Well untennable depends on if the EU army becomes a thing, or the lisbon treaty loses it's opt out option. A while ago I'd say we'd be safe as the conservatives dont like giving up power, then Boris rebelled and the chances of teh conservatives surviving in one piece approached zero. A Labour/SNP coalition would basically make that it certainty.
I think unsustainable is a better descriptor, there are only so many bailouts and charity drives before the economies of the EU becomes too sunken and socially there is only so many immigrants people will put up with taking in before they start rebelling, perhaps not violently but we're already seeing nations going against Brussels. The way I see it the economic bailouts and migrant waves are not going to stop unless the EU's leaders change direction, which all signs point to not likely, and the longer it goes on the union is going to slump and decay until it is finally abandoned by the member countries. Point being I think we'll be better off getting off now than waiting for it to collapse, and we've lost the option to leave if things go sour in the short term.
Sorry, wrong independant link:Did you read the article carefully? It says:
The Ipsos MORI poll for the Evening Standard newspaper shows Leave with 53 per cent of the vote and Remain on 47 per cent cent.
Leave was up 10 per cent on the previous poll while Remain was down 10 per cent.
It means there is a growth of leavers, but the overall situation is still precarious. The 6% difference leaves the result still doubtful.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7075131.html
The survey of 2,000 people by ORB found that 55 per cent believe the UK should leave the EU (up four points since our last poll in April), while 45 per cent want it to remain (down four points). These figures are weighted to take account of people’s likelihood to vote. It is by far the biggest lead the Leave camp has enjoyed since ORB began polling the EU issue for The Independent a year ago, when it was Remain who enjoyed a 10-point lead. Now the tables have turned.
Even when the findings are not weighted for turnout, Leave is on 53 per cent (up three points since April) and Remain on 47 per cent (down three). The online poll, taken on Wednesday and Thursday, suggests the Out camp has achieved momentum at the critical time ahead of the 23 June referendum.
Differential turnout could prove crucial. ORB found that 78 per cent of Leave supporters say they will definitely vote – describing themselves as a “10” on a scale of 0-10, while only 66 per cent of Remain supporters say the same.Would have been a heck of a thing to get through the channel tunnel without noticing!Like there were ever border checks even before Schengen was introduced. Moving between European countries you could sometimes fail to notice you have crossed into in a different state already.
Point being they dont need the schingen agreement to move into british houses and take british jobs, they can do that with the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations which keeps us from refusing them.
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