BREXIT – AN EXCITING PROSPECT AHEAD.
I
see the Brexit leave vote as an exciting and challenging prospect for the UK . After over
40 years of membership of the EU the UK has been left in a serious
financial state supported by out of control borrowing.
If
we vote to leave the EU we will be free to invest the £10 billion saved from
our membership, the £14 billion from the Foreign Aid budget and money saved
from the trade deficit to form an Investment fund, the Lions Den, to support
through loans or overdraft guarantee schemes, business plans and possible
management buyout plans securing the future and development of our
manufacturing sector. This would reduce our imports, provide skilled jobs,
reduce our benefits costs and increase our tax income.
We
would continue to meet our foreign aid commitments but instead of supplying
money we would supply manufactured goods and backup services. If you give a man
a fish you feed him and his family for a day but if you give him the right
equipment and teach him how to us it he feeds his family for the rest of time. Most
of the countries that we want to help don’t want long term charity that they
become dependant on, they actually want help to get back on their feet and have
a pride in being able to feed their own families. From reports that I have
seen, harrowing scenes of scorched earth, people trying to scratch together
enough to feed themselves and their families and animals dying, the one thing
that seems to link them all together is the lack of clean water. We can manufacture
desalination plants, irrigation pumps, filtration equipment, pipe work,
tractors, implements, disease resistant seed that will grow in harsh
environments and the technology to make it all work. Whole communities can be
independent producing enough food for their own needs and some over to sell or
trade to get other items that they need for a quality of life. Once the model
is up and working it can be rolled out to many other communities. We have
helped to feed the world in the past and this would be a chance to help the
world feed itself.
James
Hancock.
A Good Common Man.
( Because of what happens when “good men do nothing“
Edmund Burke)
( Ref: DE62558)
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