Stronger In

Image result for vote In

AA Gill wrote an article for The Sunday Times last week in which he caricatured the ugly face of the 'I want my country back' Leave Camp in the EU debate.

I have to say I agree with his assessment of such people who have popped up regularly in the TV debates, one buffoon did so last night  on the BBC by comparing the Prime Minister  David Cameron, to his predecessor Neville Chamberlain who is, of course, most famous for his appeasement policy towards the Nazis.

The questioner from the audience described the EU as a 'dictatorship' and mocked the Prime Minister's EU reforms as being no different from 1938 Munich Agreement which Chamberlain waved in celebratory fashion as he stepped off the plane on his retune to the UK.

Now David Cameron answered this chap, directly and politely, as you would expect whereas I felt he deserved a verbal kicking for putting his 'point' in such a poisonous and over the top way.

So I take my hat off to the Prime Minister for keeping his cool and putting this chap and his ugly views firmly in their place.



http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/aa-gill-argues-the-case-against-brexit-kmnp83zrt

Brexit: AA Gill argues for ‘In’

We all know what “getting our country back” means. It’s snorting a line of that most pernicious and debilitating Little English drug, nostalgia


By AA Gill - The Sunday Times


ILLUSTRATIONS BY MAGDA ANTONIUK

It was the woman on Question Time that really did it for me. She was so familiar. There is someone like her in every queue, every coffee shop, outside every school in every parish council in the country. Middle-aged, middle-class, middle-brow, over-made-up, with her National Health face and weatherproof English expression of hurt righteousness, she’s Britannia’s mother-in-law. The camera closed in on her and she shouted: “All I want is my country back. Give me my country back.”

It was a heartfelt cry of real distress and the rest of the audience erupted in sympathetic applause, but I thought: “Back from what? Back from where?”

Wanting the country back is the constant mantra of all the outies. Farage slurs it, Gove insinuates it. Of course I know what they mean. We all know what they mean. They mean back from Johnny Foreigner, back from the brink, back from the future, back-to-back, back to bosky hedges and dry stone walls and country lanes and church bells and warm beer and skittles and football rattles and cheery banter and clogs on cobbles. Back to vicars-and-tarts parties and Carry On fart jokes, back to Elgar and fudge and proper weather and herbaceous borders and cars called Morris. Back to victoria sponge and 22 yards to a wicket and 15 hands to a horse and 3ft to a yard and four fingers in a Kit Kat, back to gooseberries not avocados, back to deference and respect, to make do and mend and smiling bravely and biting your lip and suffering in silence and patronising foreigners with pity.

We all know what “getting our country back” means. It’s snorting a line of the most pernicious and debilitating Little English drug, nostalgia. The warm, crumbly, honey-coloured, collective “yesterday” with its fond belief that everything was better back then, that Britain (England, really) is a worse place now than it was at some foggy point in the past where we achieved peak Blighty. It’s the knowledge that the best of us have been and gone, that nothing we can build will be as lovely as a National Trust Georgian country house, no art will be as good as a Turner, no poem as wonderful as If, no writer a touch on Shakespeare or Dickens, nothing will grow as lovely as a cottage garden, no hero greater than Nelson, no politician better than Churchill, no view more throat-catching than the White Cliffs and that we will never manufacture anything as great as a Rolls-Royce or Flying Scotsman again.

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