Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
My instinctive stance is to vote out so we can sort out our own problems on our own and build a strong economy again not as reliant on others (or is this wishful thinking?). The map you show there makes me edge closer to voting in because from a moral point of view, it makes more sense for everyone to support each other so that a large population (e.g. Greece) aren't left in the shit because of poor decisions of their people in power.
Obviously the EU is a power beacon to be abused, but is that not the nature of most humans who find themselves with the opportunity? What countries are run by people that truly care about the welfare of their people as much as their own? If we vote out, we reduce that power but it's a bit like leaving other populations behind in even more of a mess.
I haven't spent too long considering the points of voting in or out yet but every positive seems to be at the expense of something else.
Interesting reading that mate. I might also add that there's this unspoken assumption that us not being able to make all our own decisions is a terrible thing.
The "loony" rules coming from Europe about curvature of bananas, for example. How daft is that? Well actually, not so daft at all. The rule doesn't say we can't sell non-conforming bananas. It just specifies what Class 1 means and Class 2 etc. So that someone in Poland ordering a consignment of bananas sitting in a warehouse in France, doesn't end up saying "WTF are these you've sold me???" when the bananas arrive. Is that really so silly that we should have a Europe-wide standard so that everyone knows what they are buying? Doesn't seem so daft to me. Yet things like this are used by the Brexit campaign as "evidence" for how our lives are being ruined.