"WTO isn't ideal but works well enough to trade under for many, and can be improved upon when one's counterpart trading nations opt to be reasonable."
The difference is that we don't live under WTO rules for much of our trade, so that transition from the present system to one in which WTO reigns supreme would indeed be painful -- slowing down trade, increasing its costs, etc. One would hope that the doomsday scenarios are exaggerated but still I think our politicians are clearly moving away from the "no deal is better than a bad deal" rhetoric -- albeit too late for some to have realised that this was always false.
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Naomi -- in fact the two are *not* equivalently daft. If the survey was taken over a representative sample, then it's safe to say that "Britons want another referendum" is reasonably supported, albeit with some uncertainty; I would have put it as "Britons are likely to want another referendum", and then further surveys would be required to support that claim.
On the other hand, there is no support whatsoever for the claim that "700 out of 1466" is equivalent to "700 out of 65 million", and no-one should be able to say that with a straight face.