mostlyharmless
The only reason I mentioned this was because others feel that the only saviour of the NHS is the EU when it was the initial cause of the problem that is now bankrupting the same and its purchasing directive opened the NHS up to privatisation.
I find it quite dismaying when the following is quoted as reasons to remain They’re more concerned about job security, employment rights, whether the NHS will survive, the Irish Border, the ability to travel, study and work in other European countries, queues at Dover, continuity of security arrangements, environmental protection, maintaining food standards, potential food shortages, food price inflation, whether the Government will continue the subsidies to deprived parts of the country etc etc.
Because with regards to job security and employment rights. The U.K. currently enjoy better job security and employment rights than those mandated by the EU.
I have previously mentioned the NHS
The Irish Border is an issue, but was held to be a bit of a ‘red herring’ by the EU by NI politicians.
There should be no reason why Brits should not travel, study or work in the EU. It was done for centuries before the EU, only sour grapes would prevent it in future.
At least if the Government didn’t subsidise poorer areas we could vote them out. As it is the U.K. is now getting less and less from the EU as subsidies are being diverted to Eastern European countries and we cannot change that.
Environmental and food protection again in majority of instances is higher than mandated by EU.
What dismays me most is the fact that those who make these statements do not acknowledge that many of the EU directives are derived initially from U.K. law, particularly in terms of employment law which our unions fought for. That our food standards are mandated by U.K. law and that some people think that the rest of the population are so fickle as to accept lower standards of anything.