#^d 2016-06-19 #^h Weekend Roundup

Travel disrupts my normal news browsing. I'm lucky to keep up with my email, find it hard to write on notebook keyboards, never listen to the radio, only watch TV when that's happening somewhere I'm staying (which did get me some History Channel in CT, CNN in Buffalo, and Weather Channel in AR). So I'm catching up here, and this week's links and comments are pretty hit-and-miss.



Also, a few links for further study (briefly noted:

#^b

Comments

David Everall [Mon, June 20, 2016, 6:44 am]

A few quick observations on the EU Referendum item in your latest weekend roundup.

Firstly both the linked to article and your comments vastly underestimate the racist, xenophobic nature of the "leave" side of the debate here. The Remain side have, I think, put too much store in the hope that people will ultimately vote on economic issues rather than migration. In this case the "It's the economy stupid" argument may not prevail. They should have addressed the issue of migration more directly.

What may (just) swing it for Remain is the increasingly extreme nature of some of the campaign material coming out of the Leave camp (see below) which is alienating those that feel there is an economic argument for quitting. The Jo Cox killing will I think convince a few more to join the remain camp. I do however think we should be careful in ascribing motives to her attacker at this stage. There are undoubted right wing links but also a history of mental issues, some very recent. There could well be a complex interplay of these issues involved in his actions. Here in the UK and don't feel there is any great pressure from organisations to try to force a lone wolf/ mental illness interpretation on events. What does seem apparent is that Jo Cox was a genuinely decent person who will be greatly missed in parliament and elsewhere.

It seems to me that Cameron is screwed whichever way the vote goes. If it's remain then there are enough Tory leave supporters to make his life hell and if its leave then his position would seem untenable.

If it's leave then the UK will become a nasty, even more right wing country under the influence of Johnson, Gove, Farage etc.

I know that from an economic point of view probably there wouldn't be as much change as some say but the lurch to the right of the Tory party would be inevitable and to a Socialist like me almost unbearable. It's ironic that it would be the working poor in this country, a good proportion of which support leaving, that would mainly bear the consequences.