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FM
Former Member

This comment perfectly explains why Brexit has left the UK's young feeling so devastated

 

Rob Stothard | AFP | Getty Images

Supporters of the 'Stronger In' Campaign watch the results of the EU referendum being announced at a results party at the Royal Festival Hall in London on June 24, 2016.

The howl of despair with which global financial markets greeted the United Kingdom's decision to withdraw from the European Union has nothing on the disappointment and anger of the 48 percent of British voters, many of them young, who wanted to stay.

Until the final days before the referendum, much of the coverage outside of the UK discussed the "Brexit" in economic terms. But particularly for young people in the UK, deciding whether to leave the European Union was a bigger question of national identity, with the "Leave" campaign representing a rejection of immigrants and foreigners and the "Remain" campaign representing a hopeful cosmopolitanism.

 

Young people told pollsters that they were heavily in favor of remaining, while their elders wanted to leave. And losing is both economically and emotionally devastating. This comment from "Nicholas," a reader of the Financial Times, explains why:

A quick note on the first three tragedies. Firstly, it was the working classes who voted for us to leave because they were economically disregarded, and it is they who will suffer the most in the short term. They have merely swapped one distant and unreachable elite for another.

Secondly, the younger generation has lost the right to live and work in 27 other countries. We will never know the full extent of the lost opportunities, friendships, marriages and experiences we will be denied. Freedom of movement was taken away by our parents, uncles, and grandparents in a parting blow to a generation that was already drowning in the debts of our predecessors.

Thirdly and perhaps most significantly, we now live in a post-factual democracy. When the facts met the myths they were as useless as bullets bouncing off the bodies of aliens in a HG Wells novel. When Michael Gove said, 'The British people are sick of experts,' he was right. But can anybody tell me the last time a prevailing culture of anti-intellectualism has led to anything other than bigotry?

The quote is going viral on Twitter, perhaps because, more than a chart of falling stock prices, it shows the impact of leaving on those who believed that Britain was better off as a part of Europe, and the way in which the country's young voters, who overwhelmingly supported remaining, feel they will pay for the decisions of their elders.

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€RiffRaff posted:

IMO, it's not a good thing...but the old people feeling left out, thus they react by being themselves, old time bigots

Its not bigotry, its economic security. In Swiss, the initial vote to join was defeated by 5%.  People over 40 rejected and under voted for.  They waited 6 years to vote again and it was defeated again by 5%.  The people who once voted to join changed and rejected.  They were older and had now accumulated more wealth and higher level jobs and grew wary of any change!

FM

List of European Union Countries

Comprehensive resources for EU members

No.CountryFlagDate JoinedPopulationLanguageFactbook LinkWikipedia Link
1AustriaAustrian FlagJan. 1, 1995
8,205,533
German
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
2BelgiumBelgian FlagJan. 1, 1958
10,584,534
French/Flemish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
3BulgariaBulgarian FlagJan. 1, 2007
7,262,675
Bulgarian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
4CroatiaCroatian FlagJuly 1, 2013
4,280,000
Croatian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
4CyprusCypriot FlagMay 1, 2004
792,604
Greek
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
5Czech RepublicCzech FlagMay 1, 2004
10,220,911
Czech
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
6DenmarkJan. 1, 1973
5,484,723
Danish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
7EstoniaMay 1, 2004
1,307,605
Estonian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
8FinlandJan. 1, 1995
5,244,749
Finnish (Suomi)
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
9FranceJan. 1, 1958
64,057,790
French
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
10GermanyJan. 1, 1958
82,369,548
German
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
11GreeceJan. 1, 1981
10,722,816
Greek
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
12HungaryMay 1, 2004
9,930,915
Hungarian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
13IrelandJan. 1, 1973
4,156,119
English
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
14ItalyJan. 1, 1958
58,145,321
Italian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
15LatviaMay 1, 2004
2,245,423
Latvian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
16LithuaniaMay 1, 2004
3,565,205
Lithuanian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
17LuxembourgJan. 1, 1958
486,006
Luxembourgish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
18MaltaMay 1, 2004
403,532
Maltese
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
19NetherlandsJan. 1, 1958
16,645,313
Dutch
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
20PolandMay 1, 2004
38,500,696
Polish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
21PortugalJan. 1, 1986
10,676,910
Portuguese
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
22RomaniaJan. 1, 2007
22,246,862
Romanian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
23SlovakiaMay 1, 2004
5,455,407
Slovak
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
24SloveniaMay 1, 2004
2,007,711
Slovenian
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
25SpainJan. 1, 1986
40,491,051
Spanish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
26SwedenJan. 1, 1995
9,045,389
Swedish
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry
27United KingdomJan. 1, 1973
60,943,912
English
Cia Factbook
Wikipedia Entry

The European Union presently consists of 28 countries and has a total population of just over 500 million citizens (504,456,000).

The European Union (EU) is a political and economic community of twenty-seven countries, established in 1993 by the Maastricht Treaty.

Source --- http://eucountrylist.com/

FM

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