• Echo Dot
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      3 months ago

      I lived in Sunderland at the time and the amount of brainless sentiment that was going around was huge. So I’m going to go ahead and say yeah actually a lot of the Nissan workers did vote for Brexit.

      Quite possibly because they thought they were going to give the Tories a bloody nose but still they did vote for it.

      • @JoBo
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        -63 months ago

        What do Nissan workers have to do with this thread?

        • Echo Dot
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          63 months ago

          You might want to read the link you just posted

          • @JoBo
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            3 months ago

            What does an article from a publication called West Country Voices entitled “Challenging the myth that farmers voted for Brexit (and therefore deserve what’s coming to them…)” have to do with Nissan workers?

            • Echo Dot
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              3 months ago

              Read the article you posted. It mentions Nissan workers along with farmers as groups that voted for Brexit and are now suffering the hubris of their own actions.

              Also the article doesn’t even demonstrate that farmers didn’t vote for Brexit the one thing it claims to actually do, it does not do.

              In the future when you’re posting stuff to try and one up people it might be a good idea to actually read the content of the article first.

              • @JoBo
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                -73 months ago

                There is one sentence which makes passing reference to the stereotyping of various groups of people who Remain insists on blaming for its own mistakes. And you decided the only reasonable response was to reassure us that the stereotype was true for one of those groups, according to your inevitably limited experience of individuals you have encountered.

                Astonishing.

                • Echo Dot
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                  3 months ago

                  So what I find utterly fascinating about this article is you posted it as if it was some kind of gotcha and it’s just one person’s opinion. There’s absolutely no evidence provided and the whole article concludes by basically saying that there’s no evidence for one belief or the other. So the ultimate conclusion to the article is that it could essentially not exist and everything would be exactly the same.

                  The thing is, what the author of this article never really bothered to address, possibly because it would undo his own argument, is why the belief that farmers voted in massive numbers ever came about. Apparently according to him it isn’t even true so where did it come from?

                  Your position is not backed up by any evidence.

                  • @JoBo
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                    -23 months ago

                    It’s a discussion of the polls of farmers, which fluctuated a great deal above and below 50% support.

                    I posted it because Remain fucked up the campaign and now blames everyone but themselves. Which is exactly how and why they lost in the first place. Astonishing arrogance and spite.

    • @AlexS@feddit.de
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      93 months ago

      Interesting piece.

      A poll in early 2016, conducted by the University of Exeter, found that 46 per cent of the farmers they questioned said the interests of British agriculture would be best served by the UK remaining in the EU, while only 36 per cent indicated it would be better to leave.

      Another poll a few days before the referendum vote found that 38 per cent wanted to remain, 34 per cent to leave and 28 per cent were undecided.

      Two polls, one in December 2016 and one in December 2017, both with near identical results found that among the farmers who responded, 53 per cent voted to leave, 45 per cent voted to remain and 2 per cent did not vote.