The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1
The EconomistAugust 4th 2018 13

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Let’s do it again


You are right that if the British
Parliament cannot agree on
what sort of Brexit it wants the
people must be asked what
they want including whether
they want to leave the Euro-
pean Union at all (“The case
for a second referendum” July
21st). But you also argue that it
would be better ifMPs made
up their own minds and
spared the people the trouble
of voting again on the matter.
This is wrong.
No form of Brexit will be
good. We will either damage
our prosperity by reducing our
ties with our largest market; or
we will damage our power by
followingEUrules without a
vote on them; or we will dam-
age both (the prime minister’s
latest proposal). The only way
of avoiding damage to both
our prosperity and our power
is to cancel Brexit. But Parlia-
ment should not do this with-
out first asking the people. So
even ifMPs could agree what is
the least bad form of Brexit
they should still ask the people
if they want it.
In the referendum two
years ago the public was asked
to choose between the reality
of “in” and Boris Johnson’s
cake-and-eat-it fantasy of
“out”. Once Theresa May has
finished her negotiations the
people have the right to choose
between the reality of “in” and
the reality of “out”.
HUGO DIXON
Chair
InFacts
London


The preparation and then cam-
paigning for a second referen-
dum would create increasing
indecision and insecurity for
industries a more calamitous
problem than any specific


result with perilous repercus-
sions for jobs and investment.
You asserted that the Brexit
alternatives could be “costed
and debated” in a second vote.
Yet unambiguous and compre-
hensive alternatives won’t
really be available and how
much will the public actually
know about them? A referen-
dum held before Britain leaves
the EUwould not be held on a
clear strategy for future rela-
tions with the EU.
What is most perturbing is
the perils another referendum
could impose upon our de-
mocracy. The message would
be that even after the country
reached a definitive outcome
in the first referendum sub-
sequent to a long campaign
with a record turnout Parlia-
ment was not qualified or
efficient enough to execute it.
To put it bluntly the govern-
ment cannot honour the desire
of its people. The long-estab-
lished and respected faith we
have in our democratic pro-
cesses would be brutally eradi-
cated. Britain would be deeply
divided: politically socially
and economically.
It is imperative that we
ensure the upmost stability
and unity now by accepting
the voters’ verdict and work
together to implement it as
best we can.
KARDO BECK
London

If you are going to fail fail hard
and fast. This allows you to
dust yourself off learn from
your mistake and move on. A
second referendum would
further dilute responsibility for
Brexit letting the Eurosceptics
off the hook for the misinfor-
mation they have peddled.
And it would lead to a soft
Brexit. That would make it all
too easy for the Brexit extrem-
ists to say that it failed because
it was not a true Brexit much
as Marxists attribute the
demise of a communist regime
to it not being true commu-
nism. A hard Brexit would
leave Britain sadder but wiser.
Sometimes a heart attack is the
only way to shock a person
into changing a profoundly
unhealthy lifestyle.
ANDOR ADMIRAAL
The Hague

It’s good to talk

IdonotshareThe Economist’s
dim view of the American and
Russian presidents’ recent
meeting (“Humiliation in
Helsinki” July 21st). In partic-
ular the allegation that Presi-
dent Donald Trump failed to
stand up for America in the
wake of the election-meddling
revelations. What was he
supposed to do call Vladimir
Putin a liar to his face in public?
How would that foster future
co-operation? Mr Trump is
trying to build a relationship. If
you exhibit trust in someone
they are more likely to want to
honour it than not. Children
are a good example. Whether
you truly believe the trust is
warranted is irrelevant; time
will tell in any event.
Neither do I buy the paral-
lels you draw between the
Helsinki meeting and Mr
Trump’s more critical rhetoric
towards the Europeans and
Britain. True friends tell it like it
is.Tobeabletodosoisamark
of the strength of a friendship
not the reverse.
LES PEARCE
Cranleigh Surrey

W.H. Auden once said poetry
makes nothing happen. But
Helsinki perhaps proves him
wrong:

And how reliable can any truth
be that is got
By observing oneself and then
just inserting a Not?

JOHN GOODMAN
Auckland New Zealand

Spain’s civil war
The opening paragraph of
“Disturbing Franco’s ghost”
(July 21st) is biased. The Valley
of the Fallen was built to
remember the deaths on both
sides in the Spanish civil war
and to serve as a reminder for
future generations. It was not
built by forced labour.
Inmates well fed and paid
voluntarily helped its con-
struction which was mainly
done by free workers. Last but
not least you call my grand
uncle José Antonio Primo de
Rivera a fascist. He was a
successful lawyer and poli-
tician who was killed in jail

after an unfair trial in 1936. In
his testament he did not want
more blood to be spilled in
wars between Spaniards. He
was against the war and
against the military. He was
killed when he was 33 just
three years after the founda-
tion of his party. He was a very
good friend of Federico García
Lorca. His last handwritten
manuscripts are summarised
in a book called “The Papers of
José Antonio”. Please read it
and tell me if he was a fascist.
PELAYO PRIMO DE RIVERA
Madrid

Depicting war

Movies about the cold war
made by Hollywood and the
inseparable British film in-
dustry were not quite as Mani-
chean as you suggest (“The
thaw” June 30th). If you con-
centrate on “quality” films and
strip away tongue-in-cheek
(Bond) propaganda (“Green
Berets”) crass (“Rambo”) and
allegory (“The Alamo”) you
find a more-balanced judg-
ment. I suggest a reading of
“Reds” “Dr Zhivago” “Full
Metal Jacket” “Platoon” “The
Bridges at Toko-Ri” “Pork
Chop Hill” “Judgment at
Nuremberg” “Dr Strangelove”
and many others to counter
your view. Hollywood and the
British film industry at their
best have been more imagina-
tive than youthink despite
being hindered by the normal
degree of nationalistic myopia.
SIMON STANDER
Moncofa Spain

Divisibility is a trap
Schumpeter’s final comment
on Foucault reminded me of
an old joke (June 23rd). There
are two kinds of people in this
world: those who like to divide
the world into two kinds of
people and those who don’t.
RICHARD WEXELBLAT
West Brandywine Pennsylvania 7

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