Big Guy Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 (edited) What? You're saying we can keep voting until the desired result is achieved? Is that democracy? You do what you can until you can convince those who you chose to represent you to pass legislation that you feel is required. For an example, it is generally accepted that if the question of capital punishment came to a referendum then it would pass. Our representatives understand this but do not act on it. https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2012/02/08/majority_of_canadians_support_return_of_death_penalty_poll_finds.html Edited July 12, 2016 by Big Guy Quote Note - For those expecting a response from Big Guy: I generally do not read or respond to posts longer then 300 words nor to parsed comments.
betsy Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 (edited) You do what you can until you can convince those who you chose to represent you to pass legislation that you feel is required. For an example, it is generally accepted that if the question of capital punishment came to a referendum then it would pass. Our representatives understand this but do not act on it. Well, it is an assumption to say that capital punishment would pass unless we do have the referendum. But if we do have a referendum and capital punishment won by landslide - I wonder if our representatives wouldn't be forced to act on it. Edited July 12, 2016 by betsy Quote
Big Guy Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 Well, it is an assumption to say that capital punishment would pass unless we do have the referendum. But if we do have a referendum and capital punishment won by landslide - I wonder if our representatives wouldn't be forced to act on it. I think they may or may not. I think it is telling that no political party is prepared to have a referendum or plebiscite on the issue. I guess the point I was trying to make was that in our constitution, a referendum is not binding. Majority public opinion does not "force" a government to do anything. The government which ignores the results of a referendum does so at its peril. History tells us that it is not a good idea to have a referendum if you are not sure of the results. Ask Jacques Parizeau. Quote Note - For those expecting a response from Big Guy: I generally do not read or respond to posts longer then 300 words nor to parsed comments.
-TSS- Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 I wonder if under the new rules of aiming at as fixed-term parliaments as possible the new PM even has a right ot call a snap election. Do I remember right that didn't you in Canada also change the rules regarding early election so that there has to be a serious crisis or no confidence vote for government to call an early election? Quote
Wilber Posted July 14, 2016 Report Posted July 14, 2016 I wonder if under the new rules of aiming at as fixed-term parliaments as possible the new PM even has a right ot call a snap election. Do I remember right that didn't you in Canada also change the rules regarding early election so that there has to be a serious crisis or no confidence vote for government to call an early election? I like fixed terms but they can only work when there is a majority government. Quote "Never trust a man who has not a single redeeming vice". WSC
TimG Posted July 14, 2016 Report Posted July 14, 2016 (edited) History tells us that it is not a good idea to have a referendum if you are not sure of the results. Ask Jacques Parizeau.People fall into two categories: 1) Those who believe a referendum on certain key questions is a necessary part of a modern democracy; 2) Partisans who like referendums when they allow the people to overrule governments they don't like but oppose them when 'their team' is in power. IOW, what are the chances that you would be OK if the Harper government tried to change the way votes are counted without a referendum? I say next to zero. Edited July 14, 2016 by TimG Quote
Big Guy Posted July 15, 2016 Report Posted July 15, 2016 ... IOW, what are the chances that you would be OK if the Harper government tried to change the way votes are counted without a referendum? I say next to zero. Why are you trying to make this a partisan issue? Referendums are not binding, have never been and will never be. We have a parliament which is elected to make decisions based on a process which includes a formal hearing of all sides of an issue. Call it a referendum, a plebiscite or whatever - it is an attempt by someone with an agenda to satisfy an agenda by masking it as a binding will of the people. It is not. Quote Note - For those expecting a response from Big Guy: I generally do not read or respond to posts longer then 300 words nor to parsed comments.
JamesHackerMP Posted July 15, 2016 Report Posted July 15, 2016 Well this is a first: the United Kingdom declares independence from somebody else! Quote "We're not above nature, Mr Hacker, we're part of it. Men are animals, too!" "I know that, I've just come from the House of Commons!" [Yes, Minister]
JamesHackerMP Posted July 15, 2016 Report Posted July 15, 2016 https://www.facebook.com/hipstorians/photos/a.1448145472063755.1073741829.1448143138730655/1763473537197612/?type=3&theater Quote "We're not above nature, Mr Hacker, we're part of it. Men are animals, too!" "I know that, I've just come from the House of Commons!" [Yes, Minister]
TimG Posted July 15, 2016 Report Posted July 15, 2016 (edited) Call it a referendum, a plebiscite or whatever - it is an attempt by someone with an agenda to satisfy an agenda by masking it as a binding will of the people.No. They are attempts to resolve the most contentious issues by directly asking the people they actually think instead of inferring their desires based on a vote for a party. It is quite inane to suggest a vote for Party X means every voter supports every policy that the party may support. A referendum allows voters to show that they disagree with their elected representatives. Edited July 15, 2016 by TimG Quote
Bonam Posted July 15, 2016 Report Posted July 15, 2016 The EU's problem is that it went wide before it went deep. What it needed to do was start with a smaller number of countries that were willing to join a tighter union, where they are states belonging to a federal government. Then, if the advantages of such an arrangement became obvious to their neighbors, they would freely join. Instead, the EU started as a loose trade association and quickly expanded to include a wide range of countries with disparate cultures, and only then tried to implement ever greater centralized decision-making. Quote
BC_chick Posted July 17, 2016 Report Posted July 17, 2016 It looks like the May is going be delaying Brexit until a 'UK appaoach' is established with Scotland. http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_578bd0b8e4b03fc3ee513f56 This is gonna get messy. Quote It's kind of the worst thing that any humans could be doing at this time in human history. Other than that, it's fine." Bill Nye on Alberta Oil Sands
Argus Posted July 26, 2016 Report Posted July 26, 2016 (edited) You want to know why the British voted to leave the incompetent, spineless EU? Why the right wing is gaining more and more support in France and throughout Europe? Nothing demonstrates it better than this. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaiJawAUyJ0 Edited July 26, 2016 by Argus Quote "A liberal is someone who claims to be open to all points of view — and then is surprised and offended to find there are other points of view.” William F Buckley
Big Guy Posted July 26, 2016 Report Posted July 26, 2016 It looks like the May is going be delaying Brexit until a 'UK appaoach' is established with Scotland. http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_578bd0b8e4b03fc3ee513f56 This is gonna get messy. I believe its not going to happen. It requires the British Parliament to pass legislation to invoke article 50. There is on obligation to do so and I do not think there are enough votes to pass it. Quote Note - For those expecting a response from Big Guy: I generally do not read or respond to posts longer then 300 words nor to parsed comments.
SpankyMcFarland Posted August 10, 2016 Report Posted August 10, 2016 (edited) We are in for a long story here: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/aug/09/norway-may-block-uk-return-to-european-free-trade-association Edited August 10, 2016 by SpankyMcFarland Quote
marcus Posted August 10, 2016 Report Posted August 10, 2016 You want to know why the British voted to leave the incompetent, spineless EU? Why the right wing is gaining more and more support in France and throughout Europe? Nothing demonstrates it better than this. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaiJawAUyJ0 Maybe people should be voting for their countries to stop wars and stop backing dictators which are the major reasons people are getting out of hell holes. Quote "What do you think of Western civilization?" Gandhi was asked. "I think it would be a good idea," he said.
Argus Posted August 13, 2016 Report Posted August 13, 2016 (edited) Maybe people should be voting for their countries to stop wars and stop backing dictators which are the major reasons people are getting out of hell holes. Poverty is the main reason most of those people are leaving, not wars. Turkey has actually talked about giving them citizenship, but they don't want to live in Turkey, they want to live in wealthy Europe. Edited August 13, 2016 by Argus Quote "A liberal is someone who claims to be open to all points of view — and then is surprised and offended to find there are other points of view.” William F Buckley
marcus Posted August 13, 2016 Report Posted August 13, 2016 (edited) Poverty is the main reason most of those people are leaving, not wars. Turkey has actually talked about giving them citizenship, but they don't want to live in Turkey, they want to live in wealthy Europe. The instability that wars create have a direct correlation with poverty and economic set back. An entire generation has lost a decade of its life, and the country has only begun to face the social costs it will have to pay... economy and rapid economic development have probably been set back two decades. link Instead of whining about these people escaping the crap that we helped to create through our wars, sanctions and backing of dictators, you should put that energy in voicing your opposition to our destructive foreign policies. Edited August 13, 2016 by marcus Quote "What do you think of Western civilization?" Gandhi was asked. "I think it would be a good idea," he said.
-TSS- Posted August 13, 2016 Report Posted August 13, 2016 (edited) I must say that there is almost nothing that gives me more pleasure in the schadenfreude-way than the British complaining about immigration as invasion. Hahaa, many of those people seem totally oblivious to their own country's history. Absolutely zero sympathy for them! Let London sink into a third world cesspool! Too bad that I have relatives living in London but no can do. Edited August 13, 2016 by -TSS- Quote
Bryan Posted August 13, 2016 Report Posted August 13, 2016 I must say that there is almost nothing that gives me more pleasure in the schadenfreude-way than the British complaining about immigration as invasion. Hahaa, many of those people seem totally oblivious to their own country's history. Absolutely zero sympathy for them! Let London sink into a third world cesspool! Too bad that I have relatives living in London but no can do. Please. Nobody is responsible for the actions of their ancestors. Quote
eyeball Posted August 14, 2016 Report Posted August 14, 2016 They are when they defend and rely on them to justify maintaining the advantages they conferred over those who became disadvantaged. Quote A government without public oversight is like a nuclear plant without lead shielding.
Bryan Posted August 14, 2016 Report Posted August 14, 2016 Definitely not. You can't control what someone did before you were born, and you have no control over when or where you are born. With regards to TSS's point about immigration -- those people were born in the UK as it exists now, not when it was an Empire. They can be independently for or against immigration without respect to the UK's previous imperial actions because they had nothing to do what that. And nothing in their lives today has anything to do with it either. Quote
eyeball Posted August 14, 2016 Report Posted August 14, 2016 (edited) Definitely not. You can't control what someone did before you were born, and you have no control over when or where you are born. With regards to TSS's point about immigration -- those people were born in the UK as it exists now, not when it was an Empire. They can be independently for or against immigration without respect to the UK's previous imperial actions because they had nothing to do what that. And nothing in their lives today has anything to do with it either. Our institutions had control and still do. Our institutions imperial and otherwise exist to convey values across generations and these according to a growing body of jurisprudence in the Common Wealth include taking responsibility for their past actions. If addressing the consequences of this inconveniences people living in the present then it behooves them to adjust their attitudes towards how they can better control their institutions so these can't create such problems for people living in the future. That would be us and our responsibility. Its only people in the future who have no control over what's happening. Edited August 14, 2016 by eyeball Quote A government without public oversight is like a nuclear plant without lead shielding.
Bryan Posted August 14, 2016 Report Posted August 14, 2016 Its only people in the future who have no control over what's happening. We are those people "in the future". We had no control over what happened in the past, and we are in no way responsible for it. Not. At. All. Quote
eyeball Posted August 14, 2016 Report Posted August 14, 2016 We are those people "in the future". No, we're in the present. Now what about our institutions? Who's responsible for them and when? Quote A government without public oversight is like a nuclear plant without lead shielding.
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