ganganvince
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 23 Oct 2014
- Messages
- 6,653
No not letting go is the problem we have left look forwardI know you don’t. Not understanding is a major part of the problem.
No not letting go is the problem we have left look forwardI know you don’t. Not understanding is a major part of the problem.
I am afraid that you are going have to be really quite young to have the prospect of seeing it happen
So you think we'll be spending, sorry wasting, our time arguing with the EU
about getting back what we had?
Lol.
Somehow, I doubt it.
So you think everthing in the agreement will work out perfectly, there are no unforseen consequnces of just copying old agreements across, that having different agreements in different parts of the UK won’t cause problems, that changing governments won’t want different things.So you think we'll be spending, sorry wasting, our time arguing with the EU
about getting back what we had?
Lol.
Somehow, I doubt it.
Fair enough, but as long as we think it is unrealistic, it will be unrealistic. I get told all the time my vision of the world is unrealistic, but it is only unrealistic because people are fearful of change and are somewhat indoctrinated into believing that the market is the answer to everything. As Covid has shown the market fails when times are desperate and the state has to come to the peoples aid. It has to be collaborative rather than the conservative mantra of pushing for individualism. Individualism will not solve the covid crisis, it needs the state to act, maybe its the first act of people trusting the state again rather than mistrusting as in the American way of seeing all government as interference. I am a collectivist, i do believe humans work better as a collective, Socialism is an expansion of collectivism in my view.All you had to do was get all the true socialists in the EU to vote for socialist MEPs. With PR you would then have had a socialist European Parliament.
You also get socialists in each member state to elect socialist governments to send socialists to the European Council and Council of ministers and appoint socialist Commissioners.
The only flaw in this procedure is that you don't have enough socialists. Maybe that isn't a problem for revolutionary socialists, but it is for socialists who support "leftist parties" that can actually get elected.
I enjoy your political education lectures, but a degree of realism about your "vision" would not go amiss. The idea that leaving the EU is going to hasten a pan-European socialist state (or a socialist England) seems a recipe for being disappointed. Even with oppressed masses (and there aren't that many people in Europe now who really understand how oppressed they are) revolution was a hard sell. Lenin might have been against, but frankly the "miserable reforms" of class collaboration (i.e. get people of all classes to vote for a leftist party) is the sum of my current political ambitions.
It depends what you mean. If you mean there was never a time when Britain didn't have any restrictions on immigration, there was such a time. Most of history in fact.Who specifically said they wanted open borders
We never had open borders
This happens right now, all across the world, including in the UK.The problem that can easily occur with something like this if you don't implement it properly is that you can end up giving a large amount of control to an employer. In a lot of countries a visa is linked to a particular job, which means that your employer doesn't only have control over your job, but also your entire future in the country. That sort of situation is ripe for abuse. But then go the other way and give people a visa for a particular sector, and employers will be reluctant to go through the effort and expense of sponsoring someone knowing that they can just jump ship to another employer as soon as they get into the country.
Problem is we can't even get individual political parties in the UK to act coherently (and I assume this is mirrored in every country) so attempting this across a continent would be a recipe for disaster in my view - the replacement of Labour with the SNP in Scotland is a perfect example of two very similar political ideals with a single major opposing issue. Creating a more centralised government/political system seems to go against the modern trend of devolving decision-making to regions and countries breaking into smaller pieces.No it didnt, I actually wanted further integration and a fully federal state with single political parties that operated across the Union. An elected President and single constitution. Nobody had that vision though and the status quo was unacceptable as it is just a neo-liberal club that benefits those with wealth. A fully federated EU could have led to a fully federated Socialist state, with the likes of Labour, Portugals Bloc Esquerida and other Leftist EU parties forming one mass party to campaign for a Socialist state. When remain became the supporters of status quo i came to the conclusion I cant support that and initially i was unsure so abstained in the actual vote. I do consider myself fairly well educated but the complexity of the debate was overwhelming for me, for others it was much simple such as they wanted to end all immigration, or they wanted to carry on travelling to their holiday home in the Languedoc without a problem. The more I looked into it the more I came to realise that if i wanted a Socialist state then leaving was the only way that could be achieved. It wasn't easy though because i do still believe the EU is a source for good and i hated that i would be on the same side, albeit for different reasons as the likes of that horrible **** Farage.
On Christmas Eve the default position was we had nothing. We had been negotiating to retain some of what we had. It's obvious we are still negotiating on other stuff we don't want to lose (like flying) so I don't know what's funny.So you think we'll be spending, sorry wasting, our time arguing with the EU
about getting back what we had?
Lol.
Somehow, I doubt it.