PMs change and lol we're all gonna die (but brexit will never end)

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xxp I saw an excellent thread contrasting he remain campaign and the repeal campaign that I now can’t find and it made the points about consensus building and winning over waverers and -shockingly - reached the same conclusion about a new referendum here. It’s entirely true and they’ll throw us under the bus.

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:25 (six years ago)

I think it's worth remembering that pom's entrance into the thread yesterday consisted of an unfunny joke, according to him, about (((liberal democrats))) followed by a comment, directed at the entire thread I assume, about 'you tankies'. Not terribly clever or constructive.

Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:28 (six years ago)

But carry on with your Captain Save-a-Pom routine, deems, it's entertaining.

Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:30 (six years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6QhAZckY8w

plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:30 (six years ago)

It was indeed unfunny, that much is certainly true.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:31 (six years ago)

some platitudinous, hackneyed blathering from Peter Reid (hey at least he's not Graham Souness with the evil glint in his eye for NDB!) on People's Vote in the indie today. But some truth in there that tin-eared Remain campaigners don't ever seem to learn about how condescending and dishonest they are at delivering their message. And perhaps reminding Leave voters of some of the interests of the greedy corrupt sociopaths they are aligning themselves with could be more productive than hectoring them about the annual GDP of London's FS sector or whatever. Perhaps the problem is corrupt greedy sociopaths from both sides of the EU ref campaigns don't like to attack each other too directly maybe, and keep it to the pantomime stuff for mass consumption.

calzino, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:34 (six years ago)

My argument, which I formulated repeatedly even though you claim not know to what I 'want', is that Corbyn is too ambiguous a Remainer for me to be fully on board with his Brexit policies, which doesn't mean that I wouldn't vote for him if I could.

We're almost at the point of peak sterility here.

― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:13 (eighteen minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

Again. Except for the caveat that Labour's ambiguity on Brexit is in many ways a media construct (both more complex than a single soundbyte and with an in-built model of change) this is pretty much EXACTLY THE SAME AS EVERYONE ELSE HERE. Pro Labour generally but with plenty of caveats. Exactly the position that made another poster see this thread as only united through various critiques.

plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:35 (six years ago)

Practicing самокритика there Pom, cute.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:36 (six years ago)

But carry on with your Captain Save-a-Pom routine, deems, it's entertaining.

― Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:30 (six minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

^ gets it!

phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 09:38 (six years ago)

thanks plaxico for your thoughtful post. I see that Labour's policy on EU freedom of movement reflects discord amongst their base of support. Is there such discord on this thread?

L'assie (Euler), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 10:27 (six years ago)

When I hear the term “echo chamber” or “ideological diversity” etc. that’s when I etc etc

All meaningful discussions happen in closed groups, people who have agreed to the terms etc. It’s not as if people here aren’t exposed to right wing arguments.

Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 11:31 (six years ago)

id imagine that we're not talking about stromfornt here tbf

phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 11:33 (six years ago)

I don't think it's controversial to suggest that echo chambers reinforce groupthink and act as a blocker of sorts to understanding the wider world? Yes even in those scenarios you hear the views of people whose representatives shout the the loudest, but that still excludes a lot of groups.

Matt DC, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 13:17 (six years ago)

I know, but I don't get the sense that for anybody here this place accounts for the majority of discussion they have about this, and the breadth of stuff linked suggests that people have a lot of other sources. I find it a really good repository of stuff I might not otherwise read as I tend to get a lot of my news from abandoned copies of the FT I find in blackfriars station in the morning.

plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 13:35 (six years ago)

Yeah I felt that went without saying...? Pretty hard to live in the UK and dodge right wing politics or viewpoints.

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 13:48 (six years ago)

Yeah, whatever is wrong with xyzzzz, gyac, et al, I don't think it can be blamed on ilx.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 13:52 (six years ago)

Great contribution, manages to be ignorant (and ableist?)

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 13:59 (six years ago)

ahh ..it's always nice to smell that first plop of ideological diversity of the day!

calzino, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:00 (six years ago)

I like ilxor UK politics threads as a place to park information about news, to have a discussion that’s unlikely to be interrupted by cranks of the Chris Williamson ilk, derailed or derided by Centrist ‘90s Music Press Guys (and where we can complain about them), or people with other flavours of Corbyn Derangement Syndrome.

This is a rare corner of the interwebs where people are mostly intelligent and accommodating of others. It’s also a good spot to commiserate with others touched by austerity/Tory cruelty and having an outlet to clown
on the latest Jess Phillips/Stephen Kinnock/Change UK bullshit also a bonus.

suzy, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:03 (six years ago)

Fred only visiting in between bans tbf.

Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:11 (six years ago)

the only way i can see out of this mess is for a Labour govt to massively reset the social compact (as Corbyn alluded to yesterday). if the programme is deep and far-reaching enough i.e. free education, renationalise utilities, war footing for climate change and social housing, tear up PFI and backdoor privatisation in the NHS, then frankly I'm not sure it makes a huge difference to voters whether we leave or remain. the ensuing arguments would come close to obliterating the memory of Brexit imo!

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:12 (six years ago)

(Sorry to clarify I was talking about echo chambers in general, not ILX)

Matt DC, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:13 (six years ago)

Brexit is like the 'global war on terror'. the US reacted to this massive psychological trauma - 9/11 - with an action that it thought could put the lid back on the pot of its anxiety. it couldn't. it never could. Brexit the same. the UK system is fucked. a decades-long experiment in privatisation and anti-municipalism has led to a stagnation that no one can see the end of. so let's do something dramatic! that'll put the lid back on the pot! but it won't. the problems have to be confronted at the source.

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:19 (six years ago)

there has been lots of scaremongering about the effect of a Corbyn gov in terms of mass capital flight, but this happened to Labour in the 70's and there was no apocalypse. And brexit uncertainty is already blocking foreign investment to a trickle.

calzino, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:20 (six years ago)

sorry typing on phone, sound like Russian

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:20 (six years ago)

this is the thread for it

what's wrong with being centre-y? (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:21 (six years ago)

I was talking to lifelong Labour voter J last night (likes Corbyn’s domestic policies but voted Green in the EU elections because Labour’s Brexit message wasn’t enough for him) and we wondered what the Labour Leave option would look like if they got in and were the negotiators. I thought something along the lines of EEA/EFTA v. Remain (with reforms) and J conceded he could live with that version of Brexit. What do you lot think?

suzy, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 14:25 (six years ago)

Fred only visiting in between bans tbf.

― Boulez, vous couchez avec moi? (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 bookmarkflaglink

Another ban, wonder how that happened..

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 15:49 (six years ago)

posting as he normally does

самокритика me, daddy (||||||||), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:02 (six years ago)

Comments from Johnson and Foster v much indicate they have no interest or indeed ability to come up with backstop alternative.

When are we going full Hong Kong on this?

nashwan, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:27 (six years ago)

I was reading replies to the letter on the No 10 twitter account last night and Leavers were queuing up to say EVEN WITH THE BACKSTOP THIS ISNT GOOD ENOUGH. Pair this with the large number I saw raging about IDS’s pension plans and it’s not been a good week for them with a decent part of the voter coalition.

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:35 (six years ago)

*backstop gone

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:35 (six years ago)

What would satisfy them? Another Waterloo?

pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:37 (six years ago)

Nothing, there is nothing they can get that will satisfy them.

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:39 (six years ago)

NDB

самокритика me, daddy (||||||||), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:39 (six years ago)

Nah even then they’d been agitating for public deportation or something. It never ends.

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:43 (six years ago)

Given how hauntingly gripping their tabula rasa fantasies have proven themselves to be, perhaps the UK should also pull out of every other treaty it has signed over the decades. Emancipation from the EU is just the first step on the path to insular autonomy. Survival of the fittest was formulated by an Englishman, after all.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:45 (six years ago)

UK government source hits back at Tusk and Commission

“If the Commission only wants to offer the same failed backstop that will not pass then they are essentially choosing to risk either a hard border in NI or a border in the Irish Sea. That is not what anyone wants.”

— James Crisp (@JamesCrisp6) August 20, 2019



lol omg get fucked, the backstop was a British idea! (Like Northern Ireland 🙃)

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:46 (six years ago)

Does nobody want a border in the irish sea lol

Aston "Family Court" Barrett (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:46 (six years ago)

but aNnExAtIoN

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:48 (six years ago)

"Look, if we can't come to an agreement, you will be evicted from your house, or have the opportunity to move to a much nicer house, and no-one wants that"

Aston "Family Court" Barrett (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:51 (six years ago)

Or as the og FBPE guy would put it, CAKE OR DEATH

Aston "Family Court" Barrett (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:52 (six years ago)

that reminds me

I dearly wish a reactivated IRA would sucessfully blow up that scumbag Johnson and his evil cabinet.
At least their useless, morally-empty lives would have served a purpose.
— MarcHayo #FBPE (@markhayo) August 20, 2019
― ogmor, Tuesday, August 20, 2019 2:21 AM (seven hours ago)

this has been deleted :(

Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 16:58 (six years ago)

Follow Back Primeminister Explode

Aston "Family Court" Barrett (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:03 (six years ago)

fenian brexit preliminary exhortation

phil neville jacket (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:13 (six years ago)

why delete the best ever tweet with the FBPE hashtag ffs!

calzino, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:15 (six years ago)

Some recruit the milkmaster to thread for some much needed dissenting opinions

I troll the trolls. https://t.co/3y8cE8iurv

— Mike Gapes (@MikeGapes) August 19, 2019

gyac, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:42 (six years ago)

Does anyone at all who isn't an MP, a wonk or a fanatic actually give a shit about the backstop or consider it a hill to die on?

Matt DC, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:37 (six years ago)

its weird how nobody ever tried to sell the backstop as actually a somewhat impressive strategy for squaring a circle. There are positive things to say about it (from the point of view of a feat of negotiation) and it seems May never tried to construe it as a success even though it was her achievement. she seemingly thought that marketing it as a failure and an acquiescence would work?

plax (ico), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:41 (six years ago)


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