rfdesigner said:
This vote went the way it did because we the people have been largely ignored for a long time by an elite who "knows better".
We were fed lines like "UK will be at the back of the queue for USA trade deal if we leave".
But we don't have a UK-US trade deal, yet we manage to trade very well thank you, as for TTIP I'm very glad we're out.
The EU has become something quite unlike what we entered into in 1973, then it was a trading bloc and on the whole worked relatively well. It has become a red tape machine that damages UK industry, allows (for instance) Spanish factory fishing ships to fish our waters yet insists we break up what little's left of the once substantial UK fishing fleet. It's rules and regulations dictate in favour of big business, yet the UK has a backbone of small business. For instance after the banking failure and resultant unemployment we had an MP on R4 saying if every one man business could take on just one person that we'd have zero unemployment.. the R4 presenter was totally speechless as he could only think of big business. This is part of the problem, the BBC and the rest of the press has lived inside their little "westminster bubble" for so long they have lost any connection with much of the country, so they simply can't comprehend what's happened.
Additionally it is clear the EU wants to change Europe into a "United States of Europe" with them in charge, telling everyone how to do everything... all very soviet.
There is the huge issue of immigration.. now before I go any further here's some details to give our American cousins an idea of what England's like: Population density: imagine taking all the people in california + Taxas and cramming them into michigan without first removing the population of michigan. Now add 300,000 more people from outside every year whilst at the same time having the smallest housing in europe (just over a third the average size of US homes, even the Japanese have bigger homes) and then not building anything close to the volume of housing needed. Today if you're under 40 and live in your own house with or without a mortgage then you are rare and very very lucky. The rate of immigration also depresses wages, so areas with higher than average levels of immigration can see wages depressed by as much as 30 or 40%, which is generally loved by big business but hated by those on the wrong end of the immigration. The people comming are on the whole decent hard working and so on, but when they decide to come to your town in the 10s of thousands and swamp the local population who has lived there for generations it was always going to end badly. Why all this migration?.. because the EU has failed, unemployment is rocketing 50% unemployment for the young in southern EU states, it's a catastrophy, the UK being non-Euro and generally more favourable to small businesses hasn't been dragged into the mire.
Now none of the above means we don't want to trade with the rest of Europe, just we do not want to be ruled by Europe. In fact what we want is to be free to trade with the whole world rather than focussing on a backward looking Nanny knows best stangnant EU.
Which brings us back to Japan.. We want to trade with you.. we REALLY want to trade with you, we want you to come here on holiday or to do business, we love your cameras and will carry on buying loads of them. So please don't panic.
Time to join political discussion - sorry folks but I can't help myself.
@rfdesigner - respect. Very well written post and probably a type of information people were supposed to get from both camps.
I'm EU citizen (Czech) living in UK for past 3 years. I came to UK because US technology company offered me a job here so I simply decided to have a bit of adventure with no risks as it was within EU and still close to home. I never considered this a permanent relocation. It is just a new experience and than I will move back.
I don't claim any benefits, I'm even not eligible. I don't have children yet so I don't put pressure on local schools. When I or my wife need health care treatment and it is not urgent we actually travel back to Czech republic (always for dentist) as British healthcare totally failed our expectations. IMHO NHS stands most probably for No Healthcare System. On the other hand I give tens of thousands pounds per year on my taxes to British treasury.
A lot of what I heard during campaign was offensive to people like me. Before the campaign I felt like foreigner working in another EU country but after what was said in past few months I sometimes feel like and unwanted immigrant (in the worst meaning) and burden for UK economy.
I'm caught of guard by the Brexit vote result. Not because I don't respect the result, democracy or British people or because I'm very fond of EU but because I don't like uncertainty. Right now I feel a lot of uncertainty in my life and the uncertainty is not related only to my stay in UK but also to the future of EU affecting Czech republic as well. Any business in general feels this uncertainty - that is why Canon CEO said that.
Let me ask you a question:
A lot was said about influx of EU citizens coming to UK but when the real number are put on the table, is it really so bad?
- UK population: 65M
- EU citizens: 3.3M
- UK expats in EU: 1.2M
That makes net influx of EU people to UK 2.1M - some 3.2% of the population. Consider all the claims of the EU immigration impact on social and health system, schools, housing and even transport. Now tell me - do you really think that 3% increase in population (slowly growing over many years) is really what put the pressure on all public services? Isn't this just hiding incompetency of many people in charge behind an external factor which is easy to blame?
Off course there is a question about how to slow down the influx of EU people to already overcrowded country but what about non-EU migrants? Why is EU migration blamed so much when UK government is not able to control even non-EU migration where they have all the tools available?
I'm also pretty interested how will Brexiters work on all those trade deals they promised. A simple example:
A lot was said about pursuing trade deal with China which would benefit British economy. I know nothing about trade deals but it seems to me that in discussion of such a deal China would be superior to make demands before it even happens. In my opinion free trade with China would make issues with cheap China's steel crushing British steel industry (Port Talbot) look really minor.
Anyway it will be very interesting to see how this ends up and what deal will Britons get at the end - mean how far it will be from what was promised during populist campaign. I made few friends here and I wish you guys all the best in this leap of faith.