seem too wrapped up in the relatively transient concern of which actors did what over the course of the campaign itself
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Replying to @mtracey @adamjohnsonNYC
if the outcome has desirous effects, then the factors which gave rise to that outcome shld be secondary or tertiary concerns
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Replying to @mtracey @adamjohnsonNYC
Does that mean you condone xenophobia? No. It just means that xenophobic elements which might be temporarily vindicated...
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Replying to @mtracey @adamjohnsonNYC
... don't need to dictate the final calculus as to whether Brexit will bring desirable effects.
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Replying to @mtracey @adamjohnsonNYC
If xenophobes are vindicated, that's an undesirable, but short-term problem. Brexit outcome arguably good in the long-term.
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Replying to @mtracey
well, intent matters. And while the act itself may be good in theory it can't be divorced from forces that brought it about
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Replying to @adamjohnsonNYC
it *can* be divorced, people are just refusing to do so because invested in the campaign itself
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Replying to @mtracey
I don't think so. Don't think it's a cosmetic pivot. Those on right who pushed the referendum now have a mandate
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Replying to @adamjohnsonNYC
eh not really. No guarantee this would translate to general election gains for right-wing Tories. If anything, they're split
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Farage isn't even an MP. Point is there's more uncertainty about short-term consequences than people have let on.
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