This thread is like maximum LW.
PURE DISTILLED
Also, why does the UK want to leave the EU so much? It's never been entirely clear to me.
We entered a free trade agreement and got loads of people ceaselessly trying to gouge out our sovereignty and turn us into a province. Our free trade agreements were not exactly the most beneficial either, hence why the coastal towns are absolutely livid over the EU because one of our own MPs gave away our fishing rights and completely fucked our fish stocks into oblivion illegally in the name of the EU. Culturally as well I suppose the UK has always been opposed to unification with the continent since its national founding, notably with Churchill being in favour of some European unification on the continent as long as the UK was not included.
This is the absolute base of it all, the United Kingdom did not enter a political union, it entered a free trade agreement. We've been quite shafted because all of our leaders in every single ruling and opposition party has been from Oxbridge (pro-EU academia) and has in turn been pro-EU, leading to that glorious situation where we have the option to vote for a pro-EU leader and a pro-EU leader or the protest pro-EU vote.
It has gotten to the point where our largest eurosceptic party is led by a pro-EU Minister, meaning our prime minister and de facto head of state is pro-EU. Our exit negotiations would be conducted by a minister who is pro-EU, our current negotiations have been conducted by a man who is pro-EU, our independence referendum dates have been set by a minister who is pro-EU, our independence campaign has been officially selected by pro-EU ministers whose limitations have been set by pro-EU ministers (most appallingly when our pro-EU Prime Minister called for legally binding limitations against MPs voicing their opinion on the referendum either side, then did so himself and brought the most powerful minister onto his side in addition to using
state funds to print pro-EU leaflets to distribute to every household whilst also managing the limitations to campaign spending on the official and unofficial leave campaigns), most of our media is pro-EU (EU grants are coincidence) and most of our Universities are pro-EU (EU grants are coincidence). Quite recently 3 dozen company heads in the UK as well as a mayoral candidate talking about housing have all gone and said that the whole British economy would be put at risk with independence, yet no one, not even the eurosceptic media have mentioned how much they have profited from EU lobbying for contracts :/
I don't want to be subjected to the experiment of the Commission but the affiliated factions in the UK are rather determined on giving the British no choice in the matter, it is only through so much effort that we have forced Cameron into this corner and even so he's done his best to stack everything against us on this. The more we stay within the European Union the more sovereignty we shall lose, and our MPs and PMs have a frightening tendency to quietly keep giving away our rights to the Commission. If we wish to remain an independent country we are fast running out of time.
Oh, and from a personal Londonistan point of view, it is for the best of London and the best of Europe that Europe does not regulate London and London does not regulate Europe. I can't think of a worse situation than that.
Well, old style xenophobes want out because they think it might mean less foreigners. A lot of people our concerned about the loss of power to unaccountable Belgium technocrats. There's also a big debate over whether it's costly or not: Britain is a net contributer to the EU budget, but also benefits greatly from it's trade agreements.
Addressing these points in three, the European Union attacks everyone who doesn't oppose destroying national borders as racist old style xenophobes, and now they have migration in the annual rates of millions and are speaking of it by the daily rate because they have no plans of stopping this.
I would rather selective migration from the Commonwealth, people from whom we have common history, culture and language than an open door to anyone who can journey to the Schengen area.
It does not make sense from a humanitarian point of view because our aid budget has already helped more than the European borderless zone has, and that's without subjecting ourselves to mass sexual assault or terrorist attacks, goodness we have enough trouble trying to stop Britons from flying abroad to Syria without making it easy for them to come back home. So that's a no on humanitarian and security grounds.
From an economic point of view it does not make sense to have no selective capability on migrants as you cannot for example, choose priority over those who already have relations within the UK in the Commonwealth who need little training to adapt to British standards (we have courses specifically for Indian doctors to adapt to British medical customs and standards for example), cannot choose for skilled labourers over unskilled ones (who will not likely find employment in the high-skills job market of the UK and large quantities of unemployed young men who do not speak the local language goes down as well as Germany and Sweden), and to get them to the same standard the British labour market requires would require years of training assuming one already proficient and literate with the English language which defeats the point of trying to gain economic gain from them, requiring generations - displacing the already dwindling British. Funny example (or sad?) brought up is how the Cockney are dead and gone and aren't coming back just because Labour wanted to divorce themselves from the working class vote. Pro-EU party, that Labour party. That's a no on the economic and cultural grounds.
Then from the political point of view it makes little sense after the likes of Merkel and Cameron have even said multiculturalism failed to then nevertheless continue the same policies, decreasing our tax base further. Why would we rather have no ability to select for the capable over incapable or discriminate in favour of the Commonwealth over the European Union, at the time when we are cutting our own defence budget and social services? Why are we too paying for the upkeep of foreign countries' citizens with whom we have no relation? Why is it when our own infrastructure is straining under its burgeoning population we are expected to take in all the migrants the Commission invited at our expense simply because the Commission bit off more than they could chew and have no intention of taking responsibility? From the political point and tax point of view that is a no. I'd rather keep to my own foreigners in numbers that did not collapse Parliament and actually enriched the UK than with Berlin bants :
P
As an aside I think I'll keep the thing with the loss of power to unaccountable technocrats last as it's most significant.
The EU is costly as all hell and we don't benefit enough from their free trade agreements, least of all when we became the financial headquarter of the world without. We've conducted independent negotiations in spite of the EU demanding they represent us for us, we've conducted our own currency despite the EU demanding control of our central bank for us, we've built our success rejecting the Commission's attempts to regulate our finances and gain control over our country and we've profited greatly from it whilst southern Europe have been absolutely shafted in favour of Frankfurt and Brussels. The majority of our trade is with the rest of the world and when it comes to Europe I am willing to bet that the Commission would not date risk provoking an industrial revolt by blocking off access to the British market. The very one-sided nature of our trade means with control over our own tariff rates we could just set it to zero and enjoy the benefits of a free market, our trade with BRICs, MINT and Commonwealth is growing far faster because those economies are growing far faster - most importantly, our exports to them. My favourite one is Nigeria, firstly because they are best country, secondly because our trade with them has grown faster than our trade with either France, Netherlands or Germany, and we have zero trade deals with Nigeria
I have heard the argument that we should stay within the European Union in order to lobby the Commission into forcing free market policies across all of the European Continent, which would certainly profit London greatly. It would also slaughter the European Continent's industry, which from a political point of view would be very short sighted, as poor Europe is a poor partner and influence goes both ways - our free market support could very well be lobbied into being more in line with EU regulations. I find the risk is far too severe to be worth taking, I find the EU's influence too powerful not to assume London shekel wizards would not merely become Commission shekel wizards if given enough incentive :
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There is also the issue on how negotiation and leverage works. Giving our economic power to the EU to negotiate will not be used to represent British interests, it will be used to represent the Commission. We paid £17.8B to the European Union last year. Thanks to Maggie we get some of those shekels back (I now realize more than ever that she bought us this valuable time to resist dissolution), reducing that bill by £4.9B. What do we get out of that money? Some of that money is graciously gifted back to British public institutions and private companies, resulting in public institutions and private companies who of course become pro-EU and not pro-UK. Our own shekels are used against us! Oh piteous woe! This is most damaging especially for institutions like Universities or the BBC, which are supposed to be politically impartial and are given special rights in order to outgun their commercial rivals when it comes to public influence and dissemination of information. So what happens when they receive large gifts without disclosure from the Commission?
Then the rest of the money goes towards spending for projects for which they will be thanked and for they will they gain leverage to be used in gaining preferable negotiations. It's not exactly a revolutionary idea to use our own money for our own negotiations, we're already doing it and we've been doing it since the first Britbong started throwing gold and silver at Portuguese merchants xD
When it comes to giving power away to unaccountable technocrats this is a great worry. I'm very tired so I'll maybe continue this later if anyone cares but I don't think it's right that one small group like the ESI can make their wishes into policy for a whole continent of people without anyone in the continent getting a say in how their own lives are being run. Democracy is not an exercise in choosing management, it's an exercise in choosing leaders.