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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
There are no experts in what's happening because it's never been done before and for every 'expert' who says one thing there'll be another who says the opposite. The only sensible thing for us to do now is have the courage of our convictions and negotiate on that basis, not sell the UK short by giving away our negotiating position before we even start the process.
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Re: Post-Brexit Thread
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---------- Post added at 22:54 ---------- Previous post was at 22:33 ---------- Incidentally actually looking at the site you don't have to find much reason to doubt them. Look at this on if the referendum is binding: http://www.lawyersforbritain.org/ref...-binding.shtml It's hardly confidence inspiring with the amount of commentary they mix in their their analysis. I mean serious releases do not end like this: Quote:
Also I am like 80% sure they're wrong anyway. I don't think you can bind Parliament to do anything. Parliament can repel the laws they make and even if that isn't case the EU vote was not a law. |
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Look at this way ,if the predictions and views of the right experts (the one's who are impartial according to you)are correct why hasn't Parliament overturned the vote for the good of the nation that's their job isn't it ? The answer is simply because no one knows for certain what can or should be done in this instance ,impartial experts have no better an idea of what should or can be done than experts fighting a cause because there are no procedures set in stone and it's never been done before .We are essentially a test case for the rest of Europe . |
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No such provisions were made in the EU referendum. It is politically binding for sure, it would take something catastrophic to provide any justification for ignoring it, but not legally binding. I could provide a bunch of separate sources for this but it's the mainstream and accepted view, including by Parliament. Those guys may be lawyers but they are lawyers who started off with a position then started looking for ways to prove their point, rather than looking at the law and assessing their position from that. There are loads more lawyers on the opposite side of the argument - http://lawyers-inforbritain.uk/signatories/ - but nonetheless both need taking with a fairly hefty pinch of salt as both have an axe to grind. |
Re: Post-Brexit Thread
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What constitutes independence or bias in the context of an issue like Brexit? Can anyone be truly unbiased on such a matter and how do we know how much 'bias' has been applied* to the gathering, interpretation and/or presentation of the 'facts' our 'experts' (on both sides) rely upon? :shrug:
* whether deliberately, unintentionally, directly or indirectly. The Beeb is supposed to be fairly unbiased isn't it? Well I've just heard a BBC TV news reporter commenting on a report (linked to a BBC investigation) about mistakes made by Concentrix in their handling of tax credit claims. In her words: 'many people were having their money stopped by mistake'. Is that unbiased? It could be argued that it's just vague or deliberately intended to create a certain impression. If the figures are available why weren't they or even estimates given? If there are no figures how do we know it's 'many' people who're affected? What percentage of claimants have had their payments wrongly stopped? 50%, 20%, 10%, 2%, 0.01%? Even the latter might turn out to be quite a number but without any reference to actual numbers it could be argued that deliberately choosing the word 'many' was intended to give the impression of a bigger problem when using the word 'some' would have had less impact and therefore be less newsworthy. Now of course having payments stopped is likely to be a big issue for those affected and 1 mistake is 1 too many but if the overall percentage of mistakes made was just a couple of percent or even less, it's hard to imagine that much more could be done to improve matters since no system is ever perfect and some mistakes will always slip through. So is this sort of thing just sloppiness or bias? Whatever the reason/intention, something as simple as the choice of a word can have a big bearing on the conclusions which will be drawn so we can have no guarantees of veracity. There are so many questions and unknowns surrounding everything that Brexit involves that seeking certainty, total independence or whatever is going to be like searching for the Holy Grail. Furthermore if we start dismissing every source of information because, just for example, someone involved is paid via the EU or is a member of UKIP etc. etc., I think we're going to be left with our own gut feeling to go on. Being 'biased' doesn't preclude anyone from being right but being 'independent' doesn't guarantee it either. Who's the arbiter of bias? :shrug: |
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There are absolutes in this world. If Brexit is or is not right is not one of them but some of the information we use to make such decisions can be. There seems to be a movement to position everything into a silo of political bias and thus reject any idea of balance or impartiality. I think it's because when you do that then you can any criticism of a particular position as politically motivated and thus wrong. Partisan expertise do exist of course but the trick is to distinguish them from those who are largely* impartial. So FullFact, a group who don't seem to have any motivation to spin or a particular position they're advocating for, should be taken more seriously than 'Lawyers for Britain' whose very existence is to campaign for a political goal. Understanding the motivations of sources helps in determining their credibility. *as impartial as you can be. Obviously many of us taken certain concepts for granted given the society we grew up in and so on. |
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What's true, I feel, is that the Remain side have a whole lot more to gain by delaying/complicating this process and exploiting/creating uncertainties which may suit their argument and political standing even in the short term but won't help us to secure the best possible deal from the impending negotiations. They may not like the result but we have to get on with this now and endlessly bickering about who was more misleading than whom in the run up to the referendum is a dangerous game to play. If the House of Commons had immediately got fully behind the decision and decided to work together for the common god, would Sterling have fallen so far? I doubt it very much. In fact some may say that Sterling's value is one of the main sticks the Remain side have to beat HMG with so they have every reason to carry on creating even exaggerating uncertainties in order to put further pressure on it and thereby try to influence the general public and undermine the Government. If things carry on like this I feel we're in great danger of winding up with the worst of both worlds rather than the best or anything even approaching that. I really can't see why anyone who had the UK's interests at heart would want that. :shrug: |
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But, yes, I agree with that for the moment :) |
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---------- Post added at 12:29 ---------- Previous post was at 12:10 ---------- Quote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQqi_vV0ny8 |
Re: Post-Brexit Thread
Not a great lover of Tesco but l am glad they stood up to Unilever as if Tesco give in then who will be next.
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Chances are they'll strike a deal somewhere in between and the price on the shelf will have to go up. This isn't Tesco nobly standing up to big, bad Unilever. Tesco have a history of treating suppliers, especially smaller ones without the strength of Unilever, like something they just trod in. I'm sure Unilever do much the same where they can with retailers. |
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