I take your point here, but actually I voted for my MEPs and the democratic EU created those rules. I don't want to give up those democratically won rights.secret.simon wrote:I would be extremely chary about espousing the views expressed by ryuzaki in the past few posts, because they validate the Brexit point of view pretty exactly. As I understand it, he is offering the EU as a system of governance which is an alternative to the one in Westminster. if you do not like a UK law, appeal to the EU to create a parallel law that overrides it. That is pretty much the crux of the Brexit side of the debate, that we can not legislate for ourselves because a federal EU can currently override us by creating a parallel system.
It is in fact the UK that is highly undemocratic, which is why I look to the EU to keep our politicians in check. Without getting into too much detail, our first-past-the-post system and House of Lords are both deeply anti-democratic and unfair. The EU's PR system is much better and my vote has some value there (my UK general election votes have always been discarded and I've never had any representation at all), plus the EU regularly consults its constituents and actually listens to their concerns over those of large corporate interests.
Handing power to unelected officials and our national government that doesn't even have the support of 1/3rd of the population is madness and will severely degrade our democratic rights and sovereignty. I wish to retain the power I have to shape my own destiny, by remaining in the EU and asking for positive changes.