• BolexForSoup@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Watching Brexit was one of the most bizarre world events I’ve seen in my life. Truly the slowest, clear-cut train crash in modern times. Literally everybody knew it was dumb, everybody knew what the result was going to be, and nothing really deviated from expectations.

    Hell, when they were playing musical chairs with PMs over enacting the changes and kept blowing past all of the “absolute deadlines” I started to wonder if they were just going to pretend the vote never happened and just live their lives as usual. Frankly, they might’ve gotten away with it.

    • ebikefolder@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Bizarre indeed, but at the same time highly entertaining. Real life comedy at its best!

        • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺@feddit.de
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          Well the people in it had a majority deciding in favor of it in a free election. And afterwards the people that voted against it had four years to adjust to it, for instance by migrating into an EU country.

          Also it was perfectly possible to form a political stance to overthrow the non binding referendum but instead people voted Boris Johnson in a “landslide victory” to make sure Brexit gets done.

          There were plenty turning points for society as a whole and individual possibility to leave the dumpsterfire behind. The people in the UK are getting exactly what they wanted.

          • _Gandalf_the_Black_@feddit.de
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            1 year ago

            As a person in the UK, I got the exact opposite of what I wanted. I was too young to vote at the time, so I, along with everyone else my age, had no say in our future, whereas my grandad voted for Brexit and died before it actually happened, so he won’t have to live with the consequences.

            It’s also caused me a whole load of problems directly, since I’m a language student and I went to Germany for part of my year abroad. There’s so much more bureaucracy, as well as significant fees. So no, the people in the UK are not getting what they wanted at all. Maybe apart from those idiots who went on about “British sovereignty” and rubbish like that.

            • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              Germany is struggling with a lot of demographic change and desperately needs young people. If you like it here and feel welcome enough (something unfortunately many Germans dont show towards “brown” people) you could emigrate to Germany.

              • _Gandalf_the_Black_@feddit.de
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                1 year ago

                I really enjoyed living and studying in Germany, so it’s definitely something I’d consider doing!

                (On a side note, the “Black” part of my username actually has nothing to do with skin colour, in the same way that Gandalf the Grey didn’t have grey skin! It’s just about the colour of the robes.)

          • Risk@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            I’m baffled by how you lump everyone into such a close vote as ‘getting what they wanted’, with an undertone suggesting you mean ‘getting what they deserved’.

            Most people can’t just up and leave their country; to do so would mean causing more damage to their lives than just sitting in the shit sandwich they’ve been served by the useful idiots that made this mess.

            Then there’s the whole issue with Russian interference that ‘probably happened’ according to MI5/6, but needed a full investigation which Alexander Boris de Pfelelfllellogram Johnson - likely being in Russian pockets already - obviously quashed.

            • Sigmatics@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              Can’t upvote this enough. I was in London before the vote, there was obviously a ton of people against it. This should have required at least a 2/3 majority.

              • taladar@feddit.de
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                1 year ago

                They should have required the non-binding referendum to actually be non-binding, especially considering how vague the question and answers were and how few people participated.

                • Risk@feddit.uk
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                  1 year ago

                  It’s a long string of Tory failures that they enacted pretty much only so they could keep their hands on power.

                  Cameron > made the referendum part of the 2015 manifesto to stop UKIP splitting the Tory vote.

                  May > enacted Article 50 to stop the totally-not-UKIP/disaster capitalists from paralysing the party

                  Johnson > made ‘oven ready shit biscuit Brexit’ part of the 2019 manifesto so he could whip his party of YesMen into doing whatever the fuck he liked.

                  Makes me so so angry.

        • rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Sounds like you were in it — I was thinking about this the other day, was the thought at the time (maybe at the beginning of it) that a lot of other countries were also fed up with the EU’s rules and would follow Britain out the door or something? It just all seems so random from the outside.

          • Sigmatics@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            I wasn’t, but that wasn’t Britain’s reasoning. Although it sure played a part in the EU trying to make it as hard for them as possible to leave

            • trollercoaster@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              The EU didn’t make it particularly hard, they actually were way too lenient and made quite a number of concessions, mostly in order to not escalate the Northern Ireland situation.

              It was the UK that kept insisting on renegotiating the Withdrawal Agreement over and over again, and the EU was lenient enough to let them have their way whenever they asked for renegotiation.

    • Gomiboy@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      2016 was a weird time and you could argue it was the point when western politics veered off in the direction of populism over policy.

      As a British citizen (sorry subject), it was a horrifying moment to be woken up by my girlfriend to learn that we had voted to leave by the smallest of margins.

      And later that year we watched America elect a bonafide psychopathic narcissist as the president of the United States.

      Why the majority elect to be kept under the boot with aggressive fiscal policies which reward the wealthy is beyond me.

      Brexit was sold on lies and false promises of the ‘benefits’ Britain would see when we become ‘independent’ again.

    • Bonifratz@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      For a long time, I was convinced they would actually turn around and stop the whole endeavour, as it was clearly a giant, unforced blunder. But here we are…

    • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Only if the UK wanted to fully rejoin the EU. Countries can join the European Economic Area without joining the EU, like Norway and Iceland did for example - the downside being they are bound by rules they don’t have a right to vote on, even if in practice the EU always consults them.

      • taladar@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        They EFTA countries already stated they don’t want the UK in there because it is too large and would basically ruin any influence the smaller nations have.

      • no banana@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Wasn’t that how the Brits felt about the situation from the start? That they had no say in their own laws. Seems perfect for them.

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    Good luck on that.

    The EU would make demands so steep, crawling on broken glass would be mild.

    Brexit was a catastrophic diplomatic event, bridled with ridiculous underhanded manouvers from the UK to try and sneak away from demands.

    I am not against the UK rejoining the EU but as a common member, with all the demands required to join like any other country.

    • GoodEye8@lemm.ee
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      I think it’s misleading to say that EU would make steep demands, because it gives the impression that EU would deliberately try to make UK joining difficult. UK shouldn’t get any special treatment (good or bad) and they should get the exact same standard joining procedure all other countries would get. The standard procedure is already going to have their panties twisted, no need to give them a legitimation reason to complain.

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        1 year ago

        Let’s keep in mind the UK dove into directions so divergent from the EU, on such trivial matters, just to face those demands - so trivial it will feel as petty - will make the UK negotiators twist their hands in anger.

        And to crown it all, just the demand to drop the pound would be nurderous to the british pride.

        • GoodEye8@lemm.ee
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          Absolutely. I think we’re on the same page that the process of joining is going to have the UK complain and whine at every step. My point was rather that saying EU would make demands so steep could be taken as EU wanting make an example out of UK. That’s not really what we should want because we know the UK is going to complain and treating them harsher than any other applicant would somewhat legitimize their grievances. I think a better wording for “EU would make demands so steep, crawling on…” would be “UK will think the demands are so steep, crawling on glass…” because then instead of seeming like EU is being unfair it’s going to seem like UK simply doesn’t want to play ball (which is how we have ended up in this situation in the first place).

    • NIB@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It would not be that bad. The EU wants the UK back not only because both sides would greatly economically benefit from this but because one of the main reasons for EU’s existence is the continuation of peace in Europe. So the UK must be part of the EU.

      • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        I am not again the UK rejoining the EU.

        My country has had the country as an ally for centuries and we went to great lenghts to facilitate the movements of brits to and from but the UK needs to recognize it is not more than any other member of the EU.

        That stupid and hollow pride needs to come down and mistakes have to be recognized.

    • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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      I doubt they would, at all.

      It is in their best interest to give the UK the same standing it once had, because it will make any country think twice about leaving. The UK has suffered outside of the EU, and should it return and see growth, it’ll be the closest ally to the group that you could possibly have.

      • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        So, if I’m following correctly your reasoning, you’re in favor of allowing the “person” that abandoned the team to return, in their own term, and with special previliges? Unfair to all other parties.

        • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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          It wouldn’t be the exact same deal, because the world isn’t exactly the same as it was, but yes, I’d fully expect the UK to retain certain voting rights, to keep the pound, etc.

          Treating the UK poorly would send a message to Eurosceptics that leaving is the point of no return. It would also mean there is one fewer nation to calm any sceptical nations to the power of a combined bloc.

          • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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            1 year ago

            “The UK had special entering rights; we want them as well.”

            Probably all other nations wanting to join.

            And a huge drawback of relations of trust between already in place members.

            No. The EU bent the knee to Tatcher in order to grow in relevance and stability internationally. A rejoining UK needs to recognize it is joining an established and relevant bloc, not an upstart project.

            • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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              Then it doesn’t rejoin. It’s pretty simple, really.

              It also means that the UK stays as an anti-bloc voice, and it’s successes and failures define the EU.

              It’s a really simple concept, and one that is widely shared by the likes of Ian Hislop and Oli Dugmore. If the EU are inflexible, it doesn’t particularly help with euroscepticism in the UK and the EU.

              • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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                1 year ago

                I’ll reserve my right to scepticism.

                Maybe the UK, after dredging the bottom of the barrel, perhaps in another 25 or 30 years, realizes the gravity of its mistakes and realizes the exit from the EU was a mistake for itself, by itself, and approaches the EU to rejoin, like any other member state.

  • Ooops@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    We should really stop doing polls. People will answer depending on how something sounds on the surfcae with exactly no clue about details.

    The same people in UK that want to rejoin the EU single market will also vote against most consequences of joining the single market.

    Just like for example a majority of Europeans when asked wants to stop daylight saving time changes for permanent ‘summer time’ (because summer is a more positive connotation when that 1 hour shift from standard time is bad by any objective metric and actually bad for our health).

    Just like a majority of Germans right now loudly agrees to more investments, to then turn around and answer in another poll how spending any money (even more when it’s financed by debt) should be avoided.

    People are idiots and polls have lost most their meaning as I can get any answer I want just by who I ask and how I phrase the question.

    • brothershamus@kbin.social
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      Agreed. Most American polls are still done by phone, so it only counts people who answer unknown calls, and then answer a series of questions about their beliefs. Which just gets more unbelievable every day.

      • Ooops@kbin.social
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        And then there are online polls, that already cherry-pick the people by where they advertize. And that’s on top of the effect that people with a strong opinion and desire to voice it are overrepresented in such polls.

    • AmberPrince@kbin.social
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      I never understood the arguments people use surrounding daylight savings. The health risks, accident risks, any risks surround the actual switch, not really the what time is used. If the clocks were set forward for “summer time” then 3 months later Daylight savings was abolished and no one changes their clocks anymore (as you said, permanent summer time) there would be no ill effects from it cause everyone was already used to the time change.

      I want to get rid of daylight savings. I don’t care whether it’s standard time that use used or daylight savings time that is used as long as the switchover stops happening.

      • ebikefolder@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        With people mostly using clocks which don’t need adjusting, we could have the best of both worlds.

        Currently, 12 o’clock is defined as the sun being at its highest point at a specific location (in winter, standard time)

        Imagine you take the same reference location, and define sunrise as 7:00 (am). No health issues, no sudden changes, and probably best for the biorhythm.

      • Ooops@kbin.social
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        If the clocks were set forward for “summer time” then 3 months later Daylight savings was abolished and no one changes their clocks anymore (as you said, permanent summer time) there would be no ill effects

        Yes, there would be “ill effects”. Having more daylight later the day is a pure luxury/convenience (for the people not working at that time anymore…). Having to an hour more between waking up and the sun coming up however has adverse effects on your natural clock and health.

      • Ooops@kbin.social
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        No, there is exactly nothing useful about daily polls how you would vote if the election that is actually happening in 3-4 years is tomorrow. It has zero worth as information and is only used for the also daily “see, that party got another 0.5%, they will totally be the one ruling party soon/we nend to fight them before they take over!” polarizing bullshit destroying democracies.

        There is even less use, when a lot of these polls from (always the same) questionable sources are used by (always the same) publications for their narratives.

        This has nothing to do with information and transparency anymore, but a lot with manipulation and propaganda.

          • Ooops@kbin.social
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            Shit takes and bad interpretations do not invalidate the utility of polling.

            Yes, they do. Companies are paid for these polls. Today, tomorrow, again next week. They don’t refine their data (usual polling data isn’t changing that quickly), they refine how to get the answer they want. Those polls also don’t show the reaction of public opinion on policies (again those don’t change every other day) for transparency. They show how yesterday’s rage-inducing lie on the front page worked and how it compares to today’s to refine manipulation tactics.

              • Ooops@kbin.social
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                Do you throw it every scientific study that doesn’t meet your ridiculous criteria as well?

                No I’m talking about always the same polls overvaluing one option being always used by the publications pushing that story again and again.

                So you have an actual argument or do you want to keep attacking half a dozen strawman arguments you found between the line I never wrote?

                “Oh, No! Someone diagrees with me! Let’s find a couple of things he never actually said and then attack him repeatedly for being anti-science!!”

                Are you even serious or is this just trolling at this point?

                PS: Yes, a lot of different people do polls. Actually using those, or doing a weighted avarage or just mentioning they exist would be an improvement. But it is not happening, because publications always work with the same polling whose result are beneficial for that publication.

    • HubertManne@kbin.social
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      I prefer to stick with daylight savings over standard but that is because im a late person and hate 4pm sunset.

      • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.de
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        Yeah, plus during winter sun rises after I arrive at work anyway, why should I care about that being at 08:30 or 09:30? I want at least some sunlight when going home.

        • HubertManne@kbin.social
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          yeah I don’t see the advantages of standard time at all. The one guy talked about the sun being overhead at noon but who cares.

    • Ummdustry@sh.itjust.works
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      On the one hand, you are absolutely correct, people are idiots

      On the other hand, your arguments against polls are equally valid arguments against any form representative democracy. Politicans, policies and programs are just like polls. People will often vote purely based on surface apperances. See: every law called “the fluffy familes act” or two-thirds of US elections going to the taller cannidate.

      There’s a reason it’s called ‘the least bad form of government’

      • Ooops@kbin.social
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        You are the second person now that tries to tell me how important polls are, just because I didn’t phrase it “we should stop such polls”… while I clearly then described my problem with these kind of polls.

        Yes, polls make the same sense as elections do. That’s exactly the reason we don’t have direct democracies and people are voted for 4-5 years in most countries.

        Asking people once for their opinion of Brexit to get a base line for public opinion is okay, although it’s not that precise obviously but can at least tell you if a majority seems reachable. Asking them again after a few months or after important (unexpected) decisions is helpful. Asking them again and again when there is not vote or referendum happening however is worthless.

        The same is true for polls about any question or general voting twice a week when the actual vote takes place in years. That’s not about transparency but manipulation.

        We saw exactly those kind of polls before Brexit constantly used for months to tell the story of how everything is okay and there is no reason to panic as there’s no majority for Brexit. How many against voters might have been stayed home because of that bullshit?

        We also see this in multiple countries right now, where no election is even close but there are new polls about that imaginary vote at least two or three times a week. This also has no informational value. It’s just used for polarisation (who the fuck gives something about a +0.2% for some party years before the next election, unless it’s either that party telling a fabvolous story of their increasing support or their opposition trying to scare people).

        We have (more or less) representative democracies with long terms, because everything else is highly impractical. We don’t need polls every few days as actual policies don’t shift that quick. Those polls are only used to fine tune the latest propaganda narratives or (social) media campaigns, not to evaluate actual support of people for the policies their governments enact.

        So I also don’t need yet another “rejoining the EU single market” poll when there is no vote about it even planned and it’s from the same polling group that screwed up their prediction for Brexit originally. Yes, I already know they magically find all those pro-EU Brits and get high support numbers for cooperation witht he EU. Didn’t help them with the reality of Brexit…

        If there ever is another referendum or an important political decision about pursuing more cooperation with the EU, would love to see some polls. With an emphasis on plural, and then some averaging between them and a proper analysis of the methodology and exact questions asked. Yet another YouGov online poll about “who wants to rejoin the single market” without actual details about the question and how detailed the people asked where informed about what this all entails… yeah, not thanks. Please get rid of that crap.

    • taladar@feddit.de
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      Just like for example a majority of Europeans when asked wants to stop daylight saving time changes for permanent ‘summer time’ (because summer is a more positive connotation when that 1 hour shift from standard time is bad by any objective metric and actually bad for our health).

      This is total nonsense. Which time would make more sense to adopt permanently depends on several factors including the geographic location within the current very wide CET/CEST time zone (one makes more sense on the west end, the other on the east end) and when people start and end their days.

      Personally I am in favour of just getting rid of the entire time zone system and just getting up at a time that makes sense for you locally without changing the entire clock to match. That would have the benefit that talking about time would become several orders of magnitude easier on a world-wide scale, the person-years required to develop anything related to calendars would be cut in half, most people could calculate travel times in their heads even across what is currently multiple time zones,… with the only major downside being that the date would change some time while we are awake and possibly working.

      • Ooops@kbin.social
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        This is total nonsense.

        It isn’t. It’s science. Increasing the time between us waking up and the sun naturally rising has adverse health effects. It also has the same effects on people more to the east of a time zone relatively. They are just in a slightly better position naturally.

        • taladar@feddit.de
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          You mean between the time the sun rises and the time we get up? Which is what east/west location determines and the other factor I mentioned.

          Not to mention that it also has adverse health effects when it gets dark before most full time employees even finish their work day because some morning fetishists need extra daylight an hour before most people even get up.

    • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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      The way a referendum works is that the side with more votes gets to do the thing, in this case brexit. How you voted does not matter as the majority of your countries population (who voted) voted to leave. You don’t get to “I voted for Kodos” this 7 years later.

      • alvvayson@lemmy.world
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        That referendum was 7 years ago and it passed with a 2% majority, under conditions where the Leave campaign was caught lying out of their teeth.

        A lot of people who voted on it have died since then and a whole cohort of people aged 18-25 didn’t get a chance to vote.

        Democracy required them to go through with it, but democracy also means they are allowed to change their mind and apply for EU, EER or EFTA membership.

        I, for one, will welcome them back at the soonest opportunity.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        How is that fair? If the vote had been to oppress an minority group you wouldn’t then go oh well it’s that population groups fault for being oppressed would you?

        I’m not sure that the level of vitriol here is entirely justified. Wouldn’t the European Union be more economically sound if the UK rejoined. Wouldn’t a unified trade block be the best thing possible you should want the UK back in if the UK wants back in. I do not get this attitude of oh screw all the British people because well the vast majority of Scottish didn’t want it, most of the population of London didn’t want it. It was basically just a bunch of idiot yokels and old people who are now dead who wanted to leave the EU because they thought the EU was in some way this evil entity.

        • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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          Not sure where you get vitriol and the idea anything is fair. I am also not extra happy Scotland did not leave the UK but as there was a vote (just 2 years too soon) and last time I checked things still work that way so I like most people have to live with it.

          Hold a referendum on the issue then again (I am sure it will also be a mess). Its insane that people now think you can somehow ignore a majority vote because you don’t like the result. Was this a bad idea? yes. Is the UK filled with “a bunch of idiot yokels and old people”? also yes.

          • interolivary@beehaw.org
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            Its insane that people now think you can somehow ignore a majority vote because you don’t like the result.

            Making a bad decision doesn’t mean you can never, ever rethink that decision and have to stick with it no matter what.

            If the majority doesn’t like the result, then what’s the point of not reconsidering things?

            • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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              Never said otherwise. But retroactively arguing the issue without a new referendum is an issue.

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            It was barely a majority vote and anyway it wasn’t legally binding so the government could have totally ignored it at the time and been fine the vote was utterly pointless.

            The problem is the morons held the vote then decided to uphold the decision of the vote even though It was essentially only getting soundings.

            It was a trade relationship why was it a matter of public consultation?

            The people of the UK have been extremely hurt by this and it’s just irritating to see that apparently there would be resistance in the EU to fixing a mistake. Why is there resistance I don’t get it?

            • ebikefolder@feddit.de
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              Why is there resistance I don’t get it?

              The history of British whining and cherrypicking. They never behaved like regular members, but more like “special snowflakes”. I understand the fear that they might start this nonsense again, once back in the the union.

            • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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              It was barely a majority vote and anyway it wasn’t legally binding so the government could have totally ignored it

              The problem is the morons held the vote then decided to uphold the decision of the vote

              Do you see the problem with this approach?

    • Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee
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      Ok I’m British, I live in a country that gave me permanent residency before this shit show. The remainers mismanaged the campaign by resorting to the arguments of “lol you’re so stupid” and “omg so racist”. They also completely and overwhelmingly underestimated the power of propaganda to influence public opinion. And didn’t realise that a generation of blaming the EU for Westminster’s shitty decision making might have consequences. The remainers are just as culpable as the people who voted to leave.

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        Yeah, I remember the people being interviewed on the street saying they where remainers and also they where not planing to vote. It was a silly time.

    • Syrus@lemmy.world
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      You don’t understand, we are sympathetic but the lead up to brexit did have a part in tanking the economy… Aside from inflation, Covid, etc… You guys need to get your shit together before we can move on. It will take time and make no mistake, You will never again regain the priviliged position you had before. It absolutely sucks for the remainers but thats how it is.

    • Rainman@feddit.de
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      There is a lot of sympathy for those unlucky brits that voted remain. As a person who strongly identifies as european, I can barely imagine how it must have felt to leave our union. Made me heartbroken back then.

      We just cannot give you a better treatment than those brits who voted to leave when it comes to rejoining. Unless you all move to Scotland and then leave the UK.

  • plz1@lemmy.world
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    I’m sure the EU would (re)welcome the UK as a member, but it will almost certainly not be on the same terms they had before Brexit. I do hope it happens, but I’m also a pessimist.

    • kpw@kbin.social
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      Are you sure? I don’t mind. Together we have a stronger economy. If they want to be subject of all EU market policy without having a voice in the decision process that’s their choice.

      • neeeeDanke@feddit.de
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        In a few decades maybe. Or in a non-voting manner similar to norway, but with how they sabotaged the eu from the inside while they were in it and the very conservative politics over there I don’t think the UK rejoining as a full member would be beneficial to the EU at this point.

        • johan@feddit.nl
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          Would love the UK back. Besides wanting it to be easier to travel there, I think it is also the best way to show how beneficial the EU is. If they already want back in after such a short period of time it sends a strong message to the many anti-EU people across the continent.

              • Ummdustry@sh.itjust.works
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                (more than half, strictly speaking, I was 16 during the referrendum. If you add up all the zoomers like me that have entered the voting pool since 2016 (and assume they would vote at the rates & ratios 18 year olds did) it’d overturn the 52% majority of the leave vote)

      • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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        The issue is that the UK is too big both population and economy wise to be content with following EU’s laws unquestionably.

        They already complained about it when it was not actually happening so imagine the outrage this time around.

        • taladar@feddit.de
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          I would say it has more to do with the size of their sense of self-importance and the size of their illegal money business.

  • Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee
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    No shit! As a Brit living in another country I would like Britain to never have left. BUT, now that Britain has left, I’d like to punish those who allowed Brexit to happen by preventing them from rejoining. You’ve made your nasty scat bed, now fucking lie in it.

    • eldain@feddit.nl
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      As EU citizen watching from the sidelines, I’m disappointed nobody is rallying for political reforms. The UK government has proven multiple times now it is incapable of governing and policing to adapt for changing realities. I don’t think the UK is ready for any future until painful structural reforms of their parliamentary system and executive. This mess was and is caused by UK politics and they deserve all the anger as fuel to fix their workplace. Until then, an effort to rejoin would occupy the executive for years and make UK life only worse because necessary local policy-making would’nd get the attention it deserves.

      • Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee
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        Ever since the French revolution, the establishment in Britain has been bending over backwards to ensure the status quo (as far as they’re concerned) remains. The British parliamentary system is doing exactly what it was designed to do. The sheep who live there are kept busy with xenophobia and infighting with the sole purpose of keeping them isolated from dangerous ideas.

  • Yaarmehearty@lemmy.ml
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    While I would love to have the UK rejoin it won’t happen in at least the next 5-8 years, probably not even 20 years. The problem isn’t just whether the EU would accept the UK it’s that the Brexit period was so politically toxic the two main parties won’t touch it.

    The people can say they want it all they like but unless a governing party is willing to risk tearing itself apart over it then it won’t go anywhere.

    • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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      It’s a shame that Starmer won’t budge on it, although a part of me wonders if it is a ploy to get votes in, so that he can switch his stance once in power and do pretty much what he wants.

      Like it or not, the gammon vote is quite powerful, but once his five year term is in, he could get back into the EU within 1-2 years, and take the next 3-4 benefitting from a stronger economy.

      • Syrus@lemmy.world
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        I hate to break it to you but you’re dilusional, you have no idea how much most of the EU despises the UK and your arrogance is only adding fuel to the fire.

        • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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          I mean, I’ve watched Eurovision before.

          Besides, my point is almost entirely around the UK’s viewpoint of the EU. The terms of rejoining are irrelevant unless the UK public would back it without kicking off.

  • PlatypusXray@feddit.de
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    Britain must rejoin! It is time to stop this undignified squabbling! It is time to quit fighting over petty whims! It is time to stand together, to unite and to face the great terrible evil in the very heart of europe: Belgium!

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      The UK is already a member of Europe you idiot it’s the EU the UK left

      • Novman@feddit.it
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        Oops a typo and i’m an idiot… Uk is a part of europe geographically. Culturaly speaking… Less and less.

      • force@lemmy.world
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        The UK is as much of a member of Europe as Greenland is a member of America… you could count it, but you could also just not. When people are talking about North America they’re usually not thinking about Greenland. In the same way, the UK is often not considered when talking about Europe (although it is more tied to mainland history). When people say Europe they often mean to exclude some countries like the UK or maybe Turkey (but not always).