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I don't much care what they think, so long as they vote Brexit, as the public in the UK have said they want. The problem many MPs have is that they live in the great wen (London), and their social life revolves around people who regard themselves as a metropolitan elite. I do not doubt that these people (who are not any sort of elite, contrary to their feelings) are mainly anti Brexit. Social ostracization would follow if they do not go with the herd. Tough eh? But their status rests on the votes they got from the rest of us, and most of them are nothing without that. Some of the ex MP's after the last two elections are in a difficult state, particularly if they are married to someone who remained elected. My heart does not bleed for them: that is the name of the game.OD has intentionally misrepresented my words, that's his usual tactic, pay it no mind. I never said everyone is anti Brexit, my exact words were:
and I stand by it
Trump according to Wikipaedia drew wide support, not just from the old Confederate states. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_2016.It seems they've found a group of people more stupid than gun-toting Confederate-flag-waving southern USA Trump voters. That is impressive, in a despair-for-humanity sense.
The documentary is perhaps not as disturbing as the blurb indicates, but is nonetheless disturbing. I have no quarrels with a mother 'shopping' her son when he is a criminal, as in this case, but she should have gone to the Police, not these quasi judicial thugs. That she did not says a lot about the history of the province, of which I know a little, being 50% Irish genetically, and having worked there for a short time, and having had a son go to University there. I had some disturbing experiences there, and some good ones. I also have a brother in law who served there in the RAF Regiment, who is very level headed, but has very strong feelings against the Northern Irish catholics and their supporters. But then he was exposed to vicious conduct - which some of his then opponents claim they too suffered.
What you have to watch with documentaries is that the act of filming is a bit like the effect of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle. Just as seeing the movement of a particle interferes with the track of the particle because a photon bounces off it to let you see it, so the presence of a camera can interfere with what is being seen on the screen. In some cases it has been reported that camera crews have caused the event being filmed so as to have something to film.
I can vouch for some of the ill feeling, having asked in a car spares place for a part for my car, and feeling the reaction when asked for the (UK) registration number. When I gave it the guy at the counter said "British registration?" in very venomous tones, and the crowded place went suddenly extremely quiet. It was in Londonderry, or Derry if you prefer, and on the border of the Creggan and the Bogside. Very uncomfortable indeed.