@jd.linklater wrote:

Of course that's what it's designed for and there will be a whole lot more similar stuff to look forward to over the coming months from both sides of the divide. Best not to listen to any of them. Like evoman and others have said,  do your own research and make your decision based on facts not hearsay or political spin. In other words treat the issue as if it were a general election, assume that they'll tell you anything you want to hear to secure votes. If you take anything they say at face value you're in for a big dissapointment. Has it ever been any different?


Hi jd, I have said (post 27 in creeky's thread on 'what would make you change your mind') that there are several aspects of staying or leaving the EU that I will be trying to find out about before I make my decision, such as trade, economy, jobs, national security etc.
I also appreciate that it will be harder to know the implications of leaving as it will be a bit of a leap in the dark compared to what we know about being in the EU.
I don't trust politicians so I'm hoping there will be some reasoned and informative articles written by experts with no political ambition.

 

 

All that we are is what we have thought.