Well, Thal, we'll have at least in part to agree to disagree there (as indeed I rather expected).
No doubt it was a close call, but discounting the votes of the Countries that get more out than they put in, the vote of the English people was clearly in favour of a Brexit and only bad losers would want a re-run.
The T&Cs for the referendum should have been challenged at the outset and, had that been done successfully, there would either have been a need for a re-run or the
status quo would have held sway; something as important as this should not be decidable regardless of what proportion of the electorate vote and regardless of how small the majority is. I would say the same had there been a tiny majority in favour of Remain on a less than 75% turnout, so my view has nothing to do with "bad losing".
Indeed, the first Scottish referendum should have been held under the same T&Cs - 60%+ for the winning side af 75%+ turnout and it should also be for the second one.
The whole campaign has been divisive and most politicians, previous Prime Ministers and business leaders favoured Remain, but I feel that such is the mistrust of our leaders, that many people (including me) took that they meant Remain would be good for them and not the average working man, which would almost certainly have been the case if Remain had won.
Here I do broadly agree with you. The manner in which the campaign was handled on both siade left a great deal to be desired; indeed, some (including Jeremy Corbyn) have noted that the Leave vote is largely one of protest against "the establishment" and I'm not so sure that this is far wrong. However, those who voted Remain did not all do it in the principal hope of feathering their own personal nests; I do not think it credible to claim thus for the majorities in the cities not only of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dundee but also Manchester, Liverpool, Newcastle, Bristol and substantial parts of London.
The treatment of Nigel Farage has been appalling.
Substitute "by" for "of" and you'd be dead right!
He has been labelled a racist and the biased BBC never misses an opportunity to have a go.
But what would you expect when so much of what he says and thinks is represented by that poster? He is a disgrace to politics (although far from alone in that!).
However, he speaks for a lot of working class people that simply want to be in control of their own future and are fed up with the wave of humanity invading our borders that undercut wages.
I don't believe that. Immigration as an issue in the "debate" hs been whipped up mainly by Mr Farage, the principal aim of whose wearisome presentation seems to be to mimic an English pub bore; his party polled less than 4m votes in the last General Election, which is less than one quarter of the votes for Leave yesterday, which shows clearly that immigration was only a relatively small issue for the Leavers as a while.
Statistics can be a fickle thing, but not only do some immigrants do work that UK people don't want to, but they also ensure that some of our industries, including NHS, work better than otherwise they would. "Immigrants" - as well as non-immigrants - "undercut wages" only because unscrupulous employers are willing to pay them and victimised employees accept them despite the existence of a national mimimum wage.
There are also plenty of self-employed immigrants. It has been said that there is a net economic benefit from immigrants. OK, so I'm an immigrant of sorts myself and will become a more official one should Scotland vote to leave UK, but the point is well made, I think...
He is more trustworthy than the entire Labour Party put together and at least with him you know what you are getting.
He's about as trustworthy as a bent Detective Chief Superitendent but, even if hr were indeed more trustworthy than the entire Labour Party (which he isn't), that wouldn't say much for him, would it?!
It is a great day to be an Englishman
Well, not only am I not one but there are many Englishmen and women who would disagree, including more than 16m who voted remain - that's nearly 25% of every man, woman and child in UK as a whole.
and I do not agree with the doom merchants.
Then you're unrealistically optimistic.
The referendum has been won for the Brexiters
On a very poorly structured and campaigned referendum.
and the traitor Cameron has rightly resigned.
He is not a "traitor" but should never have launched this referendum in the first place as it was entirely unnecessary and a cynical plot to try to plaster over cracks in his own party but, for that alone, I do agree that he has rightly resigned.
Maybe now, we can start to build this Country back to greatness
As long as we have plenty of good Polish brickies! But hand on a minute;
which country? UK, all of which voted yesterday? Or just England?
and stop pouring billions down the throats of foreigners
But do you really suppose that UK won't buy any more from EU member states? - and at vastly inflated prices unless the currency recovers? And what about all the French (and German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Austrian, &c.) wine that UK citizens pour down their own throats, having imported it from those nations?
If the Scots want Independence, then let them have and if they want EU membership, then they can foot the bill.
If they do so and if Northern Ireland rejoins the Republic, the prospect of an United Kingdom of England and Wales will look pretty silly. Even the Queen might find heself obliged to "consider her position" just as the Remain supporting party leaders have done or are doing.
Whatever happens, UK will still be significantly affected by EU and vice versa.
What of all the expats now living in EU member states? Mightn't the return of a substantial number of them to UK give rise to an effect not dissimilar to the influx of migrants from the countries in which they now live, or indeed from elsewhere? In any case, unless there is a UKIP government following the next General Election (which mercifully isn't going to happen, since nearly 4m votes at the last General Election gained them just one of the 650 seats in the House of Commons), I don't see that any immigration reduction targets will go near being met any more than they have been under the present government.
I think that the decision has been an unnecessary and foolish one based upon very poorly structured referendum conditions that UK will come to regret unless either the current government petition about the way that the referendum's been held makes a difference (there are almost 140,000 signatures so far, all made over a few hours) or a bunch of high-powered fancy constitutional lawyers find some way to dismantle it (which looks unlikely but might not be entirely inconceivable).
Best,
Alistair