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6/23/2016 11:38 pm  #21


Re: Brexit

I'm so happy. It's a major victory against internationalism.


Noli turbare circulos meos.
 

6/24/2016 5:02 am  #22


Re: Brexit

Today is certainly a good day for England. God save the Queen!

I must say I wasn't impressed by either campaign. Very few people seemed to know much about the true nature of the EU, its history, or its relationship with Britain. This was especially true of the remain side, who often ludicrously boasted about their superior knowledge (which all seemed to be some basic economic figures and little about the powers or operations of the EU, or even much about the history of its role in Britain's economy). In some cases I suspect some remain leaders knew but obscured it (I heard Cameron absurdly compare our membership of the EU, which de facto shares sovereignty with us, to our membership in the UN or NATO). More amongst the leave prominent supporters seemed to know about the nature of the EU, but they weren't that good at communicating it, or thought immigrantion and the like were all that the masses would pay attention to.

If I were on the leave campaign I would have handed out Booker and North's The Great Deception to all comers. But who would have read it?

     Thread Starter
 

6/24/2016 6:16 am  #23


Re: Brexit

Alexander wrote:

*Repeatedly smacks head against desk*

I suppose I should congratulate Leave on their successful campaign.
At least Cameron's out, but I suspect he will be replaced by someone worse.

Second this point. I usually fight tooth and nail to avoid commenting on political topics, but I really hope recent events don’t precipitate a rise in the casual xenophobia and racism coming out in some parts of US culture. This country is bad enough as it is…

Alexander wrote:

*Repeatedly smacks head against desk*

I suppose I should congratulate Leave on their successful campaign.
At least Cameron's out, but I suspect he will be replaced by someone worse.

May be, but only in the sense it's possible to replace one large bad thing* with a lot of small bad things. Isolationist 'British' culture is a relatively new thing, and one which has born notoriously ill-fruits (WASPism and all its attendant Newtonian-Lockean-Utilitarian-Social Darwinist ills).

Last edited by DanielCC (6/24/2016 6:20 am)

 

6/24/2016 6:42 am  #24


Re: Brexit

Jeremy Taylor wrote:

If I were on the leave campaign I would have handed out Booker and North's The Great Deception to all comers. But who would have read it?

What if you were on the remain campaign?

 

6/24/2016 7:09 am  #25


Re: Brexit

What do you all think about Boris Johnson? I think he'd be wonderful for both Great Britain and Israel.


Noli turbare circulos meos.
 

6/24/2016 8:43 am  #26


Re: Brexit

Alexander wrote:

Boris has his moments, but he is too much of a buffoon for me to want him as PM.

 
The question is twofold: can he do the job and will he resonate with voters? Somebody like Gove can definitely get the job done, but I doubt he would be as popular. While I am hardly a fan of it, I don't think a jokester persona should be disqualifying


Noli turbare circulos meos.
 

6/24/2016 8:29 pm  #27


Re: Brexit

Personally, I must say I don't think there is anything wrong with opposition to mass immigration. Indeed, I think it is an obvious position for cultural and social conservatives to take. Mass immigration tends to lead to instability in the rooted communities and connections to place that are so important to the cultural conservative. This is especially so when these immigrants are of a different culture, language, and history. This is why New Labour went out of its way to increase immigration levels, as insiders have told us, because it lessens the traditional bonds of English society (and hence some of the appeal to the pre-Cameronian Tory Party).

 ​I don't think a little wariness about lots of foreigners settling in their country, by ordinary people is wrong, even if this wariness is occasionally expressed a little frankly. It is for those who have the leading voice in local and national affairs and culture to keep such wariness in its proper bounds. But I'm not going to say that the natural dislike of lots outsiders relatively swiftly appearing in your village or town or suburb is entirely wrong. 

It is interesting that is only white Westerners who seem to worry quite so intensely about such things. In much of the rest of the world they would think what I'm saying is obvious, but many left-liberals Westerners are scandalised by the thought of it.

     Thread Starter
 

6/24/2016 8:36 pm  #28


Re: Brexit

seigneur wrote:

What if you were on the remain campaign?

 ​If I sincerely believed in the remain cause but was most interested in winning, I think I would have probably run the campaign as they did. They tried to gather all the experts and business voices they could, even if those experts were primarily talking about short term economic risk and little else. Then I would have implied my opponents were xenophobic, narrow-minded, and so on. The remain campaign basically did this. I can't think of another route they could have taken that would have led to success. Perhaps they could have done better disentangling certain things from the EU. I don't like the EU, and I understand how its power and influence is not exaggerated by the likes of UKIP - indeed, if anything many Eurosceptics don't show just how vast its reach is. But I heard campaigners narrating how they were talking to people blaming the EU for things that weren't primarily its fault. 

If I were on the remain campaign and was more interested in a thoughtful public discussion on the issue, I'd try to communicate the nature of the EU and actually discuss issues like nationhood versus internationalism and so on, which the British Europhiles avoided. This approach would not have succeeded, but it would have been a more worthwhile debate.
 

     Thread Starter
 

6/24/2016 8:42 pm  #29


Re: Brexit

Here is an interesting discussion of some of the Brexit issues from Roger Scruton.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bvlg8YK3iSU

 ​And Peter Hitchens's first thoughts on the vote: http://hitchensblog.mailonsunday.co.uk/ 

     Thread Starter
 

6/25/2016 2:41 am  #30


Re: Brexit

Jeremy Taylor wrote:

Personally, I must say I don't think there is anything wrong with opposition to mass immigration.

Mass immigration is a form of invasion, so there's natural opposition to it. Then there are following nuances worth considering, in my opinion.

Peoples and nations can be divided as those who have the assimilating/integrating capacity and those who don't. There's a certain critical mass of immigration at which point it becomes practically unpalatable, so that the native population on location concretely suffers. Below that point, immigration can be constructive in various ways and can be considered a natural flux.

Another aspect, there are historically invading/colonizing countries on the one hand and the colonized on the other. Britain is the prime example of a historical colonial empire. Many are the peoples and nations you have invaded, exploited, annihilated or assimilated. From this perspective, you are currently just receiving your own karma, and this karma is not yet full.

It's interesting to see how different countries handle this. The politicians of the bigger EU countries (historical colonial powers plus Germany and the Nordic countries) tend to try to be more generous. That's understandable, because they have a colonial past (and thus a sense of historical urgency to amend their mistakes) and/or the brute assimilating capacity. The problem arises when they delegate these sentiments to the Eastern EU members, who are historically oppressed and whose native populations are small enough to feel threatened by mass immigration. As a reaction, nationalism/fascism is concretely reappearing as we speak, even within the big/generous countries themselves, so they have no excuse.

For example in Sweden, the vilified Sverigedemokraterna had a massive success in last elections and are playing a key role in the Parliament between the ruling factions and opposition factions. The ruling Social Democrat government appears to be trying to buffer the nationalist sentiments by making immigration rules stricter. With the new rules, passed this month, less immigrants qualify for the daily money and less categories qualify for unification of family. And there's a new category "help needer" with highly ambiguous rights distinguished from "asylum seeker" with clearly defined meaningful rights as their application is being handled.

Jeremy Taylor wrote:

If I were on the remain campaign and was more interested in a thoughtful public discussion on the issue, I'd try to communicate the nature of the EU and actually discuss issues like nationhood versus internationalism and so on, which the British Europhiles avoided. This approach would not have succeeded, but it would have been a more worthwhile debate.

Just to add my two cents, from the continental perspective Britain never was a proper member of the EU. Up front, Britain negotiated a ridiculous list of extraordinary exceptions for themselves and even then kept whining and threatening at every turn everafter (e.g. remember Cameron last year at EU meetings). Britain never had any meaningful sense of internationalism, never any conciliatory spirit, political compromise, much less any alignment to the EU policies and regulations. From this perspective, Britain is good riddance.*

Further, Brexit manifests the internal weakness of the whole EU structure. It's always been clear that there are various cracks in the very foundation. Instead of repairing them, Britain contributed to exacerbating them. No good in any of this either way.

I watched half of Scruton's speech. He talks about how different Britain's legal system is from the EU, and how from the British perspective, the British system is as European as the EU system. Well, the natural retort would be that the EU system is also as European as the British system, and with good will the two could have been reconciled. There just never was any good will. That's about it.

And it's significant how Scruton verbally contrasts the EU with Britain, instead of saying something like the continent or Brussels versus Britain. Evidently, he never saw Britain as in the EU in the first place so as to make a different verbal contrast possible, and that's exactly my point.

* In fact, the official immediate EU response at the highest level seems to be saying exactly that: "As agreed, the “New Settlement for the United Kingdom within the European Union”, reached at the European Council on 18-19 February 2016, will now not take effect and ceases to exist. There will be no renegotiation." Meaning, the entire diplomatic dumbfoolery between Cameron and Brussels throughout last year is null and void, adieu Britain http://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2016/06/24-joint-statement-uk-referendum/

Last edited by seigneur (6/25/2016 3:57 am)

 

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