Kaz wrote:Just one example, so many of our environmental laws are tied in with EU law - do we trust the tories (or any govt. really) to immediately replace these, with new ones? Remember how filthy our beaches, for example, were at one point? We've been in the EU (or Common Market as it then was) for over 40 years, the untangling will be torturous and full of loopholes.
I note that Scotland exceeded the UK commitment to the 2020 emissions regulations 6 years early. I also note that the UK was instrumental in driving those regulations within the EU And Cameron was a really big player in that. Something the press chose to belittle him for but never gave him any kudos for. Now it's trendy but because they "forgot" him at the time, they won't go back and thank him now.
Beaches? Like the raw sewage that was pouring out into the Med well into the 80's? Britain didn't have that because we'd already done the whole sewage treatment thing back in Victorian times. My second house in France was connected to the mains sewage in 2012, after we bought it. Before that it was discharging into the local river, right down by the old bridge.
EU environmental regulations? Britain has been there before them in most ways. Beaches? Yep our councils didn't care and the government didn't see our beaches as real moneyspinners. EU legislation on clean beaches? When they realised that trade in tourism was going to Russia and the former East Block states, because they were so pristine, basically because only the elite had the time or money to use them, the EU realised they would have to clean up their act and then went on a legislation rampage which still has not been implemented fully in the core EU states, except Germany who are extremely environmentally conscious, but has been fully implanted by the UK even if it was not really valid for our infrastructure.
If we want to try and make decisions on whether the UK is a fit for the EU and whether we want to be in the EU, then we need to know what the EU is and that means living and working over there, side by side, with the people of the EU. Not listening to a bunch of politicians arguing over how much less comfortable their lives would be if they actually had to do their job.
Yes it's going to be a challenge to disentangle the EU. But this is my take and it has never changed. The cost of doing that, even if it takes us another 40 years, is far, far, less than the cost of not doing it.
Ask any American, Aussie or even Kiwi if they will give up their nationality and freedom to decide their own future; just to have a comfortable trade relationship and to be totally lazy about their own future, depending on others to ensure it's good for them. They'll think you are crazy.
Ask any American south of the Mason Dixie line if they want to be outside the US and they will think you are crazy.
Of course Americans south of the Mason Dixie line don't have a thousand years of history, didn't have the largest empire the world has ever seen and lost a war of independence.
If we're too scared to stand on our own two feet then we need to get in Schengen, get in the Euro, shut up about immigration and start pissing outside the tent.
Why? Why not talk about "exceptions"? Simply because the Labour party has given away every exception negotiated except for the rebate. They can't justify the rebate, that's money. The rest is all about life and jobs...
When will the people of the UK get it?
The EU
IS a country
IS Schengen
IS the Euro
That's what we are voting about here. Do we want to be a member state of the European Union (a country), with the Euro as our currency and the borderless state as it exists in the US.
The answer is:
Remain
Leave
And there are very good arguments for each. But the three statements I have made above are what Remain stands for!
How else do I put it?