All of the talk about immigration, the economy, the health service etc.etc. is all very important and key to our decision making when it comes to how to vote, however, given that no one really knows what the impact will be but (just like the scare tactics around Y2K) planes wont fall out of the sky and the UK won't sink into the sea should we take back running our own country. We managed for centuries.
The key issue is that over the decades/centuries people have fought for democracy. To be governed by a democratically elected body of people (parliament) who are voted for by the people to run the country for the people (not run the people for the country).
Where and when did we, a democratically free people, evern elect to have our laws and way of life dictated to by an unelected (and expansive) body of people who don't live in this country and do not understand the way of life of, not just British people, but those other cultures across Europe.
We can't elect to remove them because they are not elected, we can't decide to stop paying for them (even though they cannot balance their own books).
When did democracy get given away or did it happen so gradually that until it became so large and unwieldy that we suddenly sat up and took notice deciding that enough was enough. who gave a democratically elected government the right to dictate to us that we should accept the laws and regulations imposed on us?
Yes some things have been a benefit but do these outweigh our loss of ability to govern ourselves?
It's a bit like having someone move into your house without your permission, not pay rent, charge you for the privilege and then tell you how to live, what to eat and what you may or may not buy.
Just a thought!