stuartpaul":2g2hnrcr said:
The sad truth is nobody really knows what will happen whether we leave or stay. Unfortunately by the time the 'real truth' is known it may well be neigh on impossible to do anything about it.
For example, if we leave and it all goes chest up will they have us back? Highly unlikely. Arguably leaving will be easier further down the road (someone mentioned 2 years notice?).
I find some of the emotional arguments put forward (not just here but wider) that at least we'd be 'in control' if we left rather short sighted. You won't be able to trade with 'Europe' (last time round 44% of our trade) if you don't comply with their standards and rules. For example, trying selling something without a CE mark?
So many people appear to have the 'island fortress' pull up the drawbridge mentality from the 1940's that I find it scary. We're in the second decade of the 21st century and to believe we can make it on our own just isn't right.
Another way to think about it is do you want Boris as Prime Minister? Because if the vote is to leave DC will almost certainly have to resign as he have no further clout within the Tory party and I reckon Boris will get the job! Scary or what?
Boris and Donald as the terrible twins?
Well on the last point, I think we could do worse. Before Reagan became US President, a lot of people said, "He's only a B-movie actor". He turned out to be OK as president. For Prime Minister, I've seen far worse candidates than Boris. Sure, he's got a huge ambition, but that's a fairly common trait among politicians of all stripe. Perfect? Probably neither of them, but nor are the other options.
Could the UK stand on it's own? Of course it could. Why do we need our hand held? It's the fifth largest economy in the world, not a third-rate back-water. Besides, our security alliances (NATO, for example) don't depend on EU membership. On trade, we could well be better off trading round the world and taking opportunities as they arise rather than waiting for a monolithic bureaucratic bloc to catch up with where the action is and negotiating on our behalf.
The industrial revolution happened the Britain. One reason it happened here is because we had a very hands-off government, one that allowed people to just get on with it, unless experience showed that legislation was necessary. It didn't happen in Europe because their approach to government was much more authoritarian - everything's banned unless a committee specifically allows it. That approach remains the case today, and is the reason why Brexiteers get so hot under the collar about EU regulations - it just isn't the way we're used to doing things.
For me, the clincher is being able to vote for the people who govern, and hold them to account directly through the ballot box. However, there's also much I dislike about the EU approach to governance, which I think is tending to stifle economic activity; it certainly hasn't been much good for the people of Greece and the southern Mediterranian. Is 50% youth unemployment in Spain a price worth paying to save the Euro? I don't think so.
The EU has had it's day as a way of governing, and is showing it's severe limitations. It's time to move to something better.