Cheetah
Deity
It seems the EU Commission civil servants have a well earned reputation for being elite.
What does the commission has to do with us renegotiating our fees?

It seems the EU Commission civil servants have a well earned reputation for being elite.

What does the commission has to do with us renegotiating our fees?![]()
there is the alternate view too.The problem with UK invoking the article 50 is that by doing so they set a time limit for the negotiations to end. After that they've lost pretty much of their bargaining chips. That's why they're going to linger indefinitely with it.
David Cameron renewed the BBC's charter on very favourable terms for the over paid BBC executives shortly before the campaign really warmed up. I think that was part of an underhand understanding the BBC would only publicise the more eccentric Brexiters.
How else do you think Remain got as much as 48% of the vote?

Really? Remain only got 48% because the BBC was actively complicit in spreading pro-Remain propaganda? Are you actually being serious?![]()
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/eu-referendum-racism_uk_576fe161e4b08d2c56396075
I'd like to hear more about how this vote had nothing, nothing, to do with racism.
I don’t think this is anything else but a massive defeat for progressive forces, not just in the U.K., but across Europe. You know, we see celebration from the likes of Marine Le Pen of the far-right National Front in France, Geert Wilders in Holland, far-right forces in Germany and Austria. This is a victory that the most unsavory parts of politics, not just here in the U.K., but across Europe, are celebrating. And I think, as people who are progressives and believe in an anti-racist, anti-xenophobic future for our country and for our continent, we should be very, very worried. We’ve woken up today to a Britain in which it is a much, much scarier place to be a migrant.
And, yes, I mean, there are many problems with the European Union. My campaign, Another Europe is Possible, we campaigned explicitly to stay in to change it, to make it into a better organization, to democratize it. The EU is—what the EU did in Greece was an abomination. But that—I mean, despite all that, what is definitely clear is that this referendum, which has been fought by the leave camp pretty much on two issues, one of which is—sort of basically lies about putting more money into NHS, which I think everyone almost agrees, including many people in the leave side agree, were basically untrue, and the second issue, which I think was probably overwhelming and probably led to their victory, was immigration. And I think that should scare us a lot. And it does scare me. I have been up all night, and I’m genuinely terrified about the future for this country and this continent. And, you know, from Trump in America to Le Pen in France, the enemies of progressive politics, the enemies of internationalism are celebrating, and we should be worried.
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/eu-referendum-racism_uk_576fe161e4b08d2c56396075
I'd like to hear more about how this vote had nothing, nothing, to do with racism.
Well, actually I would argue that 100% of the UK population is racist because that's how racism works (we're all racist, it's just some of us prefer to pretend we aren't).
My point is that Leave's victory is a victory for the forces of reaction and should be treated as such. People on the left claiming this as a victory for the left are wrong. As a pro-Remain lefty they interviewed recently on Democracy Now! put it:
Voting the interests of the racists and nationalists normalizes their behavior. You can't cast your lot in with them and then cry foul when they feel empowered.
If you find this distasteful, you should have considered that before voting "Leave."
Manfred Belheim said:If Scotland had voted to leave the UK two years ago, knowing full well that that would lead to exactly the same uncertainty over EU membership and exactly the same financial and political upheaval that we're seeing now (they didn't even know what bloody currency they'd be using afterwards), would you have condemned the "Yes" voters (or "No", can't remember which way round it was) as xenophobic, racist, ignorant, hateful bigots?
Nah. People associate advocacy of Britain leaving the EU with the right, xenophobia and bigotry because those groups advocating most prominently for Britain leaving Europe are right-wing, xenophoic and bigoted, while they associated advocacy of Scottish independence with the left, forward-thinking and progressivism because those groups advocating most prominently for Scotland existing the Union are left-wing, forward-thinking and progressive.
Euroscepticism is not inherently right-wing and Scottish seperatism is not inherently left-wing. There are left-wing Eurosceptics and even a few right-wing Scottish seperatists. But, in the UK, Euroscepticism has effectively been a force for reaction and Scottish separatism a force for- well, perhaps not "progress", but at least a rear-guard action on behalf of cultural pluralism and the welfare state.
You can't blame people for associating a movement with the people who predominate within that movement.
Collectivist nonsense.
And yet you're the one bringing racism into each and every single discussion you partake. Guess I'm not the obsessed one.@akka I don't deal in 'racism accusations,' I already said everyone is racist (including me). "Racism accusations" and treating racism as an individual trait that must be demonstrated to exist in a given individual is a fixation you have, not me.