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Brexit discussion thread IX (Please read OP before posting)

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,158 ✭✭✭✭Kermit.de.frog


    I think those were too young to vote, or never watched the news from 1969 to 1995. I doubt the 30,000 troops that guarded it were in any doubt about the border.

    I'd say most Brexit voters (i don't mean obviously military or people with experience of the border) either genuinely didn't know or didn't care that there was a border here. The evidence for one or the other or a mix of both is pretty overwhelming to be honest.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    Most of them thought we are still part of the UK and didn't even know there was a border in my opinion.

    Really.

    I've encountered some incredible ignorance in the UK about where Ireland is, what the Republic of Ireland is and so on. I remember one example of going to a doctor in London when I was over there for a few weeks on a business trip and bringing my EHIC card. She looked at me in total befuddlement as to why I didn't have UK national insurance number (their version of a PPSN). I explained I was from Ireland and she said "but that doesn't explain why you don't have an NI number. Do you not have an NHS number?!" I explained again that it was a different country and this appeared to be the first time in her life that she actually raised that the Republic of Ireland wasn't just like Scotland or some slightly different UK jurisdiction.

    It surprised me, as I would have assumed that a GP would have a good bit of general knowledge, but clearly it just never crossed her focus at any stage!

    She was absolutely charming and very happy to help, but just this was the first time that she'd ever thought about it.

    She also explained that it confused her because she'd encountered people from the Isle of Man, Jersey, Guernsey etc and had assumed maybe it worked a bit like that and that some of the Scottish NHS systems are also completely different.

    I wouldn't necessarily say it's any kind of wilful ignorance on most people's parts, rather they were simply never told the facts about their nearest neighbours or even about how the jurisdictions within the UK itself work. They also don't tend to assume we're 'foreign' as Irish and British people have that special status under the CTA the nationality doesn't really matter. I think they genuinely largely seem to think Ireland's just another UK region, unless they've actually paid attention to it.

    It's remarkably ignorant, but then again ask your average Irish person to name a few English counties and you get the same kind of bewildered blankness. The same occurs if you ask Americans about Canada or French people about the language divide in Belgium or something like that. People often have far less knowledge than they think they do!

    I think though when it comes to people talking about European affairs on TV and any MP at this stage, not knowing the facts about this stuff is utterly inexcusable at this stage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,046 ✭✭✭✭briany


    It's remarkably ignorant, but then again ask your average Irish person to name a few English counties and you get the same kind of bewildered blankness. The same occurs if you ask Americans about Canada or French people about the language divide in Belgium or something like that. People often have far less knowledge than they think they do!

    Ah, now here. I may not now exactly where to place Derbyshire on a map, but I do know where England is located and that it's a separate country. British people not even realising that Ireland is a separate country is a whole other level of ignorance. What were they learning in geography class? How do their extrapolation skills fail so spectacularly when they hear the words, "Northern Ireland" listed in the constituent countries of the UK?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,698 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    I think those were too young to vote, or never watched the news from 1969 to 1995. I doubt the 30,000 troops that guarded it were in any doubt about the border.

    Well they very often used to find themselves "accidentally" on the wrong side of it back in the day, so perhaps those of us who were sceptical about their motives were being too harsh, and they genuinely didn't grasp the whole concept? :D

    ”I enjoy cigars, whisky and facing down totalitarians, so am I really Winston Churchill?” (JK Rowling)



  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,567 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    I'm amused that the Brexiteer cabinet are claiming that they should not be subject to the agreement negotiated under May given their change of cabinet.

    It's like a group of underage teenagers trying to buy alcohol from a shop and they send in one guy who gets refused only to try send in a second, all while the shop assistant is watching them outside the window.

    By that logic, Theresa May wasnt bound by the referendum because it happened under Cameron. But I guess consistency is a valuable commodity these days!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    briany wrote: »
    Ah, now here. I may not now exactly where to place Derbyshire on a map, but I do know where England is located and that it's a separate country. British people not even realising that Ireland is a separate country is a whole other level of ignorance. What were they learning in geography class? How do their extrapolation skills fail so spectacularly when they hear the words, "Northern Ireland" listed in the constituent countries of the UK?

    Well, I've been asked "is there a sea between the North and South of Ireland".
    I've had a UK company send my phone number to a US company as +44 353 21 555 XXXX. The same company in the states figured it out, and asked me "Are you sure the address is Cork T23 XXXX, United Kingdom.. we didn't think it was..." I've dealt with tourists who were shocked to discover that £ sterling aren't accepted in Cork.

    The one I regularly get is people demanding to be able to pay by BACS rather than IBAN and not accepting that I want payment in Euro not Sterling, as per the invoice and agreement.

    I also had "I thought it was the same country, you have 3 pin plugs!"

    Generally the level of general ignorance about the geography is mind-boggling, but I mean it seems to apply to their own internal geography too.

    The aspect that shocks me most is the cognitive dissonance that allows them to disown 19th century Irish history, as if we just ran the country into the ground all by ourselves. Even reading a book that referred to "Irish refugees fleeing the famine to Britain." when at the time Ireland was part of the UK and they were simply fleeing from a UK region that had been so mismanaged (by their government) that people were literally starving. Every one of the Irish who fled to the US in the 19th century in starving circumstances were British citizens/subjects and were departing from the UK. An independent Ireland didn't exist at the time.

    Nobody talks about Irish independence as the partial dissolution of the UK, which it was.
    Nobody mentions that they shelled and burnt their own cities i.e. Dublin and Cork.

    Also, they seem to think Northern Ireland's not part of the UK when it is causing any kind of turmoil it's suddenly "Ireland" and when anyone suggests that it might leave it's "the UK.." When you look at it objectively, almost the entire 'troubles' occurred in the UK (with the notable exceptions of the Dublin and Monaghan bombings), the entire conflict occurred in Northern Ireland (a part of the UK) and the major atrocities that were committed beyond that were mostly in England. Yet, somehow it's seen as somehow our problem!?!

    Whether you've a nationalist or unionist outlook, the cognitive dissonance and selective blindness in British circles is baffling at times.

    It's very much a case of "those who don't know their own history are doomed to repeat it."
    I think the UK absolutely needs to take ownership of its past here. I'm not saying they should wallow in it, but they should know it in much the same way as they know about the order of Tudor kings in huge detail.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,567 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    What I cant figure out is the line about not putting up a border in the event of a no deal, so there will only be a border if Ireland puts it up. Even the (relatively) smarter Brexiteers parrot this line e.g. Jacob Rees Mogg.

    But I just cant see how that is compatible with taking control of their borders.

    Re: the Taoiseach meeting the Prime Minister, Im guessing he will just restate what has been said before, maybe with some future relationship talk. But the ourpose of meeting is purely goodwill, for Ireland to say at least we tried. I cant see anything else coming of it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,158 ✭✭✭✭Kermit.de.frog


    What I cant figure out is the line about not putting up a border in the event of a no deal, so there will only be a border if Ireland puts it up. Even the (relatively) smarter Brexiteers parrot this line e.g. Jacob Rees Mogg.

    But I just cant see how that is compatible with taking control of their borders.

    Re: the Taoiseach meeting the Prime Minister, Im guessing he will just restate what has been said before, maybe with some future relationship talk. But the ourpose of meeting is purely goodwill, for Ireland to say at least we tried. I cant see anything else coming of it

    A meeting makes no sense for Johnson. The reason he won't meet with leaders in Europe is because he does not want the optics of being told 'no' and being sent on his way.

    Can't see this meeting happening for some time.

    In fact it would not surprise me if the G7 is the only time he meets Merkel and Macron ahead of a UK general election.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 518 ✭✭✭Lackadaisical


    @johnnyskeleton: Again cognitive dissonance crops up in all of their arguments.

    You've all the rhetoric of "A Global Britain" that's aggressively trying to make life as uncomfortable as possible for immigrants, under a regime literally called Hostile Environment and a country that's claiming to be open to business while ripping up its deepest trade deal with the EU, utterly screwing over companies by pulling all the regulatory rugs out from under them and giving them absolutely no certainty whatsoever on any aspect of trade. It's also ripping up huge numbers of very significant trade deals with non-EU countries that it's been part of via the EU and it continues to pretend that they didn't ever exist to fulfil some kind of daft domestic political rhetoric that fabricates a total falsehood there was a dichotomy between being in the EU and being able to trade globally.

    The whole thing is absolutely nuts and can do nothing other than cause severe economic damage.

    I am really worried for the UK at this stage - a large part of the country didn't vote for this and they are going to be driven over the cliff by people operating on pure spin and rhetoric. There's only so far you can go with that before it has to be implemented in reality and, unlike the US, the UK does not have the scale, huge mixed economy or momentum to just sail on through the chaos.

    You can only hide behind political slogans for so long. You eventually have to actually make it work and if you're basing your plans on a pack of lies and fantasy, well...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,280 ✭✭✭fash


    What I cant figure out is the line about not putting up a border in the event of a no deal, so there will only be a border if Ireland puts it up. Even the (relatively) smarter Brexiteers parrot this line e.g. Jacob Rees Mogg.

    But I just cant see how that is compatible with taking control of their borders.
    The idea seems to be to wait out Ireland, then once Ireland puts one up claim that the evil Irish clearly never cared about a border, it was clearly lies to stop Brexit, so why should they?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,492 ✭✭✭McGiver


    J Mysterio wrote:
    I will stop here before I meander too far. I realise these thoughts will prove highly objectionable to some and so I reiterate I am drawing a comparison between Brexit and the ascent of Nazism for illustrative purposes only: how can a nation take such a wayward path with such significant support? It strikes me there are many similarities.
    Not objectionable at all, actually. Maybe to the British, but not anyone non British. Albeit it is somewhat speculative to compare the rise of Tory hard-right Brexit and the rise of National Socialism in 1920s Germany, I actually subscribe to the same way of thinking as yourself - Johnson is not Hitler, and Tory party are not NSDAP, but there are certainly many parallels.

    The worst case scenario which may unfold from UK crash-out is as follows.

    1. Disaster capitalism, deregulation, massive privatisation of the remaining public assets and services, deconstruction of the welfare state, US "vasalage" - chaos ensues, prices go up, labour regulations are gone, working class and middle class suffer. Working class get more angry.
    2. Recession kicks in, unemployment rises. Working class suffers and get more angry
    3. Political opportunists use the economic and social chaos to pass more authoritarian legislation given more power to the government and/or make unconstitutional moves to the same effect.
    4. Political opportunists and allied media engage in propaganda where the EU is used as a scapegoat to further advance their power and to make the working class more angry. Basically, the crash-out may be portrayed as the UK version of the Versailles treaty.
    -->
    You end up with angry people and quasi-authoritarian government on a slippery slope spiralling towards authoritarianism. And then it could really resemble Hitler.

    So current situation is quite far away from Hitler of course , but the HMG & Tory actions are now setting conditions for it to slide into Hitleresque state under certain circumstances.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,988 ✭✭✭Enzokk


    fash wrote: »
    The idea seems to be to wait out Ireland, then once Ireland puts one up claim that the evil Irish clearly never cared about a border, it was clearly lies to stop Brexit, so why should they?


    That is a plan, but they will have lots of trouble on the other border way before we start worrying about the border here. Their hand will surely be forced by food shortages and tailbacks on the M20 before any pressure from the EU is put on us regarding the border.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,046 ✭✭✭✭briany


    What I cant figure out is the line about not putting up a border in the event of a no deal, so there will only be a border if Ireland puts it up. Even the (relatively) smarter Brexiteers parrot this line e.g. Jacob Rees Mogg.

    But I just cant see how that is compatible with taking control of their borders.

    Re: the Taoiseach meeting the Prime Minister, Im guessing he will just restate what has been said before, maybe with some future relationship talk. But the ourpose of meeting is purely goodwill, for Ireland to say at least we tried. I cant see anything else coming of it

    As I said before, I think 'taking control of our borders', is code for "keep the Poles, Romanians, 'Refugees', Roma and Blacks out", or at least to stop any more getting in. It's really about pulling up the drawbridge to the continent and turning the English channel into something of a moat. I don't know if Brexit voters considered the Irish border, but my suspicion is that they got 'Channel Tunnel vision' on the matter, rendering the Irish border an irrelevance anyway.

    Maybe a lot of arch-Brexiteers believe that those who used to try and get to the UK will try and get to Ireland instead, and when Ireland is up to its neck in migrants, the UK can sit there laughing. Or maybe they think that even if a few brown people do cross over, the UK can judiciously throw them back out, once found, without that pesky EU tapping them on the shoulder saying weird stuff about human rights, or whatever. Perhaps they could even throw those illegals directly into the sea.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,379 ✭✭✭✭Strazdas


    What I cant figure out is the line about not putting up a border in the event of a no deal, so there will only be a border if Ireland puts it up. Even the (relatively) smarter Brexiteers parrot this line e.g. Jacob Rees Mogg.

    But I just cant see how that is compatible with taking control of their borders.

    Re: the Taoiseach meeting the Prime Minister, Im guessing he will just restate what has been said before, maybe with some future relationship talk. But the ourpose of meeting is purely goodwill, for Ireland to say at least we tried. I cant see anything else coming of it

    It's totally disingenuous. They know full well that SM rules mean that there must be a hard border between the EU and a non aligned third country, but are trying to claim that if one goes up post-Brexit "It's nothing to do with us Guv, we didn't put up a border".

    Anyone putting forward this argument is clearly not acting in good faith.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,088 ✭✭✭✭BonnieSituation


    Well, I've been asked "is there a sea between the North and South of Ireland".
    I've had a UK company send my phone number to a US company as +44 353 21 555 XXXX. The same company in the states figured it out, and asked me "Are you sure the address is Cork T23 XXXX, United Kingdom.. we didn't think it was..." I've dealt with tourists who were shocked to discover that £ sterling aren't accepted in Cork.

    The one I regularly get is people demanding to be able to pay by BACS rather than IBAN and not accepting that I want payment in Euro not Sterling, as per the invoice and agreement.

    I also had "I thought it was the same country, you have 3 pin plugs!"

    Generally the level of general ignorance about the geography is mind-boggling, but I mean it seems to apply to their own internal geography too.

    The aspect that shocks me most is the cognitive dissonance that allows them to disown 19th century Irish history, as if we just ran the country into the ground all by ourselves. Even reading a book that referred to "Irish refugees fleeing the famine to Britain." when at the time Ireland was part of the UK and they were simply fleeing from a UK region that had been so mismanaged (by their government) that people were literally starving. Every one of the Irish who fled to the US in the 19th century in starving circumstances were British citizens/subjects and were departing from the UK. An independent Ireland didn't exist at the time.

    Nobody talks about Irish independence as the partial dissolution of the UK, which it was.
    Nobody mentions that they shelled and burnt their own cities i.e. Dublin and Cork.

    Also, they seem to think Northern Ireland's not part of the UK when it is causing any kind of turmoil it's suddenly "Ireland" and when anyone suggests that it might leave it's "the UK.." When you look at it objectively, almost the entire 'troubles' occurred in the UK (with the notable exceptions of the Dublin and Monaghan bombings), the entire conflict occurred in Northern Ireland (a part of the UK) and the major atrocities that were committed beyond that were mostly in England. Yet, somehow it's seen as somehow our problem!?!

    Whether you've a nationalist or unionist outlook, the cognitive dissonance and selective blindness in British circles is baffling at times.

    It's very much a case of "those who don't know their own history are doomed to repeat it."
    I think the UK absolutely needs to take ownership of its past here. I'm not saying they should wallow in it, but they should know it in much the same way as they know about the order of Tudor kings in huge detail.

    Excellent post.

    It must be highlighted at every turn that the Troubles were a Civil War in their jurisdiction. The border is a British border in Ireland.

    It's too easy to constantly dismiss Irish issues as "over there" when they've almost all been caused by British policies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,394 ✭✭✭✭Professor Moriarty


    Excellent post.

    It must be highlighted at every turn that the Troubles were a Civil War in their jurisdiction. The border is a British border in Ireland.

    It's too easy to constantly dismiss Irish issues as "over there" when they've almost all been caused by British policies.

    There is an old saying: The Irish can never forget their history while the English can never remember theirs.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,158 ✭✭✭✭Kermit.de.frog



    Ireland tells Boris Johnson there will be no backstop renegotiation



    ...

    Johnson will meet the European commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, for the first time at a G7 meeting in Biarritz at the end of this month. In an interview with an Austrian newspaper over the weekend, Juncker said “the British would be the big losers” in a no deal Brexit. “They pretend it’s not like that, but it will be”.


    From the Guardian


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,088 ✭✭✭✭BonnieSituation


    There is an old saying: The Irish can never forget their history while the English can never remember theirs.

    I know that saying well and Brexit makes you only more aware of it. They need to be "learnt".


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,168 ✭✭✭trellheim


    I know that saying well and Brexit makes you only more aware of it. They need to be "learnt".
    What precedent is there for that ? in all seriousness .

    If Johnson has agreed to meet the Taoiseach I expect a charm offensive with some type of Damocles sword fairly soon. You all think I am doom-and-gloom on this but I think it will happen.

    ( anyone remember some brit minister going "Get Me Kenny" referring to the Taoiseach , that went down well ). Watch the dialogue


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,435 ✭✭✭Imreoir2


    It is a fair point to say that when large sectors of the population see themselves as neglected by the leadership that they will gravitate towards a charismatic leader, that is true of Trump and other world leaders who havve played the nationalistic card, it is not true of Johnson though as he was selected by members of the conservative party and not the general population as a whole, he was not elected.

    If you want to use a historical reference, Mussolini's ascent to power is a closer analogy as he was also selected as leader without a popular vote.

    Mussolini is a better analogy alright. Italy were on the winning side of WW1 and full members of the international club that held sway afterwards, but they felt agreived, spured on by nationalistic journalism, that they had not gotten what they deserved in the post war settlement. Mussolini used that sence of agrievement to built a populist movement that took root mainly becasue liberal mainstream politics was too incompetant to govern the country effictivly and too riven by internal factionalism to oppose Fascism. The mainstream allowed Mussolini in because they saw him as a way to get ahead themselves and he always made sure to allow himself be seen as all things to all people so that anyone could project their desires onto him. By the end the hollowed out core of mainstream Italian politics came to believe that the Italian people deserved no better than to be ruled by a dictator, just as I am sure that there are those in the UK now who think that the Britain that allowed itself to fall to the Brexiteers deserves a no-deal Brexit.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 465 ✭✭Ben Done


    trellheim wrote: »
    What precedent is there for that ? in all seriousness .

    If Johnson has agreed to meet the Taoiseach I expect a charm offensive with some type of Damocles sword fairly soon. You all think I am doom-and-gloom on this but I think it will happen.

    ( anyone remember some brit minister going "Get Me Kenny" referring to the Taoiseach , that went down well ). Watch the dialogue


    What Sword of Damocles do you think Johnson might hang over Ireland?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,414 ✭✭✭dogbert27


    By that logic, Theresa May wasnt bound by the referendum because it happened under Cameron. But I guess consistency is a valuable commodity these days!

    Well nobody was bound by the original referendum as it was not legally binding.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,128 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    I doubt Johnson can function without Cummings. Should be an interesting tete a tete between the two of them.

    I doubt anything will come of it TBH. There is only one way this is going, and it is not in EU/Ireland's favour either. UK doesn't care as long as they can hoover up the potential Brexit Party votes in a GE on a hard line stance, and keep the Tories intact.

    Scorched Earth policy now or never.

    It really is war without the nomenclature of war or ordnance.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 41,802 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    Ben Done wrote: »
    What Sword of Damocles do you think Johnson might hang over Ireland?

    There isn't one. Any move against Ireland is a move against the EU which is why membership of the club is better than not for the various small and middling states of Europe, ie all of them at least when compared to the US, India and China.

    Johnson isn't stupid. He knows that hard Brexit means the end of the UK and the Conservative party. Currently, he's putting on a show for the Brexit faithful in case they waver and defect to the Brexit party. Maintaining the Union is the one thing he has been consistent about caring about, aside from himself of course. To me, it seems as if he's trying to provoke Parliament into overruling him and forcing him to seek an extension. That way he gets to keep playing Prime Minister while somehow playing the outsider despite being from Britain's upper caste. He can continue to playing the staunch Brexiter while he machinates to ditch the DUP via a GE or tries to win some sort of token concessions from Brussels which will fail because it failed for his predecessor, something a historian really should know in my opinion.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,046 ✭✭✭✭briany


    I know that saying well and Brexit makes you only more aware of it. They need to be "learnt".

    First of all, given the hard-headedness of the Brexiteers so far, I suspect that even if a no-deal Brexit turned out to be a complete economic disaster unlike anything the UK has seen in modern times, they'd react to it in much the same way as the Black Knight did to having his arms and legs lopped off in the film, "Monty Python and the Holy Grail". Just a flesh wound...

    They have no capacity to admit they were wrong on the matter, so I don't think there's a whole lot of room to be learned. Much more likely that all those on the other side of the argument, and even those in the middle, will put aside their own petty politics and take control.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 20,374 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    Some posters here might enjoy reviewing the TV series from 1988 - 'A Very British Coup' with Ray McNally. It won an award for best drama.

    Pay attention to the ending - during the titles. Most missed the ending.

    It is a brilliant depiction - and very apt for current times.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,615 ✭✭✭swampgas


    I wonder if there is a sense that the English establishment (or maybe a certain ruling elite within it) feel the need to prove to themselves just how powerful they still are, by doing the same thing they did successfully for centuries: bully, threaten, and oppress their opponents and subjects?

    Rules and agreements are for weak countries, for peasants, for the middle classes. The elites and superpowers make rules for others, but don't need to follow them themselves. They feel they should be, literally, above the law. The Bullingdon club is an example of this - they break the rules and norms of society, smash up a restaurant, and even though they might pay for the damage, it is primarily a display of naked power: look at us, we can do what we like, and you can't stop us.

    And it feels like this elite are freaking out because they don't rule the roost anymore - the Scots don't know their place, the Irish don't know their place, the French and the Germans want to be treated as equals ... and they really don't like it. The EU is calling the shots and there isn't a damn thing they can do about it.

    They scream abuse at their neighbours, and expect them to take it lying down. Any response, even if very mild, such as Donald Tusk's cherry picking tweet, triggers outrage, because it shows that the EU are not supplicating themselves before the mighty empire. How dare they stand up for themselves, don't they know we can destroy them? They are like school-yard bullies who lash out when one of their victims dares to look them in the eye.

    The EU has always been the enemy of those who want to live the Imperial dream, as it is based on equality, respect and cooperation. It reduces their status to that of mere mortals, no better nor worse than their neighbours. No wonder they're so desperate not just to leave the EU, but to see it destroyed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,088 ✭✭✭✭BonnieSituation


    Some posters here might enjoy reviewing the TV series from 1988 - 'A Very British Coup' with Ray McNally. It won an award for best drama.

    Pay attention to the ending - during the titles. Most missed the ending.

    It is a brilliant depiction - and very apt for current times.

    I love how Irish Actors both played the PM in both adaptations (Ray McAnally [father of Aonghus], in the 1989 version) and Gabriel Byrne in 2012's Secret State.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,173 ✭✭✭Flex


    Ben Done wrote: »
    What Sword of Damocles do you think Johnson might hang over Ireland?

    Johnson wont have to, apparently Leo Varadkar is "under pressure as furious Irish businesses demand deal with Boris" and give up the backstop /sarcasm

    Thats the story in The Express.. I honestly thought this was satire when I read it. And the source for their story? Tory peer Lord Marland :rolleyes:

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1164447/Brexit-News-Leo-Varadkhar-Boris-Johnson-no-deal-Ireland


    I read excellent posts earlier in this thread relating this to the rise of Fascism and populism in Europe in the interwar years, and it truly is is what is happening; propoganda and brainwashing of the British public. The use of the phrase 'undemocratic backstop', is the most clear example. I find it cringeworthy for the most part, however its being done so that when people hear 'backstop' theyll immediately think 'undemocratic'.

    Another is how the EU have forced everything in the WA on the UK, nobody ever points out that the UK entered the negotiations with their red lines and the WA was crafted around those red lines that they didnt have to budge on.

    Or how the backstop is a humiliation when it was actually a huge concession that the UK won (on both occasions; allowing Northern Ireland to have special status and again after when the EU conceded to allowing the whole UK to be in it).

    As others have pointed out, the reason they cant accept any agreement at the moment is because there are absolutely none that dont make the UK worse off than its status quo position in the EU.

    I really have no idea what Johnson is planning, if its all some grand bluff or hes banking on the British parliament blocking no-deal as his excuse and this is grandstanding for a general election. I dont think a no-deal Brexit will be as bad as some expect, but it will definitely make British people (the ordinary working people or those dependent on public services/social welfare) worse off. Whether they cop that it was because of Brexit or because they were sabotaged by remainers/the EU/ the Irish. Very interesting to be living through this though


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  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 41,802 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    swampgas wrote: »
    I wonder if there is a sense that the English establishment (or maybe a certain ruling elite within it) feel the need to prove to themselves just how powerful they still are, by doing the same thing they did successfully for centuries: bully, threaten, and oppress their opponents and subjects?

    Rules and agreements are for weak countries, for peasants, for the middle classes. The elites and superpowers make rules for others, but don't need to follow them themselves. They feel they should be, literally, above the law. The Bullingdon club is an example of this - they break the rules and norms of society, smash up a restaurant, and even though they might pay for the damage, it is primarily a display of naked power: look at us, we can do what we like, and you can't stop us.

    And it feels like this elite are freaking out because they don't rule the roost anymore - the Scots don't know their place, the Irish don't know their place, the French and the Germans want to be treated as equals ... and they really don't like it. The EU is calling the shots and there isn't a damn thing they can do about it.

    They scream abuse at their neighbours, and expect them to take it lying down. Any response, even if very mild, such as Donald Tusk's cherry picking tweet, triggers outrage, because it shows that the EU are not supplicating themselves before the mighty empire. How dare they stand up for themselves, don't they know we can destroy them? They are like school-yard bullies who lash out when one of their victims dares to look them in the eye.

    The EU has always been the enemy of those who want to live the Imperial dream, as it is based on equality, respect and cooperation. It reduces their status to that of mere mortals, no better nor worse than their neighbours. No wonder they're so desperate not just to leave the EU, but to see it destroyed.

    I honestly don't think so. Today's English elite seems to be concerned almost solely with self enrichment and profit. Previous generations used to care somewhat for the nation but today's generation of identikit privately educated politicians seem to care for little but their image when they occupy a position of power and then their bottom line once they finish.

    Brexit is, and always has been about shady money men making more money and being held to a different standard than the rest of us. Look at Tory donor Crispin Odey better literally hundreds of millions against British firms (including the Royal Mail). Barely a blip in the public domain. Waving the flag and invoking the war is just a good way to appeal to voters while people who see through such things would never vote for those who would employ such tactics to begin with.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



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