My favourite one is when he bangs on about how we ought never to have been allowed a vote on Brexit, but somehow manages to convince himself that it's right for the Scots to have a vote on independence. He justifies this on the grounds that it's somehow a simple thing to break up a 300 year-old union, but impossibly complicated to break up a 40 year-old one. He just ends up sounding like a thick cünt, but can't see it, of course.
It's very annoying and is apt to put one off, but one has to just learn to appreciate what people do and sort of ignore who they are insofar as possible. That said, I have sort of stopped bothering with comedians since Brexit and now Trump.
The hysteria is remarkable. Do people really imagine we're going to start pitchforking foreigners onto cattle trucks and dumping them in Calais? Mind you, the attitude from the same people to the story that OAP expats might get sent back is remarkably lacking in such sympathy, I note.
That said, Leominster's rather nice. I wouldn't mind being put in a camp there.
I really can't remember a more divisive issue in British politics. Even the Thatcher years weren't like this. I perceive it in myself as well. I am now disinclined to listen to or consume the output of certain people I once respected on the basis that they have shown themselves to be utterly irrational and rabid on the subject of Brexit.