The guardian, the EU is great, we need it, we don't need reforms, it's wonderful, we cant afford to leave, it's our only chance....
Really?
The process could start in Britain. The popular vote can’t be reversed but a signature collecting campaign could transform the political landscape by revealing a newfound enthusiasm for EU membership. This approach could then be replicated in the rest of the European Union, creating a movement to save the EU by profoundly restructuring it. I am convinced that as the consequences of Brexit unfold in the months ahead, more and more people will be eager to join this movement.
What the EU must not do is penalise British voters while ignoring their legitimate concerns about the deficiencies of the Union. European leaders should recognise their own mistakes and acknowledge the democratic deficit in the current institutional arrangements. Rather than treating Brexit as the negotiation of a divorce, they should seize the opportunity to reinvent the EU – making it the kind of club that the UK and others at risk of exit want to join.
Sorry I don't understand. This was the wonderful towering edifice that we absolutely HAD TO REMAIN IN for our wealth and health and security.
Now apparently this towering edifice is teetering on the brink of disaster because it is the largest structure of Merde the wold has ever seen since the USSR....
Personally I didn't know they could stack it that high. Only slightly lower than the tower of a Journalists opinion...
I guess I'm going to stop now. Every article, everywhere in the English speaking word, is saying the same thing. The UK may be hurt but the EU made themselves to unpalatable to the UK that we were, in the end, able to convince enough people to leave. Something that no politician actually believed you could get an electorate to do when it was comfortable and living in relative wealth when compared with 4/5 of the world.
This is what stands the British out from almost every other country in the world. It's why we led the world. It is who we are. The EU would do well never to forget that again.