Sounds like the title of a
murder mystery, perhaps…
As the EU Referendum
approaches the closing stages (at long last!) and the hyperbole,
scaremongering, idiocy, outright lies, dodgy statistics, self-serving expert
advice and all the rest is put away (hopefully never to see the light of day
again), what’s it all about, Alfie?
What, indeed. What seems to have been lost
in the argument is that the once-named Common Market has grown and grown into the European Union, a
dictatorial behemoth administered by unelected individuals paid for by the
taxes from the member states’ workforce. They’re profligate with the money,
unaccountable, and blatantly arrogant about any edict they wish to foist onto
the collective membership (the people who pay their high salaries).
What’s it all about, Alfie?
The EU isn’t a democracy, it’s
a bureaucracy, wasting tax-payers’ money on vanity projects to justify their well-paid
existence.
What's it all about?
The vote isn't about 'leaving Europe' - it's about leaving the European Union. We're part of the European continent and always will be, communing, sharing, trading; we're also part of the wider world, too.
What do the UK papers say?
Leave Remain
The Sun The Guardian
The Daily Telegraph The Observer
The Sunday Telegraph The Independent
The Sunday Times The
Mail on Sunday
The Daily Express The Times
The Daily Mirror
The Financial Times
Undeclared, last time I checked:
The Daily Mail
The Daily Star
The Morning Star
There are powerful,
well-considered arguments to be read, indeed, for both sides.
One argument goes that if the
UK stays in, we can effect change.
That doesn’t seem to work.
Reports suggest that of the seventy (!) changes the UK has voted for, the EU
voted against. The arrogant bureaucrats don’t or won’t listen; they know best.
If they had listened, if they had really wanted the UK to ‘remain’, maybe they
should have tried harder when Mr Cameron went round with his begging bowl.
If the UK remains, expect to
be sent to the ‘naughty step’.
And that old-fashioned title, ‘Great Britain’
will be removed, since the coinage is tarnished. And it will be self-inflicted –
much as it was shamefully removed from British Telecom and British Petroleum
and British Home Stores (oh, certain rich individuals took more than ‘British’
from BHS, didn’t they? Their workers’ pensions!) Sorry, got sidetracked there...
'If Britain must choose between Europe and the open sea, she must always choose the open sea.'
- Winston Churchill.
Well, the Common Market seemed like a good idea at the time...
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