I get what you're saying, that Brexit was in a sense a protest vote against the current state of things. But if it was purely down to the working class feeling disenfranchised, then it gets very hard to explain why Labour did so dismally in 2015 and still not great in 2017 even whilst promising to respect the EURef outcome and having widespread union support and a raft of policies which would benefit the working class.
I think you can't avoid the fact that narrative plays a huge role, and that facebook played its own part in both informing and disseminating that narrative.
I think you can't avoid the fact that narrative plays a huge role, and that facebook played its own part in both informing and disseminating that narrative.