Brexit Can Only Be Good for the United Kingdom

The British people seem ready to leave the European Union through a historic June 23 referendum, because they are tired of the high-handed tyrannical regulations, clauses and counter-clauses, emanating from the EU Council on even the simplest aspects of their everyday lives.  They have determined that leaving the EU will be the best step toward reclaiming their nation's sovereignty and democratic rule in all matters of immigration and border control, their economy, free trade, and national security, and they are proudly waving the Union Jack, as they tell their would-be masters in Brussels to go to hell, declaring their independence.

In November 2015, U.K. prime Minister David Cameron attempted to renegotiate a treaty change with European Union Council president Donald Tusk concerning U.K. sovereignty, trade, immigration, and economic governance.  Tusk rejected it all, with a minor exception regarding the handling of a few million pounds for children's benefits.  This dismal failure of P.M. Cameron only offered proof that the EU was closed to any substantial moves toward reform, which created a renewed and angry momentum for the Out of Europe, Vote Leave, and Brexit movements.

Corporatists, trans-nationalists, advocates of the U.N. 2030 Agenda, the BBC, and the Guardinista establishment are presenting dishonest and fear-based monologues regarding the uncertainty a U.K. exit from the EU might bring.  They enjoy being able to circumvent individual nation's policies by going through Brussels, and most of them have been made rich through their deals with the tyrannical, unelected, and entrenched bosses of the European Union.

Despite disingenuous conclusions from the trans-nationalist President Obama, does anyone really believe that a hundred years of shared security concerns and initiatives and trade agreements between the U.S. and the U.K. will be detrimentally affected by a "yes" vote to leave the EU?

What cogent thought process could people, like Lena Komileva (London economist), possibly be using when they ascribe the term "illiberal" to the British people's desire for nationalist policies and reclaiming Britain's sovereignty?

It will not take years for the U.K. to renegotiate trade deals with the U.S., as Obama suggests, but rather only months.  And if small nations like South Korea and Chile can succeed in global markets, certainly Britain also will continue to succeed, especially since the EU already imports 45% of British exports.

Membership in the EU currently costs Britain approximately $30 billion annually.  Although $55 billion in austerity cuts were made by the chancellor of the exchequer during the last Parliament, Britain's contribution to the EU was roughly $132 billion.  Every cut in public spending could be reversed, and Britain could still pay down its deficit faster if Britain were to leave the European Union.

In February, George Mason, senior vice president of Britain's high-profile Tate and Lyle Sugars, made a mockery of claims by Britain Strong in Europe that Brexit would spell economic disaster for the U.K.: "we are absolutely certain that our business and people who work in it would have a more secure future outside the EU."

Priti Patel, the U.K.'s employment minister, told the Daily Telegraph in March: "The Prime Minister has tried hard but the EU refused to give the British people what they want[.] ... The only way to take back control over our economy[.] ... [T]o create more jobs and growth is to Vote Leave."

However, national security is the issue currently foremost in most Britons' minds, but Eurocentrics, who believe that the U.K. will be safer in the EU through cooperation on crime and terrorism, have failed to see that the EU has never been capable of agreeing on effective foreign policy.  Also not taken into account, the EU recently embraced the expanded definition of "refugee" put forth by the United Nations in its 2030 Agenda.

Nigel Farage, UKIP leader, warns that the U.K. will not be able to handle the upcoming surge of migrants if it stays in the EU.  He observed during the April 1 Munk Debate that "Jeane-Claude Juncker, the unelected president of the European Commission, has changed the definition of what a refugee is, to include people ... from war torn areas ... [and] from extreme poverty ... [and] perhaps 3 billion people could possibly come to Europe [as a result]."

There are also reports of Bosnia, with a population of 3.8 million, being infiltrated by Islamic State terrorists.  They are buying property there, and they would be free to travel to the U.K. if Bosnia is granted EU membership.

Andrew Rosindell, a Conservative member of Parliament, stated in March: "Being in the EU means we don't have control of our own systems, we don't have control of our own borders. We are effectively tied to countries which I think are not as good at protecting their people as we have been."

One can only imagine the palpable red-hot anger of the British people upon hearing Martin Shulz, European Parliament president, say that he was "sad and angry [over] the undertone of national resentment" and it was "not possible" to make the changes PM Cameron wanted. Shulz added that Britain "belongs" to the EU.  Really?  Just watch, wait, and see.

Downing Street has declared that "a vote to leave is a vote to leave."  A leave vote will facilitate the U.K.'s departure through Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, and terms for Britain's withdrawal will then be negotiated over the next two years.

Over forty years ago, Britain last debated her relationship with Europe, and even then, elected officials on both the right and left, such as two of the most iconic political figures of that era, Enoch Powell and Tony Benn, campaigned against the U.K.'s membership in what was then the European Economic Community.  They objected to Britain's elected government meekly surrendering Britain's national sovereignty to unelected foreign entities and the fundamental lack of democracy in the EU.

Lady Margaret Thatcher knew that it would be near impossible to effectively and efficiently impose one currency, one economy, and one national identity on many different countries (now 28) with such different languages, histories, customs, and cultures in general.  Early on, the Iron Lady called the attempt to create a European super-state "the greatest folly of the modern era."

Britons, excited and optimistic, are moving forward to reclaim a more free, prosperous, ally-connected, and nationally secure Britain, through their own elected officials and their own choices and wisdom, breaking free of the heavy bureaucratic chains of the European Union.  As they shout "Hail Britannia," they will vote to leave in June.

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