Heckler456
Banned
Lol. At the same time, I don't really see why the police needed to get involved.
I doubt lending her pen was all she was doing.
Lol. At the same time, I don't really see why the police needed to get involved.
More than likely she was trying to influence voters which is illegal in a polling station. So police were right to be involved in that case.
Huh? Do you need to bring your own pencil or something and people forget? And why call the police? And why does this woman define herself by her EU and Islam opinion on Twitter? Everything is weird today.https://twitter.com/willowhalegreen/status/745961905831944192
Ugh what a silly woman, wish she got arrested
Lol. At the same time, I don't really see why the police needed to get involved.
I love the comments
"They REALLY want this in pencil, wonder why..."
More than likely she was trying to influence voters which is illegal in a polling station. So police were right to be involved in that case.
Huh? Do you need to bring your own pencil or something and people forget? And why call the police? And why does this woman define herself by her EU and Islam opinion on Twitter? Everything is weird today.
Wow, that 90s xtreme design philosophy!does anyone else remember this dude
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also, I used to like the ice version of tizer
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tizer's been ruined now, the taste is bollocks now and look at this shit:
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wheres the edginess and cool
Which I guess the new version is an update of.
I admit it is but the reality is leave and remain present the same problems and the truth is nobody knows what the outcome of either will be.
One could take a calculated guess and assume that migration is only going to increase to unsustainable levels, this is what happens when you have free movement and unfortunatly whilst we are a part of the EU this is never going to change, that alone should worry people, we aren't a massive country and our public services thanks to this disgusting government are already at full stretch.
Also you have to say, the EU gets more from us than we get from them, no chance it will affect our trading leaving, they need our trade, for all the dire predictions on how our economy will fail none of it is actually rooted in any form of reality.
that's one hell of a twitter bio
Huh? Do you need to bring your own pencil or something and people forget? And why call the police? And why does this woman define herself by her EU and Islam opinion on Twitter? Everything is weird today.
Makes sense. That solidarity (or lack thereof) seems irrational but I guess I can't deny that it exists.
And I have more in common with my neighbour than with someone living on a farm. In fact the South of England probably has more in common with parts of Northern Europe than with the North of England.
It's not a straw man. I think that splitting up the country would be no less ridiculous than splitting up the EU.
Are Leave people just more outspoken than Remain people? Down my street alone there is like 10 Leave posters in windows and no Remain ones. I've only seen a couple of Remain ones in my whole village...
that's one hell of a twitter bio
I've resisted the urge to use this argument at work - I think there are people here that would sincerely agree with it...I had the exact same conversation today, actually. It coaxed out some very inconsistent logic from someone who wanted to vote leave.
Huh? Do you need to bring your own pencil or something and people forget? And why call the police? And why does this woman define herself by her EU and Islam opinion on Twitter? Everything is weird today.
Well she got hers, fuck everyone else!So the EU is an "evil superstate", Islam is evil too....
...lives in Alicante, Spain.
that's one hell of a twitter bio
Hm.
I have two sets of grandparents (as is normal). Both are kinda well off but to significantly varying degrees. The wealthier pair are voting remain, and the other half are voting out.
I did go see the grandparents who are voting remain the other day, and they basically floored me with their arguments. Had no way to argue that anything other than remain would be a good outcome. Went to the others today and they, as lovely as they are, their main viewpoint came down to immigration.
So, it's curious to think about. You've got the basic standard middle and upper class pensioners who are likely voting out because of dem coloured folk and muslims, but the other side, the multi-millionaires with business ties and decades of tangible experience with europe are voting in
I voted in earlier btw
They really need to explain voting better - or the reason for pencils - next time there's an election. I saw far too many "don't use pencils!"/"Why are they using pencils?" things circulating on FB during the Scottish indyref, and this is just a repeat performance.
High turnouts, misinformation and lots of voters who don't normally vote makes for a toxic stew and paranoia over pencils is just one outcome.
I live in London and its the exact opposite of what you described.
I doubt lending her pen was all she was doing.
does anyone else remember this dude
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also, I used to like the ice version of tizer
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Voted Remain
They had pencils there, I kicked off, fellow Remain voters cheered
A lot of people (mostly Leave people, it seems) are convinced that if you vote in pencil (which is what is provided) the government will rub out the pencil and re-cast your vote to fix it. Which, obviously, is nigh-on impossible given the turnaround on British counts.
Did your Husband die for the right to use pens? Bless you, you 93 year old hero.Voted Remain
They had pencils there, I kicked off, fellow Remain voters cheered
Islington?
that's one hell of a twitter bio
I never thought about that, but it may be possible to create a fraud by lending your pen to people. There are special inks that disappear after a few minutes, turning a valid ballot into a blank one.
Pencil might actually be "safer" than ink.
Poignant little moment in the shop at lunchtime.
I was making up a necklace for a very elderly lady - probably mid-90s - and got chatting, the way you do. We talked about her time in Montana, and the time she got stuck in LA with no flight ticket and no money, when she turned to the conversation towards the referendum. So we talked around that, and her attitudes and intention to vote Leave didn't seem to match the rest of her character, and I gently prodded around the issues. She was close to tears when she told me that her political views were entirely formed by her late husband - now dead 50 years. We talked a bit more, and she left with a (by now heavily-discounted) necklace and a determination to vite Remain when she got back to Swindon.
Personal loyalty lays long shadows.
She gave me a big hug as she left.
I agree somewhat. To be fair the retired generation are supposed to take up a bigger amount of the NHS.
The aging population is still a concern. Especially when more than half the elderly live alone - which is sad but also a generational innificient resource problem.
Edit: in that more and more people are living alone now than in the nineteen fifties.
I never thought about that, but it may be possible to create a fraud by lending your pen to people. There are special inks that disappear after a few minutes, turning a valid ballot into a blank one.
Pencil might actually be "safer" than ink.
Poignant little moment in the shop at lunchtime.
I was making up a necklace for a very elderly lady - probably mid-90s - and got chatting, the way you do. We talked about her time in Montana, and the time she got stuck in LA with no flight ticket and no money, when she turned to the conversation towards the referendum. So we talked around that, and her attitudes and intention to vote Leave didn't seem to match the rest of her character, and I gently prodded around the issues. She was close to tears when she told me that her political views were entirely formed by her late husband - now dead 50 years. We talked a bit more, and she left with a (by now heavily-discounted) necklace and a determination to vite Remain when she got back to Swindon.
Personal loyalty lays long shadows.
She gave me a big hug as she left.
Having a load of people on hand with rubbers changing ballot papers is such a shit conspiracy theory. Like if you're gonna lean into this thing would you not say it's already rigged or there are extra papers or something.
Actually I'm not going to try to reason this out, that way lies madness.
Good Lord my stomach just growled. So hungry.forget Australian points-based immigration system, you need Australian-style sausage sizzle at your polling stations.
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Basically a BBQ set up at the entrance to the polling station and people cook a sausage with onions and give it to you on a slice of bread. They're basically used to raise funds for charities or local schools. They used to be outside giant hardware stores on a saturday morning (food trucks/stalls aren't as common there) but a few years ago they started appearing at schools and other voting stations on election days (it is compulsory to vote in Australia) so that's what a lot of people enjoy most about elections there. There's even a website to tell you which polling stations have sausage sizzles
http://www.electionsausagesizzle.com.au/
I voted by post but ate a sausage for breakfast anyway.
If she's still there when I go vote later I'll ask her what her problem is.https://twitter.com/willowhalegreen/status/745961905831944192
Ugh what a silly woman, wish she got arrested
That's exactly the sort of thing a rubber-toting MI5 agent would say. I'm on to you
Poignant little moment in the shop at lunchtime.
I was making up a necklace for a very elderly lady - probably mid-90s - and got chatting, the way you do. We talked about her time in Montana, and the time she got stuck in LA with no flight ticket and no money, when she turned to the conversation towards the referendum. So we talked around that, and her attitudes and intention to vote Leave didn't seem to match the rest of her character, and I gently prodded around the issues. She was close to tears when she told me that her political views were entirely formed by her late husband - now dead 50 years. We talked a bit more, and she left with a (by now heavily-discounted) necklace and a determination to vite Remain when she got back to Swindon.
Personal loyalty lays long shadows.
She gave me a big hug as she left.
Poignant little moment in the shop at lunchtime.
I was making up a necklace for a very elderly lady - probably mid-90s - and got chatting, the way you do. We talked about her time in Montana, and the time she got stuck in LA with no flight ticket and no money, when she turned to the conversation towards the referendum. So we talked around that, and her attitudes and intention to vote Leave didn't seem to match the rest of her character, and I gently prodded around the issues. She was close to tears when she told me that her political views were entirely formed by her late husband - now dead 50 years. We talked a bit more, and she left with a (by now heavily-discounted) necklace and a determination to vite Remain when she got back to Swindon.
Personal loyalty lays long shadows.
She gave me a big hug as she left.
If she's still there when I go vote later I'll ask her what her problem is.