Early 2019 I had a short trip to Lens (the Louvre outpost), Lille and Brussels to beat the potential no deal no transition cliff edge we faced then. In Brussels there is an EU visitor center, had been before, and the first gallery contains pictures of the post WW2 destruction, poverty and chaos. There was a political will to rebuild and make sure it didn't happen again, which led to the coal and steel union of France, Germany and the Benelux countries, the beginnings of the EEC and eventually the EU.
There is good evidence that countries which trade with one another don't go to war with one another, and if there is a mutual dependency the chances are reduced even more. That was the ideal. It worked, if you are old enough to remember the cold war, the iron curtain and the 3 minute warning reality or have visited Berlin and seen the nuclear shelter, or worked out how much the UK and USA spent on a permanent tank and troop army on the Rhine you would never have imagined that the USSR would collapse and the iron curtain be pushed back so far that E Germany, Poland, Slovakia, Latvia and so many more evolved into free democracies with consumer, human and employment rights underpinned by the ECJ and ECHR. Not a shot was fired. The EU presented a trade and a social vision that people could buy in to.
Maybe that is what Churchill meant when he made a speech to youth in Zurich in 1946, the quote is proudly displayed in that gallery:
"We must build a kind of United States of Europe. In this way only will hundreds of millions of toilers be able to regain the simple hopes and joys which make life with living".
Lots of "Brexiteers" have appropriated Churchill, Johnson, Francois, Duncan Smith, but conveniently forget that he was one of the most pro European post war leaders.
This thread started as one about practical implications, which get worse every day. We all have examples, my daughter awaits new carpets ordered early December and expected first week in January- fitters say "dunno when, the carpet you ordered is made in France, not had a delivery for ages....." Easy excuse perhaps, Felixtowe, lorries, brexit, covid... who knows. But it's trivial compared to the big picture. Yes we can 'bail out' fishermen short term, but not forever. We can compensate business in NI short term, but not forever. We have already spent the big red bus £350m a week several times over in direct costs and harm to the economy. But that too is trivial in comparison to the big picture.
The world is increasingly dominated by 3 big and influential trading blocs - USA/NA, China and the EU. With trade power comes diplomatic power, and no country wants to deploy the only other source of influence, military power. As well as the 3 blocs, there are the oil suppliers who will become less influential as we turn away from fossil fuels and a few much smaller groups happy to build local free trade arrangements. Counties like Japan are far less relevant than they were 25 years ago. Not only are we not in one of those 3 important blocs, we actively chose to leave.
A song keeps going through my head, Pink Floyd "Final Cut" - Post War Dream:
What have we done to England?
Should we shout, should we scream
"What happened to the post war dream?"