Who is in and who is out?

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I’d like to begin by thanking everyone, from whichever side, who has contributed to this monster thread for the plain hard work they have put into it, and for the thought-provoking quality of contributions.

However, I feel that, in common with most people, from either side of the debate, my position hasn’t changed since the beginning of the national debate. I have been deeply unimpressed (absolutely not by this forum) by the quality of both national campaigns.
I’m not swayed at all by the economic arguments – three economists together will notoriously come up with four projections, and then say, ‘On the other hand…’

The immigration question, which can look very threatening, could be managed by adopting a points-based system, so we get the immigrants we actually need.

What does bother me very much, and it’s my main reason for being in the ‘Out’ camp, is the erosion of our sovereignty, and our acquiescence in the continued acceptance of what looks to me like a bureaucratic and very undemocratic tyranny – an apparently benign, tyranny, but a tyranny nonetheless, with ambitions far beyond what we signed up for when we thought we were joining a free trade area.

I offer two observations on the nature of the EU from two long dead but prescient figures, C. S. Lewis and G. K. Chesterton.
C. S Lewis died in 1963, so knew nothing about the Common Market. He wrote, and I think he pinned down the EU machine perfectly:

“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be "cured" against one's will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals.”
― C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock: Essays on Theology (Making of Modern Theology)

G. K. Chesterton, in ‘The Secret People’ with similar accuracy ( and please don’t dismiss the poem on the basis of a possible anti-Semitic reference – he was of his own time, when attitudes were different) pinned it down:

a new people takes the land: and still it is not we.
They have given us into the hand of new unhappy lords,
Lords without anger or honour, who dare not carry their swords.
They fight by shuffling papers; they have bright dead alien eyes;
They look at our labour and laughter as a tired man looks at flies.
And the load of their loveless pity is worse than the ancient wrongs,
Their doors are shut in the evening; and they know no songs.
….But we are the people of England; and we have not spoken yet.
Smile at us, pay us, pass us. But do not quite forget.
 
Cheshirechappie":e1mbi81x said:
Actually, just to pick up on CHJ's post, and extend the seed example above - why do these things need to be regulated? If something is proven to do harm, by all means ban it for the common good. However, if it does no harm, why does it need regulating?

Let's imagine that regulations are put in place to List approved woodworking hand tools. Tools can be dangerous in the wrong hands, so regulation might save somebody from injury. A rare late 18th century Kenyon handsaw comes to light, and is offered for sale - obviously there would be interest from collectors. However, that particular design of saw is not entered on the National List, so selling it would be illegal. The authorities step in, confiscate the saw and scrap it to ensure public safety.

Ridiculous? Yes, of course it is - but that's the mentality of the people who think everything needs regulating. Alternative health products and heritage seeds today, unusual hand tools tomorrow - then what? Do we really want to live in a sanitised world were only items deemed approved by a remote, unaccountable committee somewhere in Brussels are permitted?

Think about it.

Taking that a step further, all these wooden planes that require a hammer to adjust, surely one day someone will miss and hit themselves on the hand, or slice their fingers open on the blade (which they undoubtedly have) **, so all those must be banned and only "approved" handplanes with the stanley bailey (or possibly other) adjustment system is allowed; all other forms of plane must be handed in for destruction or owners fined.

** maybe they will deem home sharpening too dangerous and only a commercial company, with approved trained specialists (conforming to H & S directives X,Y, and Z ofc) will be allowed to go anywhere near a blade, and even then will only be allowed to sharpen it to a rating of X sufficient for planing these approved types of wood, because all the exotics with even mild physiological sawdust effects have been banned.

no crazier than cucumbers must be straight and of X length is it.
 
Someone mentioned the EU record on fraud, which is a real weakness. They need to be given an enforcement division to chase things up, as all they can do at present is ask the member state kindly to investigate and prosecute, which is obviously a bit weak. For balance though, I see that estimates put EU fraud as high as €4bn annually (Telegraph) although the EU would put it lower (OLAF says €900m). That's obviously still a lot of money out of a €143bn budget - 2.7% at the Telegraph number, getting on for 1% at the official investigator's number. By comparison, the UK government fraud figures are estimated as between £21bn (official) and £38bn (McIntyre Hudson), of a total budget of around £780m - i.e. between 2.7 and 4.8%. Those UK figures include about £15bn/£22bn of tax fraud however, which is not so less of an issue for the EU where the fraud is mostly on the expenditure side. So the numbers for both are very bad and a terrible misuse of public funds, but the stats do not paint a picture of the EU being much worse than the UK government.
 
rafezetter":1w8dqtr0 said:
no crazier than cucumbers must be straight and of X length is it.

Better hope the WTO don't start thinking about planes in that way then.

(Those are just standard international cucumber grading rules which are as applicable under WTO rules as they are in EU law, so we won't be having high grade expensive curly cucumbers if we leave (if the supermarket would buy them anyway), we'll still be stuck with the same old lower grade cheaper curly ones or the same old higher grade straighter ones. Which is a real nuisance I have to say.)
 
Jake":3jdhf3tn said:
Someone mentioned the EU record on fraud, which is a real weakness. They need to be given an enforcement division to chase things up, as all they can do at present is ask the member state kindly to investigate and prosecute, which is obviously a bit weak. For balance though, I see that estimates put EU fraud as high as €4bn annually (Telegraph) although the EU would put it lower (OLAF says €900m). That's obviously still a lot of money out of a €143bn budget - 2.7% at the Telegraph number, getting on for 1% at the official investigator's number. By comparison, the UK government fraud figures are estimated as between £21bn (official) and £38bn (McIntyre Hudson), of a total budget of around £780m - i.e. between 2.7 and 4.8%. Those UK figures include about £15bn/£22bn of tax fraud however, which is not so less of an issue for the EU where the fraud is mostly on the expenditure side. So the numbers for both are very bad and a terrible misuse of public funds, but the stats do not paint a picture of the EU being much worse than the UK government.


The accounts for the EU have not been signed off with a clean audit report for years and years.
There are reports of huge amounts of money being paid for road schemes in Italy that have never been built.

When someone in the finance department exposed some of the corrupt practices, the commissioner responsible at that time , a certain Neil Kinnock, had her fired. They know there is widespread fraud but they choose to do nothing about it.

As for the culture towards wrong doing in Brussels, this makes interesting reading:-

http://order-order.com/2016/06/21/***-p ... qus_thread
 
Is it just me or did the Scottish people on the remain side come over to other people as well as arrogant, ignorant and rude?
Gisela Stuart is brilliant, imo. I don't dislike Boris, but I doubt he does the leavers any favours. Frances Grady just loves the sound of her own voice, preaching from the top of the huge mound of self righteousness that is her very own. If anyone could persuade me to do the opposite of what they asked it would be Farron and Lucas. Lucas in particular is a hypocrite - it's up to the government to build more hospitals, roads, etc. - Yeah? and who's going to be first to object to them, I wonder? Farron is just a joke leader of a joke Party. Of course Cameron was absent - he couldn't conceivably remember what he said when - as when he said he was looking forward to the road being paved from Brussels to Ankara - presumably to the Turkey that's not going to join the EU? The Turkey whose accession is being paid towards by us? The same Cameron who couldn't remember being warned that he couldn't limit EU immigration?
 
phil.p":23m21c4e said:
Of course they've been signed off. They employ a department to do it.

Actually you're right, they have been signed off but in a way that could only happen in the EU. The accounts accurately show what money has been spent so commissioners can say the accounts have been signed off, it's just that a material amount each year since 1994 shouldn't have been spent.
 
The banana thing should be a non-issue. There are more important things to worry about but this has been co-opted as something which sounds ridiculous enough to give people looking to be angry about something a problem they can actually understand and quote.

I heard that the regulations in curvature are to do with handling and shipping. If they have a relatively uniform curve they can get more in the shipping container and there's less likely that they get damaged. Sounds reasonable to me but it could be hearsay. I don't actually care while there are issues like the NHS to be raised.
 
The irritating thing with regulation is the apparent necessity to regulate EVERYTHING. If I don't want to buy an apple with a mark on it, a bent banana, a three ounce watermelon or a twelve ounce grape, I'd like to decide for myself thank you - rather than pay someone earning way more than I ever earned decide for me.
 
You can Phil, you can (or perhaps rather you could if you could find a shop which will take the risk of stocking them as most people are so hung up on cosmetics etc). They are just to be found in the cheaper grades. End up on market stalls etc.
 
BearTricks":3v55e45x said:
I don't actually care while there are issues like the NHS to be raised.
If you care about the NHS the only way to vote is to remain.
The only possible benefits from leaving are very distant in the future; Less people in the UK to put pressure on services (that won't change for very many years) and a government with the will to increase funding and having the resources to allow that to happen (again there's little chance of major economic benefit soon).
On the other hand; Leaving is highly likely to give immediate economic problems that will put further pressure on funding public services generally.
 
phil.p":2djwpu3x said:
Anyone watch The Great Debate? I don't think the remain side did themselves any favours with the selection of spokesmen/women.
Yes, I worked on it.
This is probably the first thing you've said I'd agree with.

You might have a different view of the Brexiters if you'd had to spend the whole two hours watching just them as I had to.
 
Rhossydd":2ta9mym3 said:
BearTricks":2ta9mym3 said:
I don't actually care while there are issues like the NHS to be raised.
If you care about the NHS the only way to vote is to remain.
The only possible benefits from leaving are very distant in the future; Less people in the UK to put pressure on services (that won't change for very many years) and a government with the will to increase funding and having the resources to allow that to happen (again there's little chance of major economic benefit soon).
On the other hand; Leaving is highly likely to give immediate economic problems that will put further pressure on funding public services generally.


Nonsense.
How is the electorate supposed to fund the NHS with an annual increase in population of 300,000+ above the natural growth rate, and please don't quote the mythical figure regarding the alleged contribution of migrant labour.

This is a BBC clip of an the assessment of the situation by an economist (that predicted the dangers of the Euro).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrlHY7vfb7A


As well funding the NHS, who is going to build all of the houses needed and where are they going to be built?

This is yet an another lie promoted by the Remaniacs, similar to Camerons dodgy answer about Turkey being nowhere near joining the EU.

http://order-order.com/2016/06/22/turke ... supporter/

Of course we know who Cameron is lying to and it 'aint the Turks
 
My impression after being on the fence through this is that immigration and economics are basically smokescreens as they are driven by global events rather than localised Eu ones for the greater part and fluctuate far too rapidly and at times excessively for our position in or out to have any bearing. For me the matter of greater import is more eosotaric. And to put it to it's lowest common denominator is do we as a people wish to live in a society to do as we wish unless prohibited for the greater good or in one where we can do as we are told and only as we are told. So do we want to be in effect a democratic self ruling free people or "serfs" in a beneign benevolent totalitarian dictatorship.

Now this may sound like I am for leaving, but I am at heart really not. My entire adult life has been devoted to the defence of the ideals originally portrade in the founding of the EEC and for the ideals held dear by the British in general, such as democracy and it's associated rights, our safety and security and the right to try to be as successful as one can be. Not only for Brittans but for everyone. I will defend to the death these rights and have put myself on the parapett in order to do so. Yet, I was still unsure as to how to vote.

I would like to thank all of the posters who contributed to this thread on both sides. This place has had some of the most coherent and unbiased arguement put forward (especially compared to the rhetoric of the main stream). I suppose as someone with no offspring, it is even more important that I consider these arguement in as ultruistic a manner as possible as my decision will affect those who follow, even though in the long term I have no stake in it's outcome or how it will effect my lineage. So for me it boils down to will I be selfish and think of only my benefit (ie for the time covering my expected lifespan) or for the whole.

After much deliberation I feel that I must say, as things currently stand it is in my best interest for the UK to leave the EU both economically and politically and ethically. But that is not how I will be voting, I have to believe that this referendum will act as a wake up call to the EU that it does not have the will of it's peoples and that it must deal with it's flaws now before it is torn apart by them. Therefore I feel this course must be given a chance to succeed. I feel this is the right course of action after all, if the EU does not reform each and every member country with the will of it's people can leave at any point in the future regardless of what the EU thinks if that country decides it wishes to do so and tell the EU to get stuffed it will not be able to stop them short of invasion and no state within the EU would aquiess to that course of action.

So therefore with a very heavy heart I am voting to remain
 
Why do you suppose this referendum will make the EU think any differently? No other Country's has. If the EU had any foresight at all (which it hasn't) maybe it would have been more accommodating to Cameron?
 
You're viewed much differently abroad than you look at yourselves you know. Over here people think you've gotten all kinds of special "kids gloves" treatment from the EU that you shouldn't have. Britain isn't really seen as the champion for democracy or human rights either abroad, if anything it's seen as generally conservative and lagging behind.

Figured I should post an outsiders perspective, the self-aggrandizing is poured on really thick here sometimes. You do have a lot in common with the americans in this respect, I've observed.
 
Inoffthered":17geawxm said:
.....
..... similar to Camerons dodgy answer about Turkey being nowhere near joining the EU.

....

He's right. If you check the facts rather than rely on a clip from a Turk with vested interest then you will find that they are a very, very long way off..if ever since any EU country can veto them joining.
 
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