Of course joining the EU is a voluntary matter, but the existing terms are very harsh and include agreement to whatever the EU decides to do in future. The UK joined the former EEC, which was ostensibly just a trading block, in 1973.
the decades since, the EU repeatedly moved the goalposts over regulation, law, taxation, membership, the respective powers of the European Parliament and the European Commission. Any new member has effectively to agree not only to the current situation but to whatever else the EU decides to do in future without the slightest idea what that may be. As an organisation it is moving towards removal of individual member veto and the complete harmonisation of the tax system with no scope for members to set different rates of income or corporation tax.In
In effect, new members give it carte blanche to do what the hell it likes with them and their people. And that's the point - a new member has no idea what it is ultimately signing up to.
No, we don't. They are all British Overseas Territories with varying degrees of self-government. None has been a colony for over 20 years.
ETA that Mauritius has been independent for over 50 years.
'No, we don't. They are all British Overseas Territories with varying degrees of self-government. None has been a colony for over 20 years.'
Yes, they are, they are certainly not in the same league as France's overseas territories, where the inhabitants are legally citizens of France. British over seas territorians do not have that privilege and probably never will, hence, they are colonies
'''These former parts of the
British Empire are not part of the UK proper,
but the British crown and parliament has full sovereignty over each. They have varying degrees of delegated internal self-governance. The UK counts a total of 14 such territories. This includes the UK's view that its Antarctic claim is a dependency, though internationally its legal status is governed by the
Antarctic Treaty.
'''United Kingdom Overseas Territories (UKOTs), also known as British Overseas Territories (BOTs), have constitutional and historical links with the United Kingdom, but
do not form part of the United Kingdom itself.'''
This bit is misleading,
'''' the decades since, the EU repeatedly moved the goalposts over regulation, law, taxation, membership, the respective powers of the European Parliament and the European Commission. Any new member has effectively to agree not only to the current situation but to whatever else the EU decides to do in future without the slightest idea what that may be. As an organisation it is moving towards removal of individual member veto and the complete harmonisation of the tax system with no scope for members to set different rates of income or corporation tax.''''
''''
the EU does not exist without it's Parliament. The Brits had parliament representation, by people in Britain casting their vote in a free and fare election, as to whom was to represent them. That their representers were not particularly bright, is no fault of the EU, It was a choice Brits made all on their own..