’t outstay their legally allotted residence slot, leading to pro-Brexit voices calling it “a vengeful, Big Brother” diktat, and a “draconian punishment” which will cause “holiday chaos”. Yet it’s the same type of visa Britons need to travel to the US or Australia.
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Post by Admin on Aug 20, 2023 17:32:30 GMT
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Post by Admin on Aug 24, 2023 15:38:51 GMT
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Post by Admin on Sept 25, 2023 22:22:03 GMT
Four Points on the Rejoin March averypublicsociologist.blogspot.com/2023/09/four-points-on-rejoin-march.htmlFour quick points on the national Rejoin march that took place in London on Saturday. 1. The politics of the march haven;t moved on from the second referendum/hard remain demonstrations of the Brexit wars. The list of speakers were a mix of social media celebrities, grifters, and complete unknowns. There were no prominent voices save those already associated with the movement (Gina Miller, Guy Verhofstadt), and not even an obscure Labour, Liberal Democrat, or SNP backbencher could be found to offer a soupçon of official gravitas. This is because, presently, the Rejoin movement is politically spent. At one point hundreds of thousands were involved because of their visceral disgust at the Leave campaign's lies, and also in rebellion against what the referendum told them: that their idea of a progressive consensus - the official ideology of the professional managerial class you might say - did not have as wider purchase as their social circles led them to believe. But more importantly, despite these sentiments and motives for grassroots involvement, the elite forces that funded the coaches and paid event organisers to put on the big demonstrations were less interested in rejoining the EU. Their focus was breaking up Corbynism. 2. This helps explain the lack of media interest. Also in London last Saturday, a few hundred XL Bully owners gathered to protest against government efforts to ban the breed. They received more coverage from the BBC and Sky than the yellow and blue army bopping along the streets to EU Supergirl's greatest hits and the bellows of Steve Bray set to repetitive beats. Divisions among the Tories over the EU have been settled, while Keir Starmer pretends he had nothing to do with trying to overturn Brexit. Ever the client media and with (nearly) all of capital's eggs in his basket as the next Prime Minister, they can be relied upon not to make matters too difficult for the powerful and so bang on about his recent history. But the march did attract the attention of foreign media, notably French, Belgian, and German outlets. And why wouldn't it? They're not interested in a row about dangerous dogs, but that there's still a constituency for returning to the EU after the bullshit of Brexit - that's newsworthy and interesting as far as their editorial offices are concerned. 3. Between 3,000 and 40,500 people took to the streets, depending on who you believe. According to folks who were there, the turnout wasn't different to the last national mobilisation in October last year. That indicates the movement has a stable core, even if it has been abandoned by its establishment backers of old. But it also suggests it's not attracting new layers either. From what I can gather, the composition of the march was mostly professional managerial/middle class types. Trade union banners were not in evidence. If you wanted to be unkind, you could say it was the Lib Dem base LARPing as angry, annoyed demonstrators. And just as that party has proved unable to expand its support beyond certain limits, we find the street expression of its politics suffering from an identical difficulty. 4. But it probably won't always be like this. There is an overlap between Rejoin's constituency, the Lib Dems, and Starmer's base. What's more, despite the very best efforts of the shadow front bench at dampening down expectations, people will be expecting an incoming Labour government to fix public services, to see an end to penny-pinching politics, and making simple things like getting a doctor's appointment and having a passport arrive on time happen. Disappointment is bound to translate into opposition, and because of the state the Tories are in both the Lib Dems and the Greens are well placed to profit from Starmer's difficulties. But there's no reason to believe that pro-European politics won't become another axis of opposition a Labour government will face. Despite burying his record, significant sections of the Labour vote are expecting steps back towards the EU. Some might have fooled themselves into thinking that Starmer's ruling out of single market and custom union membership and dismissal of the associate member status being floated in French and German government circles is electoral expediency, but they will be gutted when they find out his no really means no. At best there will be tinkering, not unlike the recent return to Horizon and Rishi Sunak's fiddling with the Northern Ireland Protocol. And when that penny drops, don't be too surprised if the voices clamouring for a return to the EU or a second referendum becomes a repository that condenses a certain kind of discontent.
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Post by Admin on Nov 23, 2023 17:12:11 GMT
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Post by Admin on Nov 28, 2023 17:05:01 GMT
Scientists discover that less intelligent people voted for Brexit Story by Harry Fletcher www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/scientists-discover-that-less-intelligent-people-voted-for-brexit/ar-AA1kFTsrNew scientific research has found that less intelligent people were more likely to vote for Brexit. According to a new study, people who voted for the leave campaign are more likely to have had lower cognitive abilities. This may have made them more susceptible to disinformation, the authors of the study claim. The new research comes from the University of Bath. As the study found, 73 per cent of the UK voters in the top 10 per cent of cognitive performance were remain voters. Only 40 per cent of the people in the bottom 10 per cent of cognitive performance voted to remain in the EU. The findings were published in the academic journal PLOS One are were based on analysis of 3,181 couples in the UK from an longitudinal study called Understanding Society.
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Post by Admin on Nov 30, 2023 12:13:08 GMT
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Post by Admin on Dec 1, 2023 17:45:44 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jan 29, 2024 20:32:29 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jan 31, 2024 17:48:51 GMT
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