Well I voted IN! Why? Because I'm looking at a future that isn't likely to happen in my lifetime - and if that makes me mad then so be it!
My knowledge of history is not brilliant so please feel free to correct any mistakes:
Within the last two millennia, our species has changed from a load of 'tribes' (for want of a better word), constantly fighting with their neighbours over land - and probably women too - into the altogether larger organizations we call 'nations' or 'states'. Consequently, we have the security of knowing that the food cupboard need never be empty, that water will (almost) always come out of the tap and that our daughters will be able to cross the street without being kidnapped and raped by some scumbag from the next county!

(I'm talking Europe here. Africa still has a long way to go.

)
This didn't happen overnight. Within the last thousand years, we've had Yorkshiremen fighting Lancastrians over who rules England, Englishmen fighting Scots over who rules Britain, Brits fighting Germans over who rules Europe.

Do you see a pattern here? Those 'tribes' have got bigger and we've all benefited as a result. I consider it inevitable that the trend will continue until there is only one tribe with one government, presumably the UN, and Europe is our logical next step up the evolutionary ladder.
Would this be so bad?

Let's look at the alternatives:
1) Stay out on our own. This will mean being a very small cog sitting uneasily inside a very big machine. That's not an untenable position but it might be a poor one. Look at North Korea if you want an example.
2) Join a different club. There aren't that many viable choices. The USA is, arguably, our best bet and possibly our only other option. Would you want to wake up one morning as a citizen of the US? Make your own mind up.
3) Join a loose association of other independently-minded nations. That could work. There might be problems over language - and culture too - but I don't see why a bunch of small nations shouldn't put their differences aside, pool their resources and come up with a common set of ideals that they can all agree on. In fact it's been done already.
Personally, I don't want my great, great, great grandchildren to find themselves stuck in the last independent nation that doesn't know where it's going.

And I certainly don't want them to have to grow up in one that's been invaded by stealth and taken over by some Muslim alliance.

No offence to Muslims as such, but most of the places you live are run by political crooks who've hijacked your religion to suit their own ends - and the Arab Summer of Love might still be a long way off.

(Trust me, it will happen!)
All things considered, Europe is a pretty good place to be. Yes, it's full of crooked politicians lining their own pockets - but we have them too. And the ECHR? Well what's wrong with that? I've listened to politicians on their soap boxes trying to tell us that we practically invented human rights and we don't need a bunch of Eurocrats telling us what we can and can't do in our own country.

Well why am I not surprized.

Everybody is always in favour of 'human rights' as long as they're roughly in agreement with their own beliefs (for which read prejudices) and don't impinge on whatever it is they want to do. Yes, our own record was always pretty good but it wasn't perfect, as any homosexual will tell you!
And then there's EFTA. I remember it well. Way back in the sixties I imagined a Europe in which Germany quit the Common market (as it was then) and joined us in EFTA.

But I didn't understand the politics of it all. I've said this before but I'll say it again anyway: The Common Market existed so that German factory workers could pay French and Italian farmers to grow food nobody wanted then pay them again to destroy it. It was the means by which Germany repaid France for WWII. Remind me somebody; which side were the Italians on again?
Without Germany on board, EFTA was always doomed to fail.

But what would have happened if they had come in? Well the French would have kissed their agricultural subsidy goodbye and done their proverbial dingers but, in the long run, they too would have joined in - as would most of the rest of Europe. And then there would have been closer cooperation, tighter integration, a general acceptance of the ECHR, --- Anybody like to guess where this is going?
