Which " facts" indicate any type if democracy eminating from Brussels ???
UK has spent a thousand years and numerous wars to gain / maintain self governance and democracy and we contemplate just handing it all over ??? How many folk live I Europe ?? Approaching a billion I,d guess.( 750kk last estimate 2013 750kk. And you seriously suggest UK with its none European culture could have any rral representation ?? At best doubtful but why?
UK is a thriving country , with skilled population and a working model I democracy. Why just drift into loosing it ?? What are real benefits ?? If it ain't broke dint mend . Staying in EU will change it, albeit slowly but the writing is on wall.
I,ve nothing against Spain, France or anywhere but why share governance ?
If folk really want to be part of Europe I,m sure France would welcome you??
The fact that we elect MEPS to a Parliament just as we do Mp's for a start, what's the difference?
Do you really believe we have a "Working Democracy" when 24% of the Voting population can elect a Government that 76% don't like?
Wierd!!
The UK hasn't spent "Thousands of years and fought ANY wars to gain self Governance, the last one it fought was against the Normans and it lost big time, didn't it?
So France ruled for the best part of a thousand years and we now have a German Royal Family (And King William before them was Dutch)
UK is a thriving country? really? and how do you measure that? the bonuses we give the bankers or the number of unemployed/ length of Food bak queues, foreigners working as slaves in hand car washes, or perhaps how successful our OWN industries are, rather that the Foreign owned ones like Tata that have just held us to ransom?
Ask yourself Why did we join the EU in the first place if we were doing so well?
Because we were known as the "Sick Man of Europe" and by any measure we had much more industry, resources, markets, Armed Forces, and higher employment than we do now.
Come on now tell me why you think we joined?
Did you know that Churchill himself offered to join France and England as one nation in 1939, and they even had a stamp commemorating the union, but the Germans invaded and scotched the plan?
http://www.federalunion.org.uk/a-complete-and-indissoluble-union/
So the great man himself thought it was a good idea, but you don't, fair enough, we are all entitled to our opinion.
Here is a link to the stamp and it's story
http://500years.royalmailgroup.com/gallery/proposed-anglo-french-union-issue-1940/
An finally the notion that we don't have a European culture is simply a fantasy as our language is derived from German, French, Dutch, and Danish and so are many of our place names.
As to an ancient right, how about this
"Before the 1832 Reform Act, hardly any men had the right to vote for MPs. Between 1754 and 1790, only 17% of males could vote, which constituted only 4% of the population of England and Wales. Most MPs were elected by rich
landowners and some were entirely controlled by them; working people had no representation at all. Nothing in the constitution said women could not vote, nothing to that effect appeared in the statute books. In Acts of parliament regarding voting, the word 'people' was used and there were repeated statements that no person who paid taxes ought to be excluded from voting and that no person who was subject to the laws should be excluded from a voice in making them. Few women owned enough property to qualify them to vote and perhaps for those few heiresses it was not considered 'ladylike' to get involved with politics.
And when did women get the vote? 1918 as they had been promised it in return for replacing men in the factories to make munitions.
So spare me the "Ancient rights" bit, it simply isn't true.
If the size of Europe prevents the formation of a single state, how do you explain that the TEN colonies of America merged to become the United States?
No doubt there were some among them that wanted to cling to their separate statehood, and the other classic example is Germany
"The German Empire consisted of 27 constituent territories, with most being ruled by
royal families. This included four
kingdoms, six
grand duchies, six
duchies (five after 1876), seven
principalities, three
free Hanseatic cities, and one
imperial territory. Although the
Kingdom of Prussia contained most of the Empire's population and territory, it played a lesser role. As Dwyer (2005) points out, Prussia's "political and cultural influence had diminished considerably" by the 1890s.
And since unification in 1871, they seem to have muddled though rather better than we have despite two disastrous wars