Cutting it down. I'm not on my PC and too much text is mentally tiring on touchscreen keyboard.
(Struckout 'trade' because its not just trade, its
all deals but...)
we'll not be further outside of Europe because we chose not to be a part of the Commission, geography remains the same.
Geography means nothing in a globalised world. Just because the English channel is reputedly the busiest shipping lane on the world doesn't mean we have to be involved in the trade that passes through it. Transatlantic flights don't
need to stop off or terminate on the UK. Spain could host an international banking sector the size of London's, if necessary. The euro might have had its problems, but the pound could easily tumble if enough scary scenarios hove into view, or even suffer a split if Scotland leaves ([South] Sudanese Pound, anyone?).
And that we can, upon being ejected from the EU, immediately resume 'independance' and sovereign relations with the world..? It'll take some time, and bargaining from a postition of weakness and urgent necessity, which is sure to draw in the carrion-eater kind of deals from all quarters, while we try to ward them off and get (what we think are) deals of truer worth.
Not saying it can't be done, I'm saying it's a rocky road with many uncertainties and I don't trust the obvious candidates for being the ones to get them done properly.
We're a little island (or set of ones) on the edge of Europe, and we got 'big' because of some fortunate geology, philosophy, engineering, politicing and bare-faced cheek to go and claim lands that belonged to nobody but those that already lived there. We don't maontain any of these advantages, any more. Not uneqivocally, anyway. And barring an indepedent space-programme (luckily ESA is European by name, but not an aspect of the EU, but the fact remains that we haven't had a British spaceflight since Prospero), or something weird involving parallel dimensions, we're stuck as far as new territories are concerned. The means by which we'd punch better alone than as an interested party in the EU camp (giving advantages to fellow EUers, getting some things in return...) elude me. It'd probably require massive geopoitical shake-ups, and those usually don't come without a price...
...And this is already getting too unwieldy to edit, on less than half the screen available to me, but let's correct one misapprehension. I'm not saying that the EU is paying for populist money-sinks (although doubtless they are, according to which subjective POVs you subscribe to) I'm saying that an our own elected government (of whatever flavour) will spend not-the-EU's-any-more money on money-sinks, rather than practical things that do actual good. And I predict that virtually none of the withheld EU monies will go towards the NHS (maybe a little, to drag themselves out of the current dispute about their fallacious seven-day-NHS arguments) and doubt it'll go towards
either debt or defecit reduction, in any noticable way.
And, for some reason, some people seem to think that
every EU member state can be a net recipient of EU cash. Disagree with some of where it is going, but don't suggest that net-funding countries can drop out without repurcussions for the rest. If it's a cost to us that helps develop the overall prosperity of the Union, then perhaps we benefit.
Not that I'm pro-EU. If we were not in it, I'd not be too eager to go on. The way we are currently on the sidelines, I'm not convinced that we should merge into the EU Collective any more than now
1.
But we've been hooked on the low-grade blow for so long that going cold turkey is going to be a stressful experience. And we've yet to see if our little chat with our supplier about the
possibility of giving up the habit will make him consider our position as preferential customer, one of the few not already guaranteed to get family-rates.
This is why I have strong feelings against certain Brexit arguments, although I have strong opinions against certain Remain statements, too. You're just the unlucky one who shouted up first. I remain, as before, undecided. With a small but notable lean towards status quo. Or perhaps pink floyd.
1 Another problem. If almost half of us vote out, does that mean we should opt-out even more, or are they really saying "don't go further in", by way of protest? And if almost half of us say "remain" are we going to get a smart-arse europhile taking that as a will for closer union? I'm betting that many votets on each side will be dissapointed with what their vote 'says' to those that eventually triumph. Whichever way. And it's not even legally binding, so a 60:40 split could overturn local politics in favour of the luckier side-pickers, annoy many people but ultimately neither cement our position nor transform it into the Brave New World that is indicated. And thst ignored 51:49 split as a possibility, or closer yet.