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Is Brexit actually going to happen?

Will we have a brexit?


  • Total voters
    362
What’s your point? People co-parent separately all the time, I’ve been doing it successfully for 7 years. You start by breathing into a fucking paper bag first.
Same goes for Brexit :)

I imagine you co-parent brilliantly, but didn't you and your co-parent have to suss out the details regarding the children, or even suss out the details on an ongoing basis?
My point is that if brexit is like a divorce, and any financials are worth paying for the sweet air of freedom, then the other details of the divorce have to be considered because there are two parents (usually) and there are children involved.
I am likening that task to the details that have to be sorted because of brexit, like sorting the land border on the island of Ireland.
 
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Just keep making them vote until they get it right eh. How many irish people were worried about the border when they stuck there fingers up to the eu?
No further votes are needed, all the brexiters need to do is to tell the rest of us how the border will work in detailed, practical, realistic terms.
If they really knew what they were voting for, and given the time since the vote, I imagine telling us would be a doddle for them, as easy as putting a cross on a bit of paper.
 
Where will the eu be and what new tricks have they got in store for us in ten years time?
The Union will be able to ensure that things are bad enough for them to do nothing else; they'll factor in that another decade of austerity will see a spontaneous groundswell of support for re-joining
 
The Union will be able to ensure that things are bad enough for them to do nothing else; they'll factor in that another decade of austerity will see a spontaneous groundswell of support for re-joining
I doubt that leaving will ever happen, i thought that before the vote and probably even more now. I was asking philosophical what he voted for and where he see's the eu as political entity in the future. He keeps saying we knew what we were voting for, but does he?
 
Going back to the three brexit blokes I mentioned above, if they aren't good analysts then I'd be grateful to hear who is a good source for Brexit analysis
 
I doubt that leaving will ever happen, i thought that before the vote and probably even more now. I was asking philosophical what he voted for and where he see's the eu as political entity in the future. He keeps saying we knew what we were voting for, but does he?
I was voting against what I perceived to be what Boris and Rees Mogg and Farage and others were promoting, very especially the nasty anti foreigner under and overtones. And as special dressing (you can believe me or not) I was voting against the restoration of any more of a border in Ireland than there is now.
I was banging on about it plenty before the vote, but not on this website.
 
I imagine you co-parent brilliantly, but didn't you and your co-parent have to suss out the details regarding the children, or even suss out the details on an ongoing basis?
My point is that if brexit is like a divorce, and any financials are worth paying for the sweet air of freedom, then the other details of the divorce have to be considered because there are two parents (usually) and there are children involved.
I am likening that task to the details that have to be sorted because of brexit, like sorting the land border on the island of Ireland.
You’ll need to get a notepad and write down all the ways you can say Irish land border so your posts stay as fresh as they’ve been.
 
I was voting against what I perceived to be what Boris and Rees Mogg and Farage and others were promoting, very especially the nasty anti foreigner under and overtones. And as special dressing (you can believe me or not) I was voting against the restoration of any more of a border in Ireland than there is now.
I was banging on about it plenty before the vote, but not on this website.
Exit impact on Northern Ireland
 
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