When we joind the EEC as it was then called, it was described as a 'European Club'. Since then it has almost always been desctibed as a 'European Project'. Very subtle change of description but nontheless very important.
When you join a club, you look at the set of rules that you are agreeing to abide by, if you like them you apply to join, and if they like you they let you. Its all above board and transparent, very black and white. This is what we joined.
A project is a very different thing. By its very nature it is changing and constantly redefineing its aims and objectives. The sands are constantly shifting. This what we are now a meber of.
As a youngster I can still remember the leaflets sent out by the Goverment of the day in 1975, three of them in all. One for 'yes', one for 'no', and one containing the Goverments recomendation, which was to join. Then, as now, the Goverment will try its hardest to encourage the population to vote 'yes'. There will be appeals to do the right things for future generations, to be part of a stronger better Europe, that it will bring prosperity and more job opportunities etc etc.
As you have probably guessed by now I am very much in the 'out' camp, and have been for very many years, but there are two points I would like to make.
Firstly if people are going to vote 'yes' to stay in, then do so for the right reasons and not because you have been frightened into it and you are doing so out of fear of the unknown. Thats how we neded up voting to go in in 1975.
Secondly, at long last, we will now have a vote on this issue and I dearly hope we as a nation are strong enough to vote to leave all of the European Project behind. But if we do vote to stay in then everyone, including myself, accepts the decission and gets on with things.