Continental drift
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Christopher Green received Creative cowboy films’ European web award in Piccadilly. The award was for our analysis of Brexit and its impact on the social and economic prospects of the UK. We were simply stating the obvious. It is not over yet.
I won’t go over the ground of what we said other than to say that the individuals who have engineered the Brexit disaster will never be held accountable or responsible for their actions. This is the great weakness of the way things work today in western Anglosphere democracies.
“Our democracy does not allow, much less require, decision-making by referendum. That role belongs to the representatives of the people and not to the people themselves. Democracy has never meant the tyranny of the simple majority, much less the tyranny of the mob (otherwise, we might still have capital punishment)”. Geoffrey Robertson: UK Guardian
We were living in Japan at the time the Brexit vote happened and the Japanese response was instant.
By early September Japan’s message to the United Kingdom and the European Union and specifically to the British Government had been laid out clearly in its detailed document of the same name and included the following statement:
“The withdrawal of the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU) constitutes an event that will wield a substantial impact not only on the future of European integration but also on the international community as a whole, which is why the world including Asia is paying close attention to the BREXIT negotiations. This testifies to the expectation that the UK and the EU will continue to lead the world in enlarging and promoting a free and open market economy”.
The document includes a request that Britain maintains access for workers with the necessary skills required by Japanese, often high-tech, companies.
What you can be absolutely certain of is that it will not only be the animals and the United Kingdom’s environment that suffer because of Brexit.
I won’t go over the ground of what we said other than to say that the individuals who have engineered the Brexit disaster will never be held accountable or responsible for their actions. This is the great weakness of the way things work today in western Anglosphere democracies.
“Our democracy does not allow, much less require, decision-making by referendum. That role belongs to the representatives of the people and not to the people themselves. Democracy has never meant the tyranny of the simple majority, much less the tyranny of the mob (otherwise, we might still have capital punishment)”. Geoffrey Robertson: UK Guardian
We were living in Japan at the time the Brexit vote happened and the Japanese response was instant.
By early September Japan’s message to the United Kingdom and the European Union and specifically to the British Government had been laid out clearly in its detailed document of the same name and included the following statement:
“The withdrawal of the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU) constitutes an event that will wield a substantial impact not only on the future of European integration but also on the international community as a whole, which is why the world including Asia is paying close attention to the BREXIT negotiations. This testifies to the expectation that the UK and the EU will continue to lead the world in enlarging and promoting a free and open market economy”.
The document includes a request that Britain maintains access for workers with the necessary skills required by Japanese, often high-tech, companies.
What you can be absolutely certain of is that it will not only be the animals and the United Kingdom’s environment that suffer because of Brexit.