slackAlice2 wrote:Scotland and the SNP need to accept the results of the Referendum;the majority voted to remain as part of the U.K. And yesterday the majority of the U.K. Voted to leave the EU. That's democracy, the will of the people. You can't keep having Referendums in the hope you get a result that agrees with your view.
slackAlice2 wrote:Scotland and the SNP need to accept the results of the Referendum;the majority voted to remain as part of the U.K. And yesterday the majority of the U.K. Voted to leave the EU. That's democracy, the will of the people. You can't keep having Referendums in the hope you get a result that agrees with your view.
jon MFC fan wrote:i dont understand am i scottish or english where my whole family are scottish i was born over in the dark side of the lune
seasonsinthesun wrote:Well, the next referendum is taking place in Yorkshire with the questions: Do you wish Yorkshire to remain part of the United Kingdom or to leave the United Kingdom?
As I was born in Bradford, I may have to apply for a Yorkshire passport.
seasonsinthesun wrote:Well, the next referendum is taking place in Yorkshire with the questions: Do you wish Yorkshire to remain part of the United Kingdom or to leave the United Kingdom?
As I was born in Bradford, I may have to apply for a Yorkshire passport.
George Dawes wrote:seasonsinthesun wrote:Well, the next referendum is taking place in Yorkshire with the questions: Do you wish Yorkshire to remain part of the United Kingdom or to leave the United Kingdom?
As I was born in Bradford, I may have to apply for a Yorkshire passport.
fair point, seriously where do people draw the line?
Cornwall had their own King and realm and language and independence, from England aswell.
i use that argument with Scotish people who want to leave(based on oil), saying Scotland is just a jumped up county, not country, with no borders.(they go mental btw)
however the Irish have a valid argument as their an Island and how would we feel if somebody crossed over water and invaded us, we'll the Normans and Romans did, and others have tried and failed.
Phil Anderer wrote:Yesterday 52% of 72% of the electorate, or just under 37.5%, voted to leave. I agree it is a mandate, but not a comprehensive, unquestionable one. By contrast, just over 34.5% voted to stay, while 28% couldn't care less. I'm disappointed, but not despondent. Don't overstate the case.
Zip It Shrimpy wrote:Phil Anderer wrote:Yesterday 52% of 72% of the electorate, or just under 37.5%, voted to leave. I agree it is a mandate, but not a comprehensive, unquestionable one. By contrast, just over 34.5% voted to stay, while 28% couldn't care less. I'm disappointed, but not despondent. Don't overstate the case.
How many millions weren't allowed to vote? My wife for example has lived here all her adult life and , over the last 25 years has paid a quarter of a million pounds (£250,000) in taxes. Not allowed to vote because she doesn't have a British passport.
Zip It Shrimpy wrote:Phil Anderer wrote:Yesterday 52% of 72% of the electorate, or just under 37.5%, voted to leave. I agree it is a mandate, but not a comprehensive, unquestionable one. By contrast, just over 34.5% voted to stay, while 28% couldn't care less. I'm disappointed, but not despondent. Don't overstate the case.
How many millions weren't allowed to vote? My wife for example has lived here all her adult life and , over the last 25 years has paid a quarter of a million pounds (£250,000) in taxes. Not allowed to vote because she doesn't have a British passport.
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