Isolation is not solution for UK
IF you think that British justice is the best in the world, it would be better to stay in the EU, so we could improve EU law.
If you are surprised now to be told that it does not operate as well as you had believed, it would be better to stay in the EU, where British legal practice might be improved by comparisons and statistics.
Anybody who believes in anything, in cooperation between police forces and national security forces to combat terrorism, drug gangs, people-trafficking; in compelling international companies to pay taxes, to maintain an adequate pension fund, and who abhors offshore banking, would be completely opposed to separating from people who have the same beliefs as yourself in other countries.
It does not sound intelligent that we presently have excellent combined and shared knowledge of terrorists, so we shall now sever every working link of operation with 27 countries, and hope that it could work as well. That is not even honest.
It is obvious to the greatest fool that if you care about global warming, protection of the oceans, purity of the air we breathe, and pollution, such causes cannot possibly be served by leaving the EU.
Only scoundrels with a malignant agenda would pretend to believe that the future ecology of our shared planet could be safeguarded by nations choosing to be isolated.
Substantially damaging our present trade with nearest countries should be sufficient warning that your trust is misplaced. Neville Westerman Brynna