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Soho Bikes goes viral as chalkboard message trolls the Daily Mail over Article 50 case coverage

"Openly gay ex-Olympic fencers welcome," says bike shop and cafe as it references headline about "Enemy of the People" judge...

A photo of a chalkboard outside a bike shop in the heart of London’s West End that parodied a Daily Mail headline relating to yesterday’s High Court ruling that Parliament alone should debate whether to trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty to begin the formal process of the UK leaving the European Union has gone viral.

The newspaper, one of the chief cheerleaders of the Leave campaign ahead of June’s referendum and which has been campaigning for a swift Brexit ever since , has been heavily criticised for its front page splash today which had pictures of the three judges who rejected the government’s case that Article 50 could be initiated through the royal prerogative, branding them “Enemies of the people.”

In its initial online coverage after the decision was announced on Thursday morning, however, the Daily Mail described Master of the Rolls Sir Terrence Etherton in its headline as an “openly gay ex-Olympic fencer” (the sabre at Moscow in 1980 if you were wondering) – but promptly removed those words after a barrage of criticism.

Mail Online Article 50 case online headline.PNG

The internet does not forget, however, particularly when the image has been screengrabbed and shared wide and far. And this morning, the words on the blackboard outside Berwick Street bike shop and café Soho Bikes made it clear where they stood on the issue.

BBC Newsnight retweeted a picture of the chalkboard taken by its assistant editor Jess Brammar that has itself been retweeted more than 3,500 times, and the story was also featured on the Independent’s Indy 100.

Tristan Clark, manager of the store’s café, told road.cc: “Our shop owner Nick Hawker noticed the awful headline this morning and saw fit to take a stab at the media giant!

 “People stopped to take photos all day long, some even came in and made comment in support of the message.

“Mainly we received media attention, however a few customers did come down for a coffee just because they wanted to take a photo of the sign as well.

 “Topical signboard messages are a regular appearance here at Soho Bikes, however rarely do we get this much attention.

 “The shop has always held a Remain vote,” he added.

To borrow a word from one of our European neighbours, all we can say is, “Chapeau!”

sohobikes.co.uk

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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30 comments

Avatar
urbane | 7 years ago
1 like

Appearently it emerged relatively recently that the civil service, after analysing the Common Market documents, warned the government that the Common Market was a trojan horse for a fiscal and political union but the government corruptly failed to communicate this to the general public, so the majority of voters probably did not give fully informed concent.  If confirmed, this means that all blocks to exiting the EU are probably unlawful and the three judges have shown themselves as negligent or even corrupt, because the judgement is based on fraudulent thus void treaties.

 

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Dnnnnnn replied to urbane | 7 years ago
3 likes
urbane wrote:

Appearently it emerged relatively recently that the civil service, after analysing the Common Market documents, warned the government that the Common Market was a trojan horse for a fiscal and political union but the government corruptly failed to communicate this to the general public, so the majority of voters probably did not give fully informed concent.  If confirmed, this means that all blocks to exiting the EU are probably unlawful and the three judges have shown themselves as negligent or even corrupt, because the judgement is based on fraudulent thus void treaties.

I'm sure the Supreme Court will take this on board.

Incidentally, what fiscal union are we in?

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RTB | 7 years ago
0 likes

Shock horror... liberal, out of touch with the country, London pro-remain establishment gets snarky.   Free speech cuts both ways  but for some that works only so long as it agrees with their agendas.

 

Personally I agree with the sentiment of the DM on this even if they probably did get too personal.  Vote has been cast, the outcome is way beyond dispute (like a 4-1 win) yet there is a cabal of non-elected, lurking in the shadows, metropolitan elite seeking to undermine the will of the people and kick Brexit into the long grass forever.  It is anti-democratic and the DM is totally within their rights to heap opprobium and indignance upon it.  Plenty agree with them.

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beezus fufoon replied to RTB | 7 years ago
2 likes
RTB wrote:

...the outcome is way beyond dispute (like a 4-1 win)

How is a ratio of 53 to 47 in any way like 4-1?

There are many good reasons to kick the corporate bankers into touch, but an ability to do basic arithmetic is surely not one of them!

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RTB replied to beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
0 likes
beezus fufoon wrote:
RTB wrote:

...the outcome is way beyond dispute (like a 4-1 win)

How is a ratio of 53 to 47 in any way like 4-1?

There are many good reasons to kick the corporate bankers into touch, but an ability to do basic arithmetic is surely not one of them!

 

Don't be a plonker.  It is an analogy as in a comparison to illustrate a clear win in a game that in reality was not even close when it got played out even though the losing side were expected to sneak a win.  I have a degree in applied maths and engineering so I think I can work out what a ratio is.  In political terms 52:48 (I think you will find) is a big win, thumping really given the context and attendance.

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beezus fufoon replied to RTB | 7 years ago
1 like
RTB wrote:

...even though the losing side were expected to sneak a win.  I have a degree in applied maths and engineering so I think I can work out what a ratio is.  In political terms 52:48 (I think you will find) is a big win, thumping really given the context and attendance.

Yes I agree that it's true the losing side were expected to sneak a win, as shown by this quote from Farage, "In a 52-48 referendum this would be unfinished business by a long way..."

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jova54 | 7 years ago
1 like

I'll bet Cameron is kicking himself now.

He obviously believed a vote to leave was just that, no ifs no buts, and as he'd backed the losing side he should resign.

Proabably the most honourable thing he's ever done, shame other remoaners aren't as honourable.

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Stumps | 7 years ago
2 likes

I think you'll find in this scenario the govt at the time said the result would be legally binding when it announced the referendum. It was approved by parliament when announced.

If people don't like the fact the majority voted to leave they can bugger off to live in Europe instead of whinging on about it.

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Rapha Nadal | 7 years ago
3 likes

I thought this was a cycling website?

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Woldsman replied to Rapha Nadal | 7 years ago
1 like
Rapha Nadal wrote:

I thought this was a cycling website?

Erm, is the coffee up to much, anyone...?

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rliu | 7 years ago
1 like

@Stumps - the right wing papers would never attack a judge for handing down a overly lenient sentence for someone who killed a cyclist would they? In their mind, cyclists are all part of the metropolitan liberal elite that they are committed to driving out of Britain.

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Stumps | 7 years ago
2 likes

Its funny how people think. Had one of these judges handed out a 6 month prison sentence  for a fatal rtc involving a cyclist they would be the worst thing since sliced bread and totally out of touch !!!!

There was a quote from a pro EU MP very early in the campaign which basically stated that the country could vote anyway it wanted as ultimately the MP's would have the final say on whether we stayed or left and as the vast majority of MP's wanted to stay then they could dictate.

That in itself is completely undemocratic and that is the worry of most people who voted to leave. Now this has to go in front of the MP's they will block, delay and basically twist this to suit themselves and make it a very drawn out process.   

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WillRod replied to Stumps | 7 years ago
1 like
Stumps wrote:

There was a quote from a pro EU MP very early in the campaign which basically stated that the country could vote anyway it wanted as ultimately the MP's would have the final say on whether we stayed or left and as the vast majority of MP's wanted to stay then they could dictate.

That in itself is completely undemocratic and that is the worry of most people who voted to leave. Now this has to go in front of the MP's they will block, delay and basically twist this to suit themselves and make it a very drawn out process.   

 

Actually, that is exactly how our form of democracy works. We have a representative democracy. We democratically elect representatives (MP's) who make decisions for us. If all referendums were legally binding, we would be overriding the democratic system we had. That is why the referendum was advisory. 

Abosulute democracy would mean no parliament, but a dozen referendums every week, hence why we have a representative democracy.

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RTB replied to WillRod | 7 years ago
0 likes
WillRod wrote:
Stumps wrote:

There was a quote from a pro EU MP very early in the campaign which basically stated that the country could vote anyway it wanted as ultimately the MP's would have the final say on whether we stayed or left and as the vast majority of MP's wanted to stay then they could dictate.

That in itself is completely undemocratic and that is the worry of most people who voted to leave. Now this has to go in front of the MP's they will block, delay and basically twist this to suit themselves and make it a very drawn out process.   

 

Actually, that is exactly how our form of democracy works. We have a representative democracy. We democratically elect representatives (MP's) who make decisions for us. If all referendums were legally binding, we would be overriding the democratic system we had. That is why the referendum was advisory. 

Abosulute democracy would mean no parliament, but a dozen referendums every week, hence why we have a representative democracy.

 

Willrod referendums are rare events, certainly over the past 30-40 years, maybe 4 or 5 if you include the Scottish Independence punt.  Therefore they should be accepted and implemented by parliament.  Everything that went before was and so should this.  It is their duty to implement the people's will especially when it was so comprehensively given. 

The question asked in the referendum was very clear and the implications of what that would mean were equally clear - we leave the EU, the ECJ and the ECHR, parliament once more becomes sovereign and we take full control of what we do with our own borders.  By implication this has to mean leaving the single market unless the EU wants to accept the UK's pre-conditions. 

Sound crazy?  Not necessarily when German industry has so much to lose by not having tariff free trade with the UK.  Then we will see where real power lies and it ain't gonna be with whiskey breath Juncker and his jobs-for-the-boys lamentables.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to Stumps | 7 years ago
1 like
Stumps wrote:

Its funny how people think. Had one of these judges handed out a 6 month prison sentence  for a fatal rtc involving a cyclist they would be the worst thing since sliced bread and totally out of touch !!!!

Everyone thinks in that 'funny' way though.

It cuts both ways. If major national papers were launching furious personal attacks on judges for a ruling that upset cyclists or any other group the Mail doesn't like, the same people who support this attack would be banging on about the 'rule of law' and the 'independence of the judiciary' etc. Doubtless everyone would swap sides.

The referendum was never said to be binding, only advisory. As far as I can see the judges are correct. Politically, however, it might not go well for MPs who reject its recommendations.

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Leviathan | 7 years ago
7 likes

Everything has a cycling angle these days.

2/3 majorities are antidemocratic, further referendums are antidemocratic. Having said that, the majority probably now wants to stay, so of course they will use any legal mechanism to get the best deal possible. Farage can shout about backsliding all he wants, he is a blowhard with very little actual power.

The problem with the referendum was it was not legally binding. The real person to blame for all this is Cameron. His smug ego boosting opinion poll has been spat back in our faces. Where the f*** is he now? In the Scottish referendum we had two clear manifestos that could be picked apart. In the Brexit ref there was nothing like that, just buses covered in lies. I would happily watch Jeremy Clarkson blow that thing up and Johnson in court for breaking promises.

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Hipshot | 7 years ago
8 likes

Our tabloids are quite simply revolting filth.

They only care about the views of their billionaire proprietors, it doesn't matter what  hatred, division and fear they  dredge up to get there.

I'm all for free minded  journalism, but this isn't journalism, and it isn't free minded. It's Orwelian propaganda.

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FatBoyW | 7 years ago
0 likes

Duplicate post error

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FatBoyW | 7 years ago
0 likes

Dupe error

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FatBoyW | 7 years ago
15 likes

Truly disgusting tripe promulgating hatred where none is due. 

Surely our politicians should know how to do their job properly? Being pulled up by our judiciary is a good thing.

 

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

 

Bit bonkers but One wonders if, by sticking it to the judges, there may be a reaction which brings in law to ensure our journalists maintain a civilised standard of reporting. Surely remarking on a judges sexual orientation is neither in the public interest or relevant and therefore would be a breach of privacy? Do we have laws on that?

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to FatBoyW | 7 years ago
0 likes
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote.

This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal.

Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent.

Would you do the same in a general election?

Avatar
Gus T replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
8 likes
Rich_cb wrote:
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote. This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal. Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent. Would you do the same in a general election?

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

 

Avatar
davel replied to Gus T | 7 years ago
1 like
Gus T wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote. This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal. Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent. Would you do the same in a general election?

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

 

You're conveniently - and wholly inaccurately - conflating a referendum to join the EEC with one to join the EU, which didn't happen.

Avatar
Gus T replied to davel | 7 years ago
0 likes
davel wrote:
Gus T wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote. This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal. Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent. Would you do the same in a general election?

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

 

You're conveniently - and wholly inaccurately - conflating a referendum to join the EEC with one to join the EU, which didn't happen.

Nope, the EEC developed into the EU as a natural progression just like the League of Nations developed into the UN or the WW2 alliance became NATO or the British Empire became the Commonwealth. Life and politics progress all the time.

PS I was anti EEC because it was obvious UK cost of living was going to go up without the matching wages that our future partners were receiving.

Avatar
davel replied to Gus T | 7 years ago
1 like
Gus T wrote:
davel wrote:
Gus T wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote. This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal. Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent. Would you do the same in a general election?

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

 

You're conveniently - and wholly inaccurately - conflating a referendum to join the EEC with one to join the EU, which didn't happen.

Nope, the EEC developed into the EU as a natural progression just like the League of Nations developed into the UN or the WW2 alliance became NATO or the British Empire became the Commonwealth. Life and politics progress all the time.

PS I was anti EEC because it was obvious UK cost of living was going to go up without the matching wages that our future partners were receiving.

Yes, but it was not a vote to join the EU, as you suggested - the common market and EU are two very different concepts, and Brits never had a vote to join the EU.

I suspect that had the recent referendum been about the common market, a tidy majority would have voted to remain.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to Gus T | 7 years ago
1 like
Gus T wrote:

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

That is incorrect.

The 1975 referendum only required a simple majority.

Yes achieved 2/3 of the vote albeit on a lower turnout than the 2015 referendum.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_European_Communities_memb...

Avatar
Gus T replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
0 likes
Rich_cb wrote:
Gus T wrote:

But you conveniently forget that we had to have a 2/3rds majority to join the EU so why shouldn't the same apply to leaving?

That is incorrect. The 1975 referendum only required a simple majority. Yes achieved 2/3 of the vote albeit on a lower turnout than the 2015 referendum. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_European_Communities_memb...

Unfortunately Wikipedia isn't always accurate. The Heath government stated a 60% vote was required to join and to ensure it happened, uncast votes were deemed to be yes votes, a lot of us no voters were up in arms about this but didn't have the legal right to launch challenges against this.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to Gus T | 7 years ago
2 likes
Gus T wrote:

Unfortunately Wikipedia isn't always accurate. The Heath government stated a 60% vote was required to join and to ensure it happened, uncast votes were deemed to be yes votes, a lot of us no voters were up in arms about this but didn't have the legal right to launch challenges against this.

Wikipedia might not be right on everything but it is correct on this.

There was an attempt to introduce an ammendment that would require specific turnout and vote thresholds but it failed.

Here is a link to a paper from the House of Commons library which confirms this.

http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN02809/SN02809.pdf

Avatar
harrybav replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
2 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

Here is a link to a paper from the House of Commons library...

Classy work, well played!

Avatar
Housecathst replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
1 like
Rich_cb wrote:
FatBoyW wrote:

we have to look forward to months and years of nonsense due to such an ill judged opinion poll as a straight majority vote on staying or leaving. Should have been set at two thirds majority to ensure it really was a clear mandate. Maybe we should have another opinion poll I mean referendum. Don't forget no referendum has any ability to direct parliament we vote MPs in in a general election, their decisions and votes are what carry legislation not some crazy referendum.

I hear this 2/3rds argument all the time. The problem is that you would need 2 Leave votes to counteract every Remain vote. This overrides the basic principle that all of our votes are equal. Running another referendum just because the result was close also sets a dangerous precedent. Would you do the same in a general election?

Would you do the same in a general election, if there was a hung parliament in all likelihood you would have another election very soon afterwards 

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