Turtle
Veteran
I think the elephant in the room is this: a decision either way is a compromised one. I do believe that the EU has provided some very real benefits for the UK, but I also believe it has cause quite a few problems. If we vote to leave, we face very real economic risks (risk meaning risk and not certainty). If we remain, we can be fairly sure there will be no further major accommodations of UK requests for reform/exemptions and we embrace the status quo. This is perhaps the only guaranteed truth in all the lies being told (and scaremongering from both sides). Of course the UK would be OK if it left. Of course we would be OK if we remain. The issue is about degrees of prosperity and life quality, not extremes.
I do not think there is a strong economic argument to leave, at least not in the short to medium terms. That has been shown to be bunk, as UK contributions are a tiny fraction of the annual budget. The leave campaign arguments are more qualitative and arguably abstract than those of remain, but herein lies the danger: this vote is a vehicle. It is a vehicle for a larger change in UK politics and I fear there are some hateful groups riding the leave bandwagon.
In summary, it is impossible to cherry pick the aspect of leave that I like without the bad bits and without the bad people who will be emboldened by such a vote. As much as I think the EU is in dire need of reform, I'm not sure that being outside of it will prove much better. After all, its not as if we don't have a long list of domestic political cock ups in our recent history. Leaving isn't suddenly doing to turn the UK into the economic and political Jedi of our fantasies. I don't recall Britain setting the world ablaze before we joined with all the economic woes that preceded the Thatcher administration.
It is a crappy vote. We are voting blind really using intuition and instinct. The facts will only come later, but there is one seemingly immovable point I cannot yet see a solution to for the leave camp:
Free trade and exemptions to tariffs for non-EU states comes at the cost of allowing free movement. Free movement is at the core of the leave camp's concerns. Deny free movement and there will be tariffs, which will cripple our exports, surely. There is no precedent for a state which has denied free movement and which enjoys free trade without tariffs. This seems to be the boulder in the road....
I do not think there is a strong economic argument to leave, at least not in the short to medium terms. That has been shown to be bunk, as UK contributions are a tiny fraction of the annual budget. The leave campaign arguments are more qualitative and arguably abstract than those of remain, but herein lies the danger: this vote is a vehicle. It is a vehicle for a larger change in UK politics and I fear there are some hateful groups riding the leave bandwagon.
In summary, it is impossible to cherry pick the aspect of leave that I like without the bad bits and without the bad people who will be emboldened by such a vote. As much as I think the EU is in dire need of reform, I'm not sure that being outside of it will prove much better. After all, its not as if we don't have a long list of domestic political cock ups in our recent history. Leaving isn't suddenly doing to turn the UK into the economic and political Jedi of our fantasies. I don't recall Britain setting the world ablaze before we joined with all the economic woes that preceded the Thatcher administration.
It is a crappy vote. We are voting blind really using intuition and instinct. The facts will only come later, but there is one seemingly immovable point I cannot yet see a solution to for the leave camp:
Free trade and exemptions to tariffs for non-EU states comes at the cost of allowing free movement. Free movement is at the core of the leave camp's concerns. Deny free movement and there will be tariffs, which will cripple our exports, surely. There is no precedent for a state which has denied free movement and which enjoys free trade without tariffs. This seems to be the boulder in the road....