RandomComment wrote:I'm not saying anything of the sort. People are entitled to their opinions. And I am entitled to think that those opinions don't make much sense. I really really really do think that many people voted not knowing fully what they were voting against (people's understanding of the EU's institutions is pretty thin on the ground in this country) and what they were voting for (because it was never properly spelled out, and we have seen backtracks on key campaigning issues already).
Back to the issue of the Valleys voting...
If we accept EU migration is very low, and cannot explain pressure on services or long-term unemployment (which far pre-dates EU migration), then in order believe that the Valleys will be better off from voting out you'd have to believe that economic growth would be substantially higher outside the EU to make up for the direct loss of funding. You'd also have to ignore the fact that the leading advocates of Brexit - Farage, Gove, Johnson, Fox, Davies - all come from a position of wanting less redistribution, a less regulated labour market, and a roll-back of the state, perhaps even in healthcare.
Alternatively, you might just care about the supremacy of the UK parliament. But I somehow doubt as a working class person in a struggling Valley community - and I'm from the Valleys don't forget, and go back regularly -, thats what really matters to you. You want more opportunities, more security and more certainty in your life. You feel you don't have that so you vote "against the establishment" - while actually voting alongside a particularly priveledged part of the establishment - in the belief that things cannot get worse, or that people will be forced to sit up and listen. Instead that protest vote leads to less certainty, and fewer opportunities and empowers people who want to further undermine the remaining vestiges of employment protection and the welfare state. And who concoct a deal with the Remainers ("we have to recognise we only narrowly won this vote) which does not really address the issue of immigration, which was so potent in the campaigning.
So with all of this I think its very very reasonable for Remainers to be frustrated, worried, disappointed.. and to feel that many Leavers probably did not think things through deeply enough, and maybe still don't realise they have voted to make the problems that worry them worse rather than better.
well nobody could argue that that isn't a reasonable opinion, and you agree that people are entitled to opinions - Nevertheless it does rather suggest that it is your belief that if people had your knowledge then they would of course have voted to remain, which is really saying that they just don't understand the facts in the same way that you do! - that in my book is condescending, you don't know the exact reason that each individual voted the way they did?
The vitriol on here is very distasteful - I don't particularly like the idea that many people who visit with an interest in Cardiff developments need to be called Moronic and Racist and god help them if they're from the valleys as well!! If people don't like the fact that I don't want that on this forum then please feel free to flounce! frankly such poison wont be missed
