Brexit: the referendum

I think you are missing the point that this vote is purely* about our protecting our borders.......

Yep, you seem to be right:

Loss of sovereignty.
Deep democratic deficits.
A ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracy.
The European Court of Justice.
The Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy..
The EU is an inward-looking organisation with huge trade barriers and protectionism, in long term decline, and burdened with a currency which doesn't work with the disparate economies without deeper political union, aligned taxation etc.
 
Loss of sovereignty.
Deep democratic deficits.
A ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracy.
The European Court of Justice.
The Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy..
The EU is an inward-looking organisation with huge trade barriers and protectionism, in long term decline, and burdened with a currency which doesn't work with the disparate economies without deeper political union, aligned taxation etc.

Others will no doubt add to this list, but those are my objections.

Don't for a second read into this that there is no positive side to our membership of the EU........I haven't listed those because you asked for the negative.

....and bear in mind that for some of us, some of those negatives are also positives. Personally I think that the European Court of Justice has been a net benefit for the people of the U.K. There have been a small number of apparently perverse rulings (but then again many of those have been through the filter of a largely Eurosceptic press) but then again there have been a much larger number of rulings where people's rights have been protected when national courts have failed them.

Likewise with the "A ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracy". At least we have a single bureaucracy handling the affairs of 28 countries (as opposed to 28 ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracies handling them in their uniquely inefficient ways).

Regarding loss of sovereignty, there's a continuum which at one end we have one world government and at the other Freemen on the Land. My personal view is that the larger the unit over which sovereignty is wielded, the less the risk of conflict, armed or otherwise (which is why instinctively I was anti Scottish independence (although an independent Scotland in a united Europe could have changed my mind).
 
I think you are missing the point that this vote is purely* about our protecting our borders.
If we deny Europeans the right to freely enter the UK, it is incredibly naive to think we can negotiate free movement of UK Citizens. Any negotiation will end with free movement for all or no-one.

*depending on whose turn it is gorgeous the soundbite.

That's one of the difficulties that the "In" campaign faces, they have to argue against the background of the (warts and all) current situation whereas the "Out" campaign has the freedom to construct whatever fantasy they want for the post-EU situation.

If I was pitching the vision it would be:

  • Free trade with Europe
  • Free movement of UK citizens to Europe (because we're trusted and whatnot) but no need to reciprocate
  • No control or influence over British laws from the EU
  • We can abandon ecological and workers' welfare legislation
  • Reinstate the duty free allowances for booze cruises
  • Repeal all the human rights legislation
 
.........At least we have a single bureaucracy handling the affairs of 28 countries (as opposed to 28 ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracies handling them in their uniquely inefficient ways)........

Hang on a minute!

We've now got 28 individual bureaucracies PLUS the EU bureaucracy. Whitehall didn't just disappear when we signed up to the Common Market.
 
Straight bananas.

Loss of sovereignty.
Deep democratic deficits.
A ridiculously expensive and intrusive bureaucracy.
The European Court of Justice.
The Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy..
The EU is an inward-looking organisation with huge trade barriers and protectionism, in long term decline, and burdened with a currency which doesn't work with the disparate economies without deeper political union, aligned taxation etc.

Others will no doubt add to this list, but those are my objections.

Don't for a second read into this that there is no positive side to our membership of the EU........I haven't listed those because you asked for the negative.

Hang on a minute!

We've now got 28 individual bureaucracies PLUS the EU bureaucracy. Whitehall didn't just disappear when we signed up to the Common Market.
Okay, just a quick reply for now: It seems that many the objections are of a gradual kind, where the line is seemingly arbitrarily drawn at the UK for reasons I don't really understand.
What I mean is that layers of bureaucracy no doubt exist on multiple levels in the UK, and so will regulations regarding the properties of produce. Are European bureaucrats really more faceless than National bureaucrats, or is the problem that someone from outside the UK can influence the lives of the British?
And about sovereignty: What does that mean to an individual anyway? Does it make a difference when obeying laws (or not) where the bureaucrat sits?

In short, your post is helpful, but not for making me understand why it's so important that the UK leave the EU.
 
Bureaucracy wasn't the only thing on the list H'ethetheth.

The difference between EU bureaucracy and national arrangements is that voters can remove the (entirety of the) government which gives the bureaucrats their orders, and thus have a theoretical final say in how we are governed. There is no such democratic accountability with the EU.
 
With all its ups and downs, advantages and disadvantages, etc, the EU has meant that we have not had WW III. It's like the nuclear deterrent or not, no-one can predict which mad dictator will rouse a populace against the rest and that is far and away the most important factor as far as I'm concerned.

Hmmm...I am sure that one of the purposes of the EU was to improve diplomatic ties among European nations (particularly Germany and France), but I really doubt that there is much evidence that the EU has prevented WWIII.

While I understand the logic to this, given the frequency of wars in Europe prior to World War 2, I think I would give more credit to a variety of other factors such as modern cultural and political norms, liberal democracy, NATO, nuclear deterrents, better educated and politically empowered populations, and so on. The old saw that "democracies don't go to war against each other" isn't quite true, but it does seem that liberal democracies beyond a certain level of human development don't go to war against each other. It seems inconceivable for example that the United States would invade Canada today, for example, or that Sweden would invade Norway, which is not an EU member, or vice versa.

Russia OTOH . . .
 
Bureaucracy wasn't the only thing on the list H'ethetheth.

The difference between EU bureaucracy and national arrangements is that voters can remove the (entirety of the) government which gives the bureaucrats their orders, and thus have a theoretical final say in how we are governed. There is no such democratic accountability with the EU.

That's simply not true.

UK voters can only vote for their constituency representative same as the EU arrangement. The totality of voters may decide the government but that's no different at the EU level either.

When you were pulled up on sovereignty the last time you tried this nonsense you backtracked rather rapidly on it being important to you and now you have come back to it again.
 
I don't want to sound like an old fuddy duddy but I'm pleased about the agreement to finally stop sending benefit payments to non-residents at UK rates.

That might back-fire if they start bringing their kids with them. To me, paying full child benefit for kids who aren't consuming UK health and education resources is not necessarily a "bad thing."

Or did you mean ending pension payments to ex-patriates...?
 
Bureaucracy wasn't the only thing on the list H'ethetheth.
Well, it isn't the only thing I responded to either, so there's that.

The difference between EU bureaucracy and national arrangements is that voters can remove the (entirety of the) government which gives the bureaucrats their orders, and thus have a theoretical final say in how we are governed. There is no such democratic accountability with the EU.
It's been a while since I learned this stuff, but don't we elect a European parliament? No not the entirety of it, but then, when I vote for my national parliament, I also can't elect the entire parliament. I can only elect as much of the parliament as there are voters who agree with me.

This is what I meant by gradual objections: Like several of the things you mentioned, representation in Europe functions quite similar to how it functions on a national level in many states. It's just a layer of government on top. Why is a UK government over a Scottish government okay, but not a European one over that?

And I'm not saying it's perfect, but I don't see how it's so terrible.
 
Well, it isn't the only thing I responded to either, so there's that.

It's been a while since I learned this stuff, but don't we elect a European parliament? No not the entirety of it, but then, when I vote for my national parliament, I also can't elect the entire parliament. I can only elect as much of the parliament as there are voters who agree with me.

This is what I meant by gradual objections: Like several of the things you mentioned, representation in Europe functions quite similar to how it functions on a national level in many states. It's just a layer of government on top. Why is a UK government over a Scottish government okay, but not a European one over that?

And I'm not saying it's perfect, but I don't see how it's so terrible.
Yes, we do elect European parliament MPs. It is similar to the Scottish / UK government relationship in that the EU only deals with some matters. It is however a slightly different relationship in that Scottish people are subject to the laws set by both the Scottish and UK parliaments. UK people are not usually subject to EU laws in the same way. The EU laws apply to the UK as a country. The UK government generally has to change domestic law to give effect to EU law.
 
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You mean if the outcome of the referendum is "Leave"?

There are still some sites in Germany and Poland where we can intern them, thank you very much. Or we could simply deport them.

On a more serious note, I guess they'd all have to apply for residence permits. I'd say, treat them as newly arrived ones. After all, after a UK exit they're new foreigners in the country.


Sure they do. But the UK is really a special snowflake. It's the only EU country that has had a 40-years straight public discussion on again leaving the EC/EU, and has had 40-years straight a government with at least a vocal minority advocating leaving, whatever the stripe of the government. It's the only EU country like that.

Don't you think the rest of the EU is by now sick and tired of this continuous debate?

The EU has been a convenient whipping boy for politicians and the media, and sadly much of their whining has infected the population at large. Neither of them ever big up the positives of being in the EU, and instead fostered a "we put more in than we get out" attitude, without actually defining the "what we get out" element. Anyone who travels ariound Europe will see signs proclaiming which particular new bit of infrastructure got EU funding; you just don't see that in the UK, or at least it's never as prominent, even when it is acknowledged.

It occured to me recently that a thousand years of never being invaded, but having resisted the threat - real or imagined - means a seige mentality comes easy to Brits. Most European countries, on the other hand, have been subject to invasion or occupation of one form or another, most of them fairly recently. For them it's, "maybe co-operation is much better," while for Brits it, "we can stand against all-comers."
 
As a citizen of the continental EU, I have to say I don't recognise it in the views expressed in this thread. All this totalitarian policing has apparently passed me by.
Can anyone tell me succinctly what, in a general sense, the main objections to EU membership are?

Sadly it seems that for a lot of people it's some vague indefinable idea that the EU is designed solely to screw the UK over.
 
.........Anyone who travels ariound Europe will see signs proclaiming which particular new bit of infrastructure got EU funding.........

You do know that these signs are like a red rag to some particular bulls? Why the hell should my taxes go to building new bridges in Spain or roads in Greece, or whatever.......is the argument. People who don't like the idea of subsidy, or of redistribution, find this an anathema. Don't assign this view to me.
 
A lot of British people seem to believe that the UK is god damn "special" that it must be treated exceptionally compared to all other countries in the EU. Unfortunately Britain isn't nearly as special as it once was. This is especially true now that the ex-communist central and eastern European countries are becoming increasingly developed.

Evidently they can't accept that the days of the British empire is long gone and not coming whether or they leave the EU.
 
A lot of British people seem to believe that the UK is god damn "special" that it must be treated exceptionally compared to all other countries in the EU. Unfortunately Britain isn't nearly as special as it once was. This is especially true now that the ex-communist central and eastern European countries are becoming increasingly developed.

Evidently they can't accept that the days of the British empire is long gone and not coming whether or they leave the EU.

:rolleyes: That's it? That's the best you can do: trot out silly stereotypes....... Have you got nothing substantive to say?
 

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