Oreo
DaisyAnneReturns
MaizieD
growstuff
GrannyRose I don't accept that there is ever such a thing as a collective "will of the people".
It's a very useful concept for authoritarians of all shades of political belief, though....
I believe that nice Mr Hitler made good use of it...
A vote in favour of something is only ever a will of the people who voted in favour. That's not too difficult to understand, is it?
Do those who voted against immediately lose their 'peoplehood' and become alien beings?
"A vote in favour of something is only ever a will of the people who voted in favour. That's not too difficult to understand, is it?"
But that really is the very thing that some on here do believe, isn't it? It's really very worrying that people can think that having voted, under dubious circumstances and winning by very little, they should be able to influence how we think and what we say about our government and the outcome of that vote. It really is rather like Chinese thinking. Very worrying.
I still can't really understand why they think that's okay and democratic.
The slight majority of people who voted to leave the EU were told by the govt of the day that if only one more vote was for Brexit it would count, in fact it was over a million.
So it wasn’t what they, the ones who voted to leave said or thought or influenced it was the govt.Blame the govt not the people.
I voted to stay in the EU but won’t go down the road of bleating on about it, claiming it was undemocratic ( would it have been undemocratic if remain had won the day?)
Though it definitely comes into it, we're not specifically discussing vote to leave the EU. We could equally well be looking at the last general election, or, indeed any general election.
However, as the thread is about 'dictatorship' and democracy is definitely involved somewhere along the line I think we have every right to post examples of undemocratic behaviour and behaviour that leads to dictatorships.
Some EU referendum campaigns contravened our notions of democracy, which go a bit further than solely imposing the will of the majority, The manner in which the result was implemented tottered on the edge of being democratic. There was certainly no effort whatsoever to gain 'losers consent', which, contrary to popular belief, is not something that the 'losers' are obliged to give.
Like 'the will of the people', losers consent is used as a sort of fig leaf to make the 'winners' feel more comfortable about the gross things they have forced on the 'losers'. IMO...