Thanks, NMA, for a most eloquent and balanced summary of the situation... I had composed a lengthy message for this thread earlier today but that one got lost in BT's continuously failing broadband infrastructure.
I have to echo how disheartening, and nasty the debate has become... and I wholeheartedly agree that it's mostly down to this simplistic tunnel vision on net pay, control (what bollocks that entire topic is...) and immigration driven by a rampant, populist, right-wing agenda. It was to be expected and one can blame Cameron for not realising this before he thought of this referendum. The same happens elsewhere (e.g. in Switzerland), popular votes foster populism. That is not to say that there are reasons for debate about the value and implementation of the EU from all angles, but Brexit is not about this (leaving has only one certainty: uncertainty... is this desirable?). Can't help myself seeing this as nothing but a last attempt by a dwindling empire to regain old glory - a rather emotional affair and dangerous game given that the decision will be dumped onto the future generation of this country.
It seems obvious that a possible Brexit will not lead to any benefits for those affected most by inequality (Billy Bragg:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jun/20/english-working-class-victims-brexit-vote-false-patriotism ), rather much the opposite given the political swing to the right this will cause... a prime minister Boris is a nightmare in my book, and I don't see how years of insecurity, nasty discussions with EU states on common treaties will benefit the people. Inequality in the UK is not a consequence of EU politics. It is plainly wrong how Pumpkin (as usual) attempts to tweak his agenda into others' words ("many of Brexit’s arguments on a right-wing agenda") - no matter what arguments were there in the first place, if they have been hijacked and will further be abused by those in future power after Brexit, it will have little to do with "important wider arguments". Having said that, I still do not to see a convincing realistic, sensible argument for what Brexit will *actually* deliver and improve... and that is not to say I defend the EU.
If one is skeptical of something, running away fixes it? If Germany is powerful now, how do you expect it to be after Brexit, with Frankfurt becoming the defacto financial center of Europe and the UK having zero say inside the EU? I cannot stand Schaeuble's austerity and snide stabs at other countries, but this will not disintegrate by one member state running away. TTIP is scandalous, but what will Brexit do against it? You truly believe Johnson wouldn't jump into getting exactly the same kind of deal with the US? The only point would be that the US will not be very interested in rushing into a deal with an insignificant country such as the UK (compared to the scale of Europe, China etc). But yes, Brexit will propel Germany to a huge increase in power and influence, politically and economically. Equally, security and peace only work via international cooperation, building higher walls has the opposite effect. UK science/technology/education (that's my sector) will take a massive hit and probably throw the UK way behind:
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexitvote/2015/12/05/debunking-the-myths-about-british-science-after-an-eu-exit . That's not scaremongering, but facts.
Neoliberal, undemocratic, bureaucratic? I can immediately think of a number of countries including the UK for which these descriptors are spot-on, e.g. the very vote today excluding millions of citizens, and Thatcher probably being the one to blame for introducing this neoliberal fallacy to Europe in the first place. EU political culture is only a reflection of national politics, it is not a country. Is this all a reason to run away from it? I'm all for a fundamental change of the system as this neoliberal syndrome is not sustainable. But not via something so ill-posed and poisoned as Brexit. Pumpkin, you couldn't be more wrong in blindly assuming that out means you can fix it. Where has this ever worked? I trust the EU has followed this debate with open ears, and the most productive course of action would be to work on issues together. You forfeit the opportunity by running away - the EU will not run after the UK should it decide to sail away in isolation.
I'm quite surprised as to how many board members on here subscribe to these nationalist emotions (sorry, that's what such a vote is about), and it is shocking for a European living in the UK how racist and xenophobic large fractions of society actually are (sadly of course, this happens all over the place). Being a German citizen, I am constantly reminded of the early 1930s these days. We're in this together on this most blood-thirsty continent... to try and avoid escalation at all cost. Brexit will only foster this, and that is a core reason why I cannot see "leave" as a viable option whatsoever, and believe it's a hugely dangerous path to take. It's not a vote of good against bad, it's about the less worse.
I found this summary of the key concerns quite accessible:
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/22/eu-referendum-five-questions-to-answer-before-you-vote?CMP=fb_guAnd here's how this whole saga feels:
http://newsthump.com/2016/06/20/majority-of-lemmings-in-favour-of-jumping-off-cliff/