Originally posted by burning dog
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May is nearly out and so is May
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Postyes that's a very sophisticated ceramic method of dealing with a touch of the Brancuzzis'....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostThanks for the clarification, doversoul... I've always been unsure about what is "allowable", as comments on Brexit etc do crop up on other threads now and then, without immediate (or even later) removal.
But is Brexit essentially Party Political? Surely not, even if it has in some ways become a - in civil terms, tragic - story about divided and factionalised party politics.
If there is any possible way ahead it must be through middle-ground discussions from all sides of the argument, which seem a distant possibility now in Westminster or the UK generally, but one which something like this forum could have attempted (well sometimes has, until...).
(Citizens' Assemblies!).
If it can't, well.... but of course I wouldn't try to push it.
I always felt that you can't divide "the Life from the Art", whether in individuals or nations.
I would just add that - if someone starts a thread like this (with genuine goodwill & openminded intellectual curiosity) and it is deemed "impermissible", there are more dignified ways of expressing that (or simply removing it with a brief explanation) than irrelevant or trivialising jokes and puns.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell I did feel it trivialised it I'm afraid - that was my point.
A few weeks ago a lengthy Sibelius piece of mine was sidetracked from the start, by comments mocking the larger typeface I'd used (to help reading a longer piece).
Serial_Apologist
I do also agree that the whole thing about brexit/remain is that it falls outside the "party political", and is therefore worthy of inclusion for discussion on this forum - especially in view of the likely consequences of brexit on everything else we do discuss here
Isn’t it because, so far, the current political parties have failed to solve the issue?
I suppose it can be discussed on the Ideas and theories board as, say, the question of nationhood in the modern political theories or something in that way.Last edited by doversoul1; 25-05-19, 18:09.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt's a peculiarly British obsession to think that everything is about "trade"It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt's a peculiarly British obsession to think that everything is about "trade"
There would seem to be a strong possibility that the Brexit curse which has now claimed two Tory leaders in less than three years would soon see off the next one as as well.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt's a peculiarly British obsession to think that everything is about "trade"Last edited by burning dog; 26-05-19, 00:34.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWe get dragged into that debate. For me trade is completely unimportant I "don't care" about trade. But I have to recognise that for many people their jobs and livelihoods depend on it, so I have to support them. And that's not dependent upon them supporting what is important to me, unfortunately - because my job and livelihood aren't affected. Other than possibly not being able to get French cheese and fruit.
cold be regarded as such, though we might regard them as cultural exchanges. I'm not sure how these will be affected in the long run. How much does anyone know?
Student exchanges in no-deal Brexit threat
Last edited by burning dog; 26-05-19, 00:14.
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This is interesting, coincides with my experience of dealing with the elderly ie. those brought up during the war rather than "boomers" of which I am one of the younger members, Some of these older Leftist types don't like the EU for other reasons but understand the pacific intentions. I always suspected this was common but its the first research that appears to confirm it
Britain’s wartime generation are almost as pro-EU as millennials
There is a significant difference in opinion on Brexit between different age groups in the UK, with older citizens generally exhibiting more negative attitudes toward the EU than younger ones. But …
"One explanation for these results is that the war generation give a premium to the pacific benefits of European institutions. Having experienced first-hand the horrors of war, they place a high value on the founding principles of unity that the EU promotes."
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Speech promoting European Unity
https://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/102675
For hundreds of years the peoples of Britain have been writing history. Do we want future generations to continue to write history or are they simply going to have to read it.
If we fail, they will read how we broke faith with both the present and the past.
If we fail and the British people vote ‘No’ to the European Community, they will read how there was a defeat for co-operation between nations, and how there was a victory for the tribunes of the Left.
They will read how extremism won over commonsense. For it is purely common sense to belong to a community working together in peace on economic and political issues that concern us all.
It is purely commonsense to have access to secure sources of food supplies, when as a nation we have to import half our food.
It is surely commonsense to belong to the Community that is the largest trading and aiding unit in the world, and play our part in that Community.
It is surely commonsense for Britain to continue to play a part in the Council of Europe.
It is purely commonsense that we should now listen also to the Commonwealth—those Nations who twice this century, have come to Britain's aid to defend democracy in Europe.
Not one of them now want us to leave. The Commonwealth wants us to stay in. Britain has made a vital contribution to the past. She has a contribution to make to the future. It will be bigger in Europe than alone.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI come into that group, and am also wary of online exchanges(here and elsewhere) when strong and opposing feelings are involved as the possibility of misunderstandings or intolerance calling down unpleasant responses(and no I don't mean ones I don't agree with) is high.
I find a kind of grim humour, which may occasionally result in some low-level punnery, quite a good way of coping with Br*x*t which, let's face it, is gonna be around for a long, long time - possibly for ever. You can check out any time you like but you can never leave …..Last edited by LMcD; 26-05-19, 06:03.
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Really what has happened re Brexit, you could never make it up. I question all these self righteous politicians who say it would be betraying the electorate who had democratically voted to leave. If that were the case itvwould have been sorted long ago. Lust for power has overtaken all that and thus the mess we are in, and the cowardly bully boys are winning and the electorate will, whatever the outcome, be paying!
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