Brexit: Meaningless Environment in Britain's History

It's done. A triumph of difficult negotiations and Boris Johnson managed to fulfill the most meaningless and masochistic ambition ever dreamed of in the history of this island country. The rest of the world, with the exception of Presidents Putin and Trump, watched in amazement without hiding disappointment. A majority voted in December for parties [...]
It's done. A triumph of difficult negotiations and Boris Johnson managed to fulfill the most meaningless and masochistic ambition ever dreamed of in the history of this island country. The rest of the world, with the exception of Presidents Putin and Trump, watched in amazement without hiding disappointment.
A majority voted in December for parties supporting a second referendum. But the parties involved failed to produce a common cause. Now we have to gather the tents, perhaps even at the sound of falling bells, and hope to start this 15-year-old crevice by always haunting us in front of our eyes - numerous trade deals, security, health, scientific co-operation and thousands of other useful things.
The only sure thing now is we're going to ask ourselves questions for a very long time. Put aside for a moment the lies of the pro-resolvation camp, reckless financing, Russian involvement or the Electoral Commission that had no teeth to show. Think instead of this magic powder. How was an issue of such constitutional, economic and cultural consequences managed to be resolved by a simple vote rather than a super majority?
A parliamentary report (see Briging 07212) at the time of the Referendum Law in 2015 highlighted the reason: “because the referendum was simply advisory”! He created the electorate the opportunity to express an opinion. How did the “advise” turn into “binding”? With that blind dust, then, they threw their populist hands into our eyes from the left and the right. We've witnessed a fellow numbness between the government and the opposition. The Epropa exit door was kept open by opposition leader Jeremy Corby for Johnson to pass quietly. In this case, if you had traveled enough to the left, you would have met with the right on the other side.
What did we learn from our blindness? That those who were not prospering within the status quo had no good reason to vote for it; that our prolonged parliamentary chaos stems from a bad yes-No; that the ecology of long evolution of the EU has deeply formed the flora of our nation's landscape and the removal of these plants will be brutal; that what once called the Brex was made difficult after the threats of no agreement; and that in any way, the removal from our bloc will distort our economy will cause deep division, that all future trade arrangements will be a compromise agreement with the <x> and that we take back the promise of this cynic control. / Translate: Journal “Albanian”










