robber–s:

fimbulvetr-now:

robber–s:

fimbulvetr-now:

meanswithoutend:

fimbulvetr-now:

has this been done yet

m8, it was a democratic vote to leave an undemocratic union, not the seizure of ‘emergency powers’ by emperor fucking palpatine

shit thanks for clearing that up I was really sure Boris Johnson was actually Jar Jar Binks

And wow how democratic. A bunch of elderly racists that don’t know how to interface with poc they can’t exploit from afar have made a decision that will have consequences they won’t have to deal with. The younger generations, however, who do need to worry about jobs and the economy, and who did not want to leave the EU, are forced to reckon with an economy that has already started to nose dive. 

I don’t think you understand how democracy works. Democracy allows people to vote for what they believe is right. No matter how old they are, they are still a citizen of this country and deserve a voice.
The fault lies in those who didn’t vote, the 18-25 demographic have the highest percentage of remain votes than any other demographic. They are also the demographic with the highest % of people who won’t vote. It is also from my experience on social media today that the young people who didn’t vote are the most salty and are crying that it’s their future. They didn’t vote, they can’t say shit about this result because they didn’t practice their right to vote in a democratic society.

But I don’t think most of tumblr understands (they never do) that just because we voted out of the EU, we aren’t all fucking racist. In probably 90% if not more, of the leave voters don’t give a fuck whether immigrants come here or not. Our problem is with the EU itself, how it’s run, it’s corruption and the fact that it is a threat to our own democracy.
Read into it before you put everyone who voted out under the racist label.

I would honestly love to hear what sort of pure democracy you think Farage and Johnson, etc. are going to usher in. How do you think this is going to unfold? How does a drastically devalued currency serve the UK? How do you feel about the immediate flip on the £350mil claim?

Say whatever the hell you want about Farage, he is a man of the people. He is the only well known politician not born with a silver poon in his mouth and knows what it’s like to be an average joe. He has done more for democracy than any other politician and he never even became prime minister. He has some weird ideas but the whole point of democracy is to let the people decide whether your ideas are reasonable or not. Nigel cares about the country, perhaps in an old fashion way but not an aggressive or elitist one.

Johnson I am not too happy about, the man is an idiot who cares too much about a positive public image as a goon. We don’t need that in a politician, especially not a prime minister. However he is a logical man and is quite fair, speaks his mine and is a man of democracy.

How will this unfold? It is expected to be rough at first, clearly demonstrated by the drop in the GBP. However as we progress through this our economy will get better, realistically it won’t be “the great country it was” it won’t be as great most likely, things won’t go back to the way they were, humanity has progressed and it won’t be the same.

As for the £350million “probably not entirely going on the NHS”, it’s a bit shit. In Farage’s ideal world, he would put all the money he could on the NHS, but in all honesty the money being spent on other things is to be expected and anyone who believed that it would and could go entirely on the NHS, are idiots. Government is not and will never be that simple, money needs to be spent on stuff like education and funds for the army etc. But don’t forget we still have our taxes contributing to the NHS so overall it won’t have a disastrous effect if some of the money is spent elsewhere. It was a lie, so overall I am not happy about it but at the end of the day it was not a surprise.

Nigel Farage’s father was a London stockbroker. 

He attended Dulwich College, a public(for those keeping score at home: this means a fee-paying school in the UK, as opposed to a ‘comprehensive’, which is what Muricans would refer to as a public school) school that’s part of the Eton Group, and where his teachers described him as a racist and a fascist. X

He went on to be a commodity broker with several companies abroad.

His house is estimated at £540,000. And he once claimed his EU salary and expenses were worth about

£250,000 a year. X

The Farages pull about

£109,000 a year.

The 2013/14 HBAI report gave median household income (2 adults) as £23,556. X He also pulled about

£2mil in expenses between 1999 and 2009.  X

What on earth does he know about being an average joe?

meanswithoutend:

fimbulvetr-now:

meanswithoutend:

fimbulvetr-now:

has this been done yet

m8, it was a democratic vote to leave an undemocratic union, not the seizure of ‘emergency powers’ by emperor fucking palpatine

shit thanks for clearing that up I was really sure Boris Johnson was actually Jar Jar Binks

And wow how democratic. A bunch of elderly racists that don’t know how to interface with poc they can’t exploit from afar have made a decision that will have consequences they won’t have to deal with. The younger generations, however, who do need to worry about jobs and the economy, and who did not want to leave the EU, are forced to reckon with an economy that has already started to nose dive. 

Your calling the voters of the U.K. racists without any foundation for the claim doesn’t make the vote less democratic. And as for the idealistic younger generations with little knowledge of the real world, workplace, economy etc… Maybe they ought to learn from their elders. They’ve been voting years before you, so sweeping them aside and calling them idiots is terribly smug and short-sighted. And as for your assumption that the pound’s crash in value is permanent… That says it all.

Well okay for starters I didn’t call them idiots. I don’t think they’re idiots at all. They’re voting for their own interests, and doing what they think is best for them. But that is inherently short-sighted when you’re talking about older, especially 65+, voters. Y’know, it’s that old proverb: ‘Society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.’

Secondly, if younger generations have little knowledge of ‘the real world, workplace, economy etc…’ it’s probably because older generations’ years of voting has gutted the very programs they themselves benefitted from because the 80s culture of greed is good discouraged paying it forward. Younger people are not living at home and pushing 30 because they’re lazy. They’re living at home pushing thirty because they cannot afford to live on their own. They’re unemployed or underemployed because the jobs are not there, not because they’re too busy taking selfies to apply. Companies are doing things like not replacing employees that retire, and I could go on at length about the classist devilry that is unpaid internships.

Thirdly, I never stated that I thought the pound’s devaluation is permanent. In fact, I didn’t mention the pound at all. Of course it’ll recover. But it’s going to take a long time. 1% changes in currency are considered massive. The pound fell like…8%? 8-10%? Even on the conservative end of that range it’s still very dramatic.

I will also continue to argue that it was undemocratic because the people who don’t have to face the ramifications of this forced a very uncertain, and given the Leave campaigners’ furious backpedalling on their promises, fairly unoptimistic future on their children and grandchildren. 

sir-grayfox:

fimbulvetr-now:

sir-grayfox:

fimbulvetr-now:

has this been done yet

The EU shouldn’t even exist so it’s a good step in the right direction if their steps after this are going down the right path. I think the US should leave now, we should’ve never joined in the first place

????? You must mean the UK??? The US isn’t a member?????

Yeah I am dumb sometimes I hate myself -.-

No worries but I would love to hear your reasons for feeling that way?