It’s a great point away fro the big arguments,great ideological debate, it’t easy to laugh and make fun of these new inconveniences, but they all add up. Like you say though where are the counter things to it. What little bits of our life does it make better, easier or a little more convenient, I haven’t seen any yet.
Catching up I have seen a number of posts asking about the benefits of Brexit
These posters are it seems only able to reflect on relatively small inconveniences
None of these posters seem willing to address the big issues that utterly swamp the trivial issues that they mention.
In a recent excellent post
@Rascal mentioned the events in Greece:
".......In January 2015, the radical left party Syriza was elected, with its leader Alexis Tsipras declaring “Greece is leaving behind destructive austerity.” Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, responded that “To suggest that everything is going to change because there's a new government in Athens is to mistake dreams for reality… There can be no democratic choice against the European treaties.”
The economic warfare unleashed on Greece by the Troika witnessed living standards slashed, services privatised and workers' rights dismantled as part of what the Jubilee Debt Campaign has called “The Never-Ending Austerity Story”. That is the EU that exists, it is neo-liberal to its core and it is anti democrat as Juncker declares......"
Yet no Remain posters came back on that. There are many benefits from being free to act to support UK businesses directly and free from the controls of the EU, as just one example - the management of Post-Covid recovery will possibly be much more robust if we are able to invest in UK priorities without the constraints EU that membership enforces.
Some days ago, a few of us were discussing the impact of EU policies towards debt mutualisation and the implications that would have for the UK, this post by
@Mazzarelli's Swiss Cheese Swiss Cheese as an example:
Basically EU borrows huge sum and repackages debt into smaller parcels to 'help' EU nations post covid. These parcels have some pretty serious strings attached which essentially dictate future domestic budgets and turn half the continent into Greece circa 2010. Rather than seeking to help beleaguered member states, the EU are seeking to take advantage of the post covid wreckage to leverage the situation into a power grab. Shrewd move to head off disintegration of the project by tying nations to long term debt (membership). Maybe I'm wrong, and they are just seeking to act as credit worthy honest brokers of cheap borrowing?! - Always try to keep an open mind on these things :-)
yet only one Remain poster made even an attempt to consider the impact of that major issue on the UK. An issue so large it would mean that the UK being (increasingly) free of the risk from would be benefit enough of itself to swamp all the trivial inconveniences
There must be a reason why the vast majority of Remainers avoid such fundamental flaws in the EU construct and the limitations it places on the UK and the major risks it locks the UK into
My own summary is that Remainers only seem willing to limit their assessments to the convenient and comfortable experiences of the recent past - whereas Leavers are looking to the future and the icebergs ahead that need to be avoided