Indeed. I can't foresee a "people's vote" happening at all. In the unlikely even that it did, I certainly can't see how a Remain option would get onto the ballot paper.
Still, blue ration books, eh?
Mrs Don is seriously worried (and is making me concerned as well).
In her view a no-deal Brexit will leave the UK in an economic mess the likes of which we have not seen. The NHS will be the first to go because we won't be able to afford it and in any case, there won't be enough medical personnel. Within a decade she reckons we'll have a US-style system where there is some public provision for those most likely to vote (i.e. the elderly) but that most people will have to rely on private medical insurance.
She's also concerned that taxes will have to rise steeply to help fund all the schemes the government will try to keep the country afloat. Corporate taxes will have to drop significantly and taxes on the rich will fall to stimulate growth. Instead the working and middle classes will see their taxes go through the roof. She also thinks that there will be taxes on savings so that people like us - rich enough to be comfortably off - not rich enough to warrant the fees associated with a tax haven - will see their savings erode rapidly.
The state pension will be another thing that we won't be able to afford. This, combined with the erosion of savings, will mean that almost everyone will be too poor to retire. We'll end up having to work low-wage jobs to try and make ends meet but the need to compete with the developing world will drive wages lower.
Her vision is that in 25 years the UK will be a developing country