Millerco wrote:I love how you refer to the migration of people from Eastern EU as a 'flood of people', this is exactly the type of language I knew this thread would lead to.
Thank heavens I did not write a "horde", as that would have been so much worse. I would not want this thread to degenerate into a discussion on semantics. So, how about "a significant influx of people"? Still too extreme for your tastes? It certainly was a "noticeable influx of people" as many people and organisations made observations on it in the past and hence must have noticed it.
Millerco wrote:as someone whose job very much involves understanding global and European affairs
I am tempted to ask you for what your job involves.
Millerco wrote:you know nothing about EU politics or decision making
My knowledge is, as you have correctly surmised, entirely academic. I am unfortunately not one of the negotiation teams in Brussels, as you undoubtedly are.
Millerco wrote:I spend a lot of time in two other major EU countries and speak three different languages and the obsession with EU migration is from I have seen fairly unique to this country.
I am so sorry, I did not realise you were Nick Clegg. Then again, you are probably as well-educated as Boris, who after all knows Ancient Greek and Latin.
Millerco wrote:I have now lived in four western countries all wealthier than the UK
I think you have made your point that you are far better off and better educated than us already.
Millerco wrote:France...having an economy equal in size
Undeniably why migrants are flocking at Calais...to get into France. The land of love, of romance, of revolutions and instability, of banlieues and increasingly of the far-right Front Nationale. Yes, I can certainly see France objecting to any concessions to the UK. But that is a part of their history. Let us see after 2017 if such refusal is a part of their future, with either President Sarkozy or Le Pen.
Millerco wrote:Germany a country whose political value the European project and principles above all else.
Germany, and especially the current chancellor, is a country that I have great respect (and affection), partially because they are very pragmatic and don't get stuck up in ideology, which seems to be the preserve of the French. I have no doubt that if Germany were to be left to guiding the EU on its own, that they would come up with a practical/pragmatic structure that would suit everybody to a greater extent that the current structure, which due to its French influence, is ideologically driven but not very practical.
Millerco wrote:no other country despite the appearance of right parties across the continent has a press that is so obsessed with blaming other EU citizens for their countries problems.
The difference between the continent and the UK is that parties in the UK have been too prim and polite in addressing EU immigration for fear of being branded dearly beloved. The history of beloved in the UK post-Windrush is so fresh in the memory here that politicians would do anything not to be called dearly beloved. Indeed, in many cases, they likely genuinely believed that any reference to immigration was dearly beloved. Witness the Gillian Duffy episode in 2010.
The press in the UK do the same role as political parties on the continent in airing such politically incorrect views. They do not generate them, but they allow them to be aired, and in doing so, do the same function as the political parties on the Continent.
Petaltop wrote:There is little appetite for free movement in it''s present form from the wealthier countries, who have after all, received the brunt of mass migration.
I would agree with this in a different way. When the UK joined the EU, most countries in the EU were at the same economic level at the time of joining. Even as late as the last pre-A8 accession of Austria, Finland and Sweden to the EU, most countries in the EU had broadly the same level of living as each other and hence free movement (only limited to workers till 1992) was not a big issue.
The post Cold War 2004 accession of 10 countries (the A8 + Cyprus and Malta) (for political reasons, to show solidarity with them rather than for economic reasons) most of who were significantly poorer than the existing members, without changing the rules on freedom of movement, is, in my opinion, the reason for the current referendum and the strength of the Leave campaign.
I doubt that the Leave campaign is against the freedom of movement for countries with an equivalent standard of living. But the disparity in the standard of living between say Poland and the UK is so high as to encourage a noticeable influx to arrive and it is the size of that noticeable influx that is putting a burden on standards of living in some communities here.
Millerco wrote:I don't have to accept the point you made
You don't have to accept any points made here, because this is a discussion offering different opinions that are equally valid. That is its very existence.
Millerco wrote:Cameron went to his negotiations with all other 27 EU members and didnt find a single ally to fight for his plans to put a break on inter EU migration
I think Victor Orban of Hungary did side with Cameron, but I could be wrong. Let us see what the state of play is in 2017. I think that the current right-wing Polish and Slovak governments at the very least may side with Cameron on some aspects of any plan put forward to control immigration. President Le Pen may too as well, which will radically alter the balance of power in Europe.
Millerco wrote:I think Brexit might be good for the British to give the people of this country a wake up call about its real place in the world and not just the imagined one some people have in their heads.
I think it will be a wakeup call for the EU as well for the same reasons. Were a referendum to be held across the EU on June 23rd, I have no doubt that there would be a majority to dissolve it in a majority of its constituent countries (a double majority).
Millerco wrote:I am relatively young but old enough to remember when Britain was for many a laughing stock among western countries for its failing economy, crumbling cities and decrepit infrastructure and this was in the 80s not 50 or 60 years ago.
Oh, like France right now, after years in the EU.
Millerco wrote:Brexit will mean this country getting and taking a terrible deal
Reminds one of the deal that the Greek people voted against but got anyway. In this sense, the EU sounds like an abusive partnership, either be browbeaten or get thrown out of the house with nothing.
I am not a lawyer or immigration advisor. My statements/comments do not constitute legal advice. E&OE. Please do not PM me for advice.