If there was ever an example of attacking the man, not the ball here it is. Go and dig out those posts and reply to them if you want.
The point is that it isn't devaluing the word when you have a history of saying racist stuff on this very forum
I see, so the GCR and everybody who hasn't signed the ECHR is on the same standard as North Korea and Saudi Arabia. Sorry but I'm not going to discuss further with this as you seem to lack basic knowledge of the matter and let emotions control you into continuing to openly insult people.
I see. Well there is still the ICCPR and ICESCR that are binding the UK and the UN Charta of Human Rights, while not binding, is seen as codified common law. So there's not totally nothing. I also read that there is supposed to be a new British Bill of Rights - would it really be that easy for parliament to just randomly replace stuff within? Would it be so easy to reach majorities for that?
While the NK/Saudi comparison is hyperbole, but I wouldn't accuse him of lacking basic knowledge of the situation given your second post. The UKs uncodified constitution is a fairly fundamental part of British law/politics. Additionally, at the moment not much is known about the "British Bill of Rights", we know very little about what rights would be gained and lost with it, or about how easy it would be for the government to change them.
The fact that there is so much political will to repeal existing human rights legislation, while giving very vague details about its replacement is extremely worrying. If the Conservatives actually cared about enshrining a persons human rights, they would be pointing out how great their replacement is, and how its better than what we have now. Instead we just get told the current one is European trash that protects cat owning terrorists, with vague promises that we will get some kind of replacement when its gone
I don't recall those that lost the referendum in the 1970's resorting to court action to try and stop staying in the EU by the back door.
Ugh.
The converse of this never happened either. People challenged the ability of the PM to be able to invoke article 50 without first consulting parliament. This wasn't a matter of "staying in the EU by the back door", it was a matter of respecting parliamentary sovereignty, which is another fairly fundamental part of UK law.
No one was stopping leaving the EU, just making sure it is done in a way that respects UK law.
They accepted the decision and it took 40yrs to get another vote.
Surely you can see how this is a contradiction in itself?