



Brexit made it clear our politicians are good at prolonging issues and have no business experience at all. Political professors should feel very nervous when teaching their students theorems only to have politicians throw it all out the window. Same goes for economic professors.





I write this to clear the air and format in an easy to read that'll have you more undecided but knowledgeable of this current climate.





Reasons for Remain:

Economic stability easy projections. No uncertainty. Global elites and billionaires decide the future not tax-payed politicians. Europe holds 300% of our country in debt. Politicians aren't prepared to handle this situation, no-one is an actual expert here. House prices will go down, our land is the real value of UK and it will become worthless. Imports will cost more because of a weaker pound (£). Old-age pensioners face unnecessary stress. Huge unemployment due to crumbling service sector. UK has no real bargaining power. Running away is not courageous. EU have 600 million residents and control major roads and pipelines, we are out infrastructure'ed. Security and data sharing with EU become tedious. Two-way travel helps us a lot, VISAs will go. This deal is much worse than anything we had ever. Talks and debates didn't discuss in debate or conversation a clear vision. Business speakers are prompted to voice their concerns, they deserve a platform as we are now finding out. The UK should fix it's own problems before dabbling in geopolitical drama. Theresa May (wealthy conservative) is not an ideal candidate to broker a deal suitable for the needs of British working class.





Reasons to Leave:

network barriers to entry entry in political sphere, nothing done to open talks and negotiate with super powers e.g. Russia, China. EU was built to strengthen economies, people working harder in more uncertain times. Currency rules the world. Strongholds brightest economic minds in Europe but leaves innovation to underfunded private sector. Corruption of finances and steered misspending on subsidies towards companies robbing us on prices. EU, EU, EU, what about the African Union, American Union, Asian Union, South American Union, who's the fairest of them all. Behaviour of EU officials show complete lack of competency. Huge neglect of UK demands. EU are calm when riots for basic rights are ongoing. Economic literacy has increased as a result, a somewhat bonus. EU have hidden in the shadows and now exposed. Newspapers will struggle to engage with headline news as the bar has been raised. British government is going to be completely restructured, it has to be for good or bad. Business people must become more vocal in political debates. After Brexit we might start getting better at resolving political issues now the public have some experience in understanding these issues.



Conclusion:

I want the argument to become more technical but unfortunately this is completely new territory. A lot of waffle and illusion mystify the whole conversation. "We've evaluated multiple factors", "The depreciation of the sterling will cause transitional boundaries", "Risk is relatively high in our scenarios and policy decides the long-term effects", "The answer is two fold". I've watched the BBC Select Committee discussing the economic relationship with the European Union has me worried at the absurd complexity for simple answers, clearly these suited-ties like Mark Carney have no practical experience, or teaching experience to describe what they preach.



I believe at this sensitive moment in time the EUs citizens have a lot of bargaining power while the power structure is at it's weakest. Political candidates in all European nations should raise talks while the beast has been slain.











The EU is undemocratic. Brussels refuses to increase spending on public sector for suffering countries. Unemployment in Europe is rising. EU fail to get large corporations to break up monopolies or pay tax. EU parliament are overpaid and unsupervised. EU havebarriers to entry entry in political sphere, nothing done to open talks and negotiate with super powers e.g. Russia, China. EU was built to strengthen economies, people working harder in more uncertain times. Currency rules the world. Strongholds brightest economic minds in Europe but leaves innovation to underfunded private sector. Corruption of finances and steered misspending on subsidies towards companies robbing us on prices. EU, EU, EU, what about the African Union, American Union, Asian Union, South American Union, who's the fairest of them all. Behaviour of EU officials show complete lack of competency. Huge neglect of UK demands. EU are calm when riots for basic rights are ongoing. Economic literacy has increased as a result, a somewhat bonus. EU have hidden in the shadows and now exposed. Newspapers will struggle to engage with headline news as the bar has been raised. British government is going to be completely restructured, it has to be for good or bad. Business people must become more vocal in political debates. After Brexit we might start getting better at resolving political issues now the public have some experience in understanding these issues.I want the argument to become more technical but unfortunately this is completely new territory. A lot of waffle and illusion mystify the whole conversation. "", "", "", "". I've watched the BBC Select Committee discussing the economic relationship with the European Union has me worried at the absurd complexity for simple answers, clearly these suited-ties like Mark Carney have no practical experience, or teaching experience to describe what they preach.I believe at this sensitive moment in time the EUs citizens have a lot of bargaining power while the power structure is at it's weakest. Political candidates in all European nations should raise talks while the beast has been slain.

Brexit is a three year long news story which has finally come close to finishing, a date is set reckoning.