Originally posted by d000hg
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Reply to: Do you indulge in digital self harm?
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Previously on "Do you indulge in digital self harm?"
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I've never even heard of this, what a weird idea. Although I wager a lot of people here do it via sockies
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostWhereas the other 48% do nothing but whinge about a democratic process that they obviously don't understand - because it doesn't suit!
Why are we still going on about it, it's happening get on with it.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostI agree. There's too much sophistry around this. There's a clear democratic mandate around leaving the EU. It's a ******* stupid idea, but there you go.
Unfortunately there's no mandate around the post exit settlement. EEA membership probably reflects where most people sit given the narrowness of the result but it wasn't on the ballot paper. This presents a strong case for a second referendum, not on whether or not to leave, but on the post-leave settlement.
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostAll this carp about advisory this and advisory that overlooks one essential point:
Before the results were known, Cameron & co made it abundantly clear they would respect the result. So in practice it was binding!
Unfortunately there's no mandate around the post exit settlement. EEA membership probably reflects where most people sit given the narrowness of the result but it wasn't on the ballot paper. This presents a strong case for a second referendum, not on whether or not to leave, but on the post-leave settlement.
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Originally posted by rogerfederer View PostIt was an advisory referendum. Any party in power, or who came to power, would be within their rights to view it as too close to call.
If you believe in democracy you would question the advisory nature of it. Why was it not a binding referendum? The real question to ask is why was this detail intentionally made. It is very strange.
If joining the EU on limited terms is an advisory referendum in future, this would be just that - purely advisory. The weird thing about this whole scenario is that the margin was so close, it was advisory, and now we are heading towards an unknown target.
Referenda should always be binding to avoid this situation. At the core of democracy is such a choice. If someone advised me 52% of people voted one way and 48% another way in an advisory referendum, I would suggest the people were almost split down the middle in opinions. If it was a binding referendum, then tough, it should progress regardless.
You are claiming you wish for democracy to be upheld, but if you think carefully it is actually being subverted by the choice of a particular government in power choosing to head down a path based on a very narrowly contested advisory referendum. Democracy, in this case, should be regardless of the government in power. This is why binding referenda exist.
Before the results were known, Cameron & co made it abundantly clear they would respect the result. So in practice it was binding!
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Originally posted by rogerfederer View PostIt was an advisory referendum. Any party in power, or who came to power, would be within their rights to view it as too close to call.
If you believe in democracy you would question the advisory nature of it. Why was it not a binding referendum? The real question to ask is why was this detail intentionally made. It is very strange.
If joining the EU on limited terms is an advisory referendum in future, this would be just that - purely advisory. The weird thing about this whole scenario is that the margin was so close, it was advisory, and now we are heading towards an unknown target.
Referenda should always be binding to avoid this situation. At the core of democracy is such a choice. If someone advised me 52% of people voted one way and 48% another way in an advisory referendum, I would suggest the people were almost split down the middle in opinions. If it was a binding referendum, then tough, it should progress regardless.
You are claiming you wish for democracy to be upheld, but if you think carefully it is actually being subverted by the choice of a particular government in power choosing to head down a path based on a very narrowly contested advisory referendum. Democracy, in this case, should be regardless of the government in power. This is why binding referenda exist.
United Kingdom European Union membership referendum
Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?
Location United Kingdom
Gibraltar
Date 23 June 2016
Results
Votes %
Leave 17,410,742 51.89%
Remain 16,141,241 48.11%
Valid votes 33,551,983 99.92%
Invalid or blank votes 25,359 0.08%
Total votes 33,577,342 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 46,500,001 72.21%
A 1,269,501 vote majority is a lot of votes and not "too close to call".
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Originally posted by GreenMirror View Posthttps://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/artic...f-eecd47d7dfd7
US research from 2017 found that approximately 6% of students aged 12 to 17 had sent themselves anonymous hate, with boys more likely to engage in the behaviour than girls and LGBT students nearly three times more likely to self-cyberbully.
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Of course I don't you idiot.
digital self harm by proxy == posting stupid questions on CUK (preferably in general for maximum harm)
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostWhereas the other 48% do nothing but whinge about a democratic process that they obviously don't understand - because it doesn't suit!
If you believe in democracy you would question the advisory nature of it. Why was it not a binding referendum? The real question to ask is why was this detail intentionally made. It is very strange.
If joining the EU on limited terms is an advisory referendum in future, this would be just that - purely advisory. The weird thing about this whole scenario is that the margin was so close, it was advisory, and now we are heading towards an unknown target.
Referenda should always be binding to avoid this situation. At the core of democracy is such a choice. If someone advised me 52% of people voted one way and 48% another way in an advisory referendum, I would suggest the people were almost split down the middle in opinions. If it was a binding referendum, then tough, it should progress regardless.
You are claiming you wish for democracy to be upheld, but if you think carefully it is actually being subverted by the choice of a particular government in power choosing to head down a path based on a very narrowly contested advisory referendum. Democracy, in this case, should be regardless of the government in power. This is why binding referenda exist.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by GreenMirror View Posthttps://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/artic...f-eecd47d7dfd7
US research from 2017 found that approximately 6% of students aged 12 to 17 had sent themselves anonymous hate, with boys more likely to engage in the behaviour than girls and LGBT students nearly three times more likely to self-cyberbully.
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Of course I don't you idiot.
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'He was engaging in ‘digital self-harm’ - the act of secretly sending yourself hurtful messages online.'
What the fook????
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Originally posted by GreenMirror View Posthttps://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/artic...f-eecd47d7dfd7
US research from 2017 found that approximately 6% of students aged 12 to 17 had sent themselves anonymous hate, with boys more likely to engage in the behaviour than girls and LGBT students nearly three times more likely to self-cyberbully.
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Of course I don't you idiot.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by GreenMirror View Posthttps://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/artic...f-eecd47d7dfd7
US research from 2017 found that approximately 6% of students aged 12 to 17 had sent themselves anonymous hate, with boys more likely to engage in the behaviour than girls and LGBT students nearly three times more likely to self-cyberbully.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Of course I don't you idiot.
Leave a comment:
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