Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

How can Britain's divisions be healed?

The country is massively divided on Brexit and these divisions are only getting deeper. Here is when Owen Jones, a prominent left-wing Guardian journalist, went to interview people at a rally for Nigel Farage's Brexit Party. He got insulted and shouted at by almost everyone he was filmed interviewing. The main points made by these people were about democracy but ironically almost nobody tried to engage him in rational discourse and one person even said that the Guardian newspaper should be banned:

[media=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sltIisHseA]

The mood at the Brexit rally was one of right-wing anti-establishment anger fuelled by tribal bitterness against anything that they disagree with. Obviously, its a rally and it's the hard-core rather than the majority of party support, but they are the hard-core of a party which is polling very well.

The Brexit Party won't win a UK General Election, but they will probably push the Conservative Party into supporting a no-deal Brexit. Boris Johnson, now the clear front-runner to replace May, has already said that Britain must leave the EU by October 'with or without a deal'. There is no deal that could conceivably be negotiated that would appease the majority of Brexit voters.

The anger and sense of betrayal felt by the people at the Brexit rally is only likely to increase. If the unscrupulous and caddish Johnson walks back on his no-deal promise then Farage and our right-wing tabloids will further inflame these tensions. If there is a no-deal Brexit then there will be a huge recession and people will feel betrayed again. This anger could go in different places but some of it will go further down the well of the nationalist right.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
Tracos · 51-55, M
how would you reckon a new referendum to play out?
SW-User
@Tracos close but I'd suspect remain would just edge it now
This message was deleted by its author.
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@Tracos I haven't always supported a second ref (for various reasons) but I've come to that conclusion because the middle ground in this country is disappearing. Almost nobody wants a compromise deal. Remainers would see a negotiated compromise deal as a sell-out and leavers would see that as a sellout so we are basically heading to a situation where it's no deal Brexit vrs Remain.

A second ref would be a nasty campaign and very close but I think remain would probably narrowly win. It would leave a lot of angry people though and they are already really angry.
Tracos · 51-55, M
I think you are right.... I just hate to see a good country be torn apart over senseless populist emotion manipulations