I have asked several times on this forum if a Leave voter could give examples of how their life will be improved once we have left the EU. Nobody has answered.
Oh dear.
Yours is a typical Remainer stance. Basically - write me a detailed thesis as to why leaving the EU is a good thing. Most Leavers sussed this approach fairly quickly.
I turn the tables and say "As a remainer, please break down the constituent parts of the EU framework and explain what they do, their role, their effect on the UK, who leads them, how are the committees made up and name the representatives of Slovenia, Estonia and Hungary who are able to veto concessions made to the UK if they so desire."
And of course, the very same questions could be asked of our parliament but really - does or has anyone pored over the ins and outs of EU legislation over the decades? Nope.
Can any of us recall what life was like before the Common Market? Did being in the Common Market make very much difference to the man in the street? Nope. Did any of us wake up in the morning in, say, 1997 and think "Oh, thank goodness we are in the EU? Life would be just awful if we weren't!" NO
Don't try and fool us that we are a backward third world country, unenlightened and living in the dark ages and dependent and relied on insight from....erm...Hungary...for example, to enable us to do things differently. We do human rights very well. WE are far more tolerant in the UK than many of the member states in eastern Europe.
Your argument really doesn't wash.
What perturbed me, and millions like me, back in 2016 was how bloody ineffective Cameron and the British government were in getting concessions from Brussels. The UK had no power to alter things or improve our standing, or indeed make any demands of the EU powers that be that suited OUR country.
The principle and the enormous amounts of money we were paying Brussels to be members of this club angered many, many people and had done for many many years.
We joined a common market, a trading community. Decades on the EU has morphed into an entirely different beast. Questioning our place in that community seemed to me. and many millions like me, to be eminently sensible.
Perhaps I should rephrase and ask "In what way has your life been made more difficult/unfair/become restricted by the UK being a member of the EU for the last forty years?