@medealady wrote:

The sad outcome will be various factions will point the finger at the other for this atrocity.  How much have the Remain theats fuelled the fire of fear? The threatening emergency Budget? With each threat comes a counter threat as with a 2 horse race each side attempts to out-threaten the other.  Whilst we the 'common' people try and make sense of fact from fiction.  The 'powers that be' consider not the equivalent of the lone gunman, isolated, unhinged maybe drinking and the rest driven to distraction by a feeling of hopelessness. The people probably didnt also expect the Party of Power to bully to such an extent in such a one sided manner, enlist cross party support and state what they could and would do if voters dared to disagree.

 

The best outcome would be for the last days pre referendum for both sides to only deal in hard facts and admit everthing else that is a guesstimate. In the 70's we voted for a Common Market/Agricultural Policy and what we ended up with should be the lesson as to what the future holds when idle hands need to justify their existance. 

 


It did not take long for your words to be proven correct,

we could all guess at the murderers motives and claim to know the cause,

it could be that farage standing in front of a poster pushed mair over the edge, 

or it could be the constant threats from the remain camp,

maybe it has something to do with mair struggling to find real employment when his voluntary work ended,

it could be that he blames labour and their wars and open door policy for the suffering we now see in other countries and on a smaller scale right here, point being i doubt even mair really knows why he did what he did.

to try and twist this to be anyone fault but mair's is childish, but desperate people say desperate things.

Proven by the responses from the remain camp.