sort of makes me sad - it looks like the vote to exit has prevailed
seems like a blow towards globalization and a step towards isolationism
not to mention a tanking stock market for the next couple of weeks
The picture of a dichotomy with globalization on one side and isolationism on the other is a false picture.
depends on some of the relevant arrangements of the "globalization" and the "isolationism".
When the "globalism" is not a democratic form of government, but a collection of managers selected by a hodge-podge of special interests, and there are no identified "inalienable human rights" but instead of list of limited state-given "privileges", and when very very wealthy elites hold all the levers of real power, what you are losing is actually a totalitarian fascism with more ambitions for unrestrained power than any dictatorship the world has ever known.
However, it will take Parliament and many bureaucratic specific actions to make the vote meaningful. I doubt the political establishment will act on the vote.
On the "isolationism" side, I'm pretty sure the Brits are still pretty cosmopolitan, with losts of interests in the world beyond their borders or their empire. Their decision is simple to leave the European Union, which happens to be particularly and painfully inept and worthless beyond belief, besides being abysmally corrupt.
This vote is a popular referendum on the British corollary to the US Council of Foreign Relations.
Here in the United States, this election is shaping up as a popular referendum on the US Council of Foreign Relations and the progressive agenda embraced by the United Nations. A pretty steep battle for the "isolationists" who believe in broad principles of human rights that demand limitations on governmental powers.