At the end of a BBC article about Brexit appears the following:

Do you have any questions about the Brexit bill and what happens next?

Use this form to ask your question:

[text entry box]
In some cases your question will be published, displaying your name and location as you provide it, unless you state otherwise. Your contact details will never be published. Please ensure you have read the terms and conditions.


I think they're serious.

Anyone who *got* to the end of the article has questions about what happens next. But I don't think the BBC can answer them, because they don't know either.

Meanwhile, xkcd has an unusual suggestion for this problem. But Randall Munroe knows he's joking.
Buried near the bottom of a Brexit briefing in the Guardian I found this fascinating bit:

The i newspaper reported this week that the Queen sought legal advice on the circumstances in which she can dismiss a prime minister prior to Johnson’s defeat in the supreme court.

Constitutional law was supposed to be boring.
I just got '451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons
Sorry, this content is not available in your region.' when I tried looking at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer website from London. I am surprised not that things are blocked in different reasons, but that this is one of them, and that it came back as a vanilla HTTP error message.
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