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I can't speak for everyone personally, or anyone on here at all, but no one I know really had an opinion about being in the EU this time last year, or even a few months ago. But now a lot of people seem to have formed this really strong opinion we should leave, when they didn't care before.
I didn't have a problem being in the EU before, and I feel it's a bit strange to begin caring and having this strong opinion we should leave like you've been crushed your entire life, when no one had a problem a year ago. Again I must reiterate that is merely a personal observation I have made, and it 100% does not apply to everyone, nor anyone on here. People probably did have opinions about it beforehand, but just the majority of people I have spoken to seem to have had conjured this strong anti-EU stance in the last few months almost because they've been told to care. |
It's worth reiterating that a lot British people have this bizarre sense of cultural and political supremacy, based chiefly on an empire built upon slave trade, subjugation of foreign nations and military conquest.
We are, in 2016, a middling power with aspirations way above our capability. We can't even scale our economy to utilise the immigration into the country properly. The UK is the self indignant, moody cunt of Europe and it wouldn't surprise me if we sacrificed all the good of the EU to sate our ultra nationalist fears of sharing political power and staunching the flow of working immigrants. |
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I'll be damned if I have to have a passport handy every time I go down South.
Remain!! |
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Connel's got a point. I can't pretend to care or get indignant about EU control over some particular legislation. I can't pretend to get riled up about the flow of immigration when it's never worried me on a personal level previously.
I think a lot of people in the UK are the same. It's why we keep hearing about this large, relatively neutral base of voters that are a bit frustrated by the rhetoric on either side. They just want to be able to weigh the facts of one decision against the other. Unfortunately, the impression I get is that these facts are difficult to provide and the outcome of Brexit is difficult to predict. So we get a fair amount of sensationalism. I mean Cameron insinuating that war could come of Brexit or Boris Johnson comparing the grasp of the EU over Europe to Hitler's plans for the continent don't do either side any real favours. Then these large financial organisations come out and say Brexit would be a very bad economic decision yet Brexit highlight where these institutions have been wrong in the past (as with Britain joining the Euro) and start throwing out their own statistics. You'd like to just go along with the IMF but maybe the Brexit side has a bit of a point? It's difficult to maneuver. And the closer you dig the more susceptible you become to parroting either sides' arguments. At the moment I'll probably vote Remain because I've yet to hear a series of Brexit arguments that truly compel me the change the status quo - which might have some negative effects living in Northern Ireland and with the industry I'm trying to work in. |
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Austria-Hungary was again, a nation that imposed very strict repressive policies based upon one's ethnic group. An Austro-Hungarian elite (one might actually say a South German elite, excluding Hungarians in all but name), presided over an empire constituting Serbs, Bosniaks, Turks, Albanians and Croatians to name a few. Yugoslavia (a successor state of Austria-Hungary of course); another nation comprising other cultures that got on together very well under the fairly beneficent dictatorship of Tito. All fell apart when he died and far right minority fascists underwent a maniacal genocide. There's a common trend here, and it's not "BIG GUV FALES". Subjugation, inequality and repression are the evils. |
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Most people voting for the local elections in UK have their own interests in mind. The elections have a huge influence on the UK.
Most people voting for the EU elections *don't* have the interests of British people in mind. The EU elections have a huge influence on the UK. I pointed that out before so that my previous post in no way leads to the conclusion you gave me. |
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Most people voting for the UK elections *don't* have the interests of London people in mind. The UK elections have a huge influence on London. |
London is not a different country. It's an essential part of Britain.
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London votes for representatives to the UK parliament, just as the UK votes for representatives to the EU parliament.
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Does London conspire against UK? Does it want to harm UK in an economical or other way?
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I can't live down the idea of having to present my passport every time I want to go to a friend's. Bullshite, I say. |
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Also for your point to work, you first need to prove the EU is conspiring against the UK or vice-versa. Otherwise you’re just making up a scare-story to suit your argument. |
EU as a whole is not conspiring against UK.
But not all countries ever love UK and wish the best for UK. |
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Even so, you can bet that there are areas of the UK that don't especially like London either. And more broadly there will be parts of the UK that dislike other parts - it's a union of countries after all.
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Everyone fucking hates London, it may as well be a separate country in and of itself. Even I hate it and I work there.
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Here in Canada (I am British) the majority of refuges coming in are generally sponsored by government officials or people with wealth.
It doesn't make sense to me, how are they refuges? I vote leave, we can follow examples of other countries that are doing fine without the EU. However, and just my personal opinion, we will remain in the EU. |
The border control in EU is pretty weak, they let in people with no identification and the system is severly abused by african people from countries that aren't even at war, trying to disguise themselves as Syrian refugees. They just want freebie houses and privileges and hardly give a damn about even learning the language of the country they mass-invade. And they get what they want.
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Whole situation is odd.
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Also you don't need a passport to travel from Northern Ireland to the Republic because there literally is no physical border. There are no stops or checkpoints. You can simply drive South until you start seeing road signs in Gaeilge. The concern would be that Brexit would possibly lead to an actual physical border of sorts or disrupt the free movement between both countries. |
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