I'm sure that paying it won't be any trouble for the UK, but it will certainly leave a dent in the budget.
Quote from: Mr Psychologist on October 24, 2014, 08:22:48 PMI'm sure that paying it won't be any trouble for the UK, but it will certainly leave a dent in the budget.Aren't we still in some sort of deficit? That's sure to cut the UK some slack.Not to mention the bailing out of lesser-EU states (not to say they're any worse of course, but Greece and the PI_S don't have a strong economy). It seems that EU is just getting grumpy because we voted "No" for something a year or so ago and got demoted to some sort of lower status in one of the many unknown but important EU councils we have.(My memory has failed me terribly as to what it was all about; I blame how dull the EU political stuff is sometimes)
Doesn't the Fourth Reich just suck all of the tax dollars out of it's member states? Can't say I blame people in the UK for wanting to leave.
That would be a terrible shame for both parties involved. The infamous British "nanny state" occupying itself with spying on its citizens and violating privacy and other human rights left and right is kept somewhat in check by the EU and several of its organs. Adding to this is the fact that the UK employs a dualistic system of implying inter- and supranational law, meaning that those rules require a subsequent national law to come into effect and that they can be easily terminated afterwards.I know that a lot of people are eurosceptic because of the EU's economic policies, which are concerns I can fully agree with, but if I were British, I'd be getting very concerned about what could happen if the UK leaves the EU, nullifies currently applicable directives and regulations and breaks away from the ECtHR.