What saying 'be sure you know why you are voting' is politicizing your statement? I would have thought that was common sense.@zand you are politicalizing my statement which was just a plain fact. If you are unhappy then that's just tough.![]()
What saying 'be sure you know why you are voting' is politicizing your statement? I would have thought that was common sense.@zand you are politicalizing my statement which was just a plain fact. If you are unhappy then that's just tough.![]()
Indeed they are, and all this tearing apart will make matters worse. Everyone must now unite, and I include Nicola Sturgeon in this.
I was referring to your words quote "we are all on the losing side", which is an opinion therefore political and not factual as my OP.What saying 'be sure you know why you are voting' is politicizing your statement? I would have thought that was common sense.
What saying 'be sure you know why you are voting' is politicizing your statement? I would have thought that was common sense.
I agree, Nicola Sturgeon always had the option for a referendum on devolution, and if that's what the majority want, she should unite behind the scots she represents, call the referendum, and accept what her people tell her to do, just like the english must do.
What I would like to know is just where are all our talented youth are going to go?
Greece? Youth unemployment 49%, but if they got a job all would be well because they wouldn't need to pay any tax. The Greeks are not known for doing this.
Spain? Youth unemployment 45%
France? Youth unemployment nearly 25%
Italy? youth unemployment 39%,
Portugal it is 30%
Belgium 25%
Ireland and Poland 20%
The average across the whole EU is over 19%
Great Britain is 13%
Or maybe they would go to the USA, Canada, Australia or New Zealand and be out of Europe anyway.
It really is time to stop complaining. The vote is over. It was electorally fair in that it was a straight yes/no. No constituency voting, no proportional representation. It is time to stop the sour grapes and pull together, not tear apart.
Are you saying she should call a second referendum? Your post is confusing.
I have no idea if the outcome would have been different, I honestly don't know if those percentages of voters are correct. The problem is that it's not like a general election where you can accept the outcome, knowing that in 5 years time you can vote again. Look what happened to the Lib Dems last time in reaction to their consensus government with the Tories. This time it's for good and affects a whole generation. Unfortunately the generation who will have to live with it are largely the ones who voted remain.Were they let down?
I read somewhere that more than 70% of the older generation voted, but only 45-50% of the young did.
Would the outcome have been different if 70+% of the young had voted?
New Zealand and Canada seem like favourites. As I said above the problem is that it's not like a general election where you get to vote again in 5 years time, it has an impact for a whole generation.What I would like to know is just where are all our talented youth are going to go?
Greece? Youth unemployment 49%, but if they got a job all would be well because they wouldn't need to pay any tax. The Greeks are not known for doing this.
Spain? Youth unemployment 45%
France? Youth unemployment nearly 25%
Italy? youth unemployment 39%,
Portugal it is 30%
Belgium 25%
Ireland and Poland 20%
The average across the whole EU is over 19%
Great Britain is 13%
Or maybe they would go to the USA, Canada, Australia or New Zealand and be out of Europe anyway.
It really is time to stop complaining. The vote is over. It was electorally fair in that it was a straight yes/no. No constituency voting, no proportional representation. It is time to stop the sour grapes and pull together, not tear apart.
New Zealand and Canada seem like favourites. As I said above the problem is that it's not like a general election where you get to vote again in 5 years time, it has an impact for a whole generation.
It's the educated university graduates who are probably more mobile and sought after by Canada and NZI think you have to consider the type of unemployed youth in the countries, and question which youths will be staying, and which youths will be leaving.
It's the educated university graduates who are probably more mobile and sought after by Canada and NZ
Exactly that! They voted with their gut, when it's their brains they should have been using. So many people have said that. My own initial gut instinct was to vote leave. Over the last year or so I have changed my view. This was a decision for the head to make, not the heart/gut. Crazy. We've all had enough time to think about this very important decision but sadly some are just happy to put their cross in any box as the whim takes them. I include people from both camps in this. I'm sure many voted remain without thinking it through properly too. Is that all democracy means to some people?In response to @catherinecherub's post in my own person opinion the ordinary working class man/woman out there turned out and voted with their gut opinions and with the high turnout the "silent majority" factor came into play. I have read a lot of posts on DCUK over the years and on this thread the majority voted in the DCUK poll to remain and most of the posts were pro-remain. Sometimes I think the DCUK forum doesn't accurately reflect real demographics. Some people can't afford Internet/computers etc and some elderly people do not engage online as much as the younger population. This is my own person opinion and should be taken as such - I might be wrong though !![]()
@zand I feel sorry for you if that's the best argument you've got - it's no longer worthy of further engagement, you are typically twisting my words, taking my quotes out of context and can't maintain mature and sensible debate.Exactly that! They voted with their gut, when it's their brains they should have been using. So many people have said that. My own initial gut instinct was to vote leave. Over the last year or so I have changed my view. This was a decision for the head to make, not the heart/gut. Crazy. We've all had enough time to think about this very important decision but sadly some are just happy to put their cross in any box as the whim takes them. I include people from both camps in this. I'm sure many voted remain without thinking it through properly too. Is that all democracy means to some people?
Hey - grumpy-bum! She said you were right in abstaining. The rest of her post referred to her views, which may or may not have been political, but had nothing to do with your personal decision not to vote.@zand you are politicalizing my statement which was just a plain fact. If you are unhappy then that's just tough.![]()
... and whether Canada and New Zealand will want them!I think you have to consider the type of unemployed youth in the countries, and question which youths will be staying, and which youths will be leaving.
Yes @debrasue, I am not happy with my words being quoted out of context, that's unfair. Her post I was referring to was a political statement in saying we are all sorry for the vote - those who voted leave might actually disagree and are not sorry. This is not some personal vendetta against @zand, I usually like her posts and just think me being assertive is not a bad thing to be. Grumpy now 5/10 from 7/10 lolHey - grumpy-bum! She said you were right in abstaining. The rest of her post referred to her views, which may or may not have been political, but had nothing to do with your personal decision not to vote.
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... and whether Canada and New Zealand will want them!