No problem mate. I want the status quo preserved in Ireland regarding the border. I couldn't see how the border issue could be resolved in the event of a leave vote without a special status for Northern Ireland. I voted remain on this basis, as well as a number of other issues. The thing is that all of the problems regarding customs, immigration in Great Britain etc can be resolved, albeit at great cost to British citizens on any number of levels. However, I see no resolution to the Irish border issue unless the DUP adjust their stance. This is a DUP who have an MP suspended over a £100,000 holiday in Sri Lanka (Ceylon to Brexiteers), a leader who is involved in the RHI scandal and who wishes to deny language rights to nationalists, and who opposes gay marriages.
That's an extremely brief summary of my reason for voting remain from a point of view of practicality. I appreciate that you, not once, thought "How's all this going to work?" regarding the border but I did. Ireland will always come back to haunt the British until they solve the border issue. This will soon be resolved by the soon to be nationalist majority, after which Britain can do it's own thing. It would have been at the point of Irish reunification that Britain should have voted to leave/remain. I know that you have zero knowledge of Ireland (remember saying that Ireland counts EU nationals in and out?) but in fairness that makes you no different to a large amount of Brexiteers who read the Mail and the Sun and believe every word it prints/twists.
By the way, I asked you a series of questions earlier, and you answered not one. Laughable