Indeed. The problem is that his feelings on this issue are, in my opinion, affecting his reason, to the point that he'd pick this specific analogy to refer to Leavers.
Whic is ridiculous.
It really isn't. As I say above, I have not met a well informed Brexiteer voter. Not one. I have not read one, met one, talked to one, seen one on TV or anywhere else. Not a one.
Given that that's the case ant that there has been abundant opportunity for the well informed Brexit voter to make themselves known and they haven't, my conclusion is that those who are in favour of Brexit (those without a seven figure independent income) are ill infomred and poor thinkers.
Now, and this is the important bit:
I have not found or seen a single shred of evidence that shakes or even wobbles my position.
In light of this, what would you call those in favour of brexit?
I'm aware of it, but certainly not to the level of UK residents. Regardless of the campaign, though, you don't know the individual reasons why one might vote to Leave, and to simply assume that they are all idiots is both counter-productive and certainly factually wrong.
It's really not. Have you found a good reason? Have you found someone in favour of the project that has a good reason.
I think that you're assuming that there must be
something useful in or or it wouldn't be happening. This would be an error on your part.
Again - If you, like we - had spent 18 months trying to find reasonable reasons (because it's our coutry and, if we're going to do this, all of us would have liked some positivity to cling to) and had found there were no reasonable reasons, even amongst those in favour of the project, what would you call those who were in favour?
Have you considered that this is perhaps because you've defined Leave voters as unreasonable to begin with? Bias is a powerful thing.
No. Why would I do that? If there were anything positive, I'd be clinging to it right now like a drowning man holding an inflated pair of jeans.
Look, my position is not fixed. If I find a decent set of reasons that aren't spurious and ephemeral claims of 'sovereignty' or 'democracy' then I@ll reconsider, but in the lat 18 months, the sum total of positive news about brexit has been zero.
Seriously, in light of the above, when the economic future of my country is bleak and the very union is in danger of dissolution in pursuit of a project with no upside, what would you call those in favour?
I'm afraid 'Idiot' covers it nicely. Sorry.