As you know, I'm firmly in the leave camp, but I do think Cameron's project fear is having a big impact.
Every day we are bombarded with dire predictions from him and his big-business allies, plus of course, Government influenced Civil Service departments.
Those are, of course guesses, as is much of the rhetoric from both sides.
On balance I fear that Remain will win, which will relegate us to a region of the United States of Europe, being forced into the failing euro, our armed forces being part of a E.U army, our trade agreements negotiated (e.g.TTIP) by others, whose interests are not necessarily ours, the CAP being run for the benefit of small, inefficient continental farmers and our fishing industry hamstrung, as it is now.
Cameron's so-called "renegotiation" is a fraud: it is not even sure to be ratified!
The canard that in the EU "we will have influence" is a complete falsehood. Not one single proposal which the UK wanted passed by the EU parliament has been carried.
As one of the largest net contributors to the E.U. budget, we are welcomed only for our money.
As one of the countries with the largest population per land unit, be it acres or hectares, we are being filled with un-chosen immigrants from the EU at a rate which which is putting severe strain on our housing, health and education infrastructures.
The UK has a welfare system which IS more generous that most of other EU countries, where it is not unusual to all benefits being linked to an individual's contributions (in Spain, for example, no benefit is available without there having been payments IN from that person.)
Even if one agrees that there are many crap jobs being filled by unskilled EU nationals, even if you agree they pay income tax and NI, it is the other in-work benefits which make Britain so attractive. Stiffening our Job Seekers and other out of work benefits and paying a decent wage for these undesirable jobs would certainly encourage native Britons to do them. Yes - it might put up the price of your supermarket veggies, but there would be other benefits which, in my view, would outweigh that.
Proper control of immigration - any talk of which is branded by the new catch-all derogatory epithet of "racist", is by no means the only downside of being a EU member, but it is a central plank.
I do admit that the Leave camp have not published a well thought out plan of action following a Leave vote and that is a serious failing, which may well prove a costly error.
However it is my hope that the British public will not believe all the frighteners which Remain are spraying around: will remember that we are a great nation which has over faced serious problems before and will do so again.
We are too good to be part of someone else's flag.
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