DutchNews, June 24,
2016
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| Photo: British embassy Facebook |
British residents in the Netherlands have reacted with shock and surprise
towards the vote by a narrow majority in favour of Britain leaving the European
Union. ‘I’m ashamed,’ one expat told DutchNews.nl.
‘I am ashamed about 52% of
them, and very sad for the 48%. I’m especially sad for the young people who will
have to live with the consequences of this long after the old pensioners who
voted to leave have gone. I’m ashamed to be British, but I can tell you I won’t
be British much longer.’
‘It is sad, disappointing news which, rather than
resolving anything probably just opens up more questions, uncertainty and
division,’ said Utrecht resident Daniel Leonard on Twitter.
‘My wife and I
voted to remain in the EU and feel very disappointed that the English have
voted to leave,’ said James in Amsterdam by email. ‘Scotland and Northern
Ireland have both supported remaining in EU so there will be consequences I’m
sure for the UK.’
‘It also means uncertainty in terms of travel, borders,
pensions and trade. But we’re happy to be here in a multinational, multicultural
city like Amsterdam and will work with others to continue to welcome the
outcasts and the refugees.’
Legal situation
The legal situation facing British
residents in the Netherlands will depend very much on the new treaties that
Britain hopes to sign with the EU.
European constitutional law expert and
immigration lawyer Jeremy Bierbach told DutchNews.nl: ‘It is important to
remember that even if no new agreement is concluded, the Netherlands will still
be a member of the EU and by EU law, it is still bound to guarantee the “legal
certainty”, as it’s called, of everyone who enjoyed the rights guaranteed them
by their EU citizenship at the time they moved here.’
Under EU law, ‘you can’t
suddenly tell someone who is already here and has always been working or self-supporting,
“no, now the deal is different”,’ he said. Nevertheless, as non-EU citizens,
British nationals would lose the right to vote in the European and local Dutch
elections, and there could be implications for the right to family
reunifications, Bierbach says.
Dutch passports
Many long term British nationals
are now planning to apply for Dutch nationality in order to guarantee their
rights to live in the Netherlands.
‘I just can’t face the idea of all that
paperwork like we used to have to deal with,’ another long-term British
resident told DutchNews.nl. ‘Becoming Dutch would be the easiest thing to do.’
‘I just applied for Dutch nationality,’ said John Coppock from Rotterdam on
Twitter, who has just updated his Twitter profile to ‘refugee’.
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“… Human Nature is Changing
There's a new concept afoot, a change in Human nature. We've spoken about this before. How many of you studied European history? And in school, did your mind fill up with all of the dates you had to memorize? Who conquered whom and when? Over and over and over, every single country had their turn conquering another country. Borders moved constantly. As far back as you want to go, that's what Humans did. They separated, gathered, and conquered. But as little as 50 years ago, it all stopped.
We've said this before. Fifty years ago, a seed, an idea, was planted at the end of World War II. "Let's put these European countries together," they said. "Let's even drop the borders and eventually give them one currency." Do this and they'll never war again, they predicted, for countries with common economic sources don't go to war! And that's exactly what's happened. Did it work? It's fairly fresh, but their money is threatening to take over the strength of your money, did you notice? It's worth more than yours. They still struggle to make it work and balance it. But then again, you do the same in the United States, always fine tuning the unity.
South America is considering the same thing right now. The seeds are being planted in Brazil. Within a generation, they would love to see the borders dropped and one currency. Can they do it? Perhaps. Perhaps it will take longer. Why do it? Because they see the European Union with the strongest currency on Earth. We've said this before. Here is a prediction: Perhaps not in your time, but there'll come a day when there are only five currencies in the world, because continents will start understanding that unification creates peace and prosperity. Separation creates chaos. What a concept. …”
South America is considering the same thing right now. The seeds are being planted in Brazil. Within a generation, they would love to see the borders dropped and one currency. Can they do it? Perhaps. Perhaps it will take longer. Why do it? Because they see the European Union with the strongest currency on Earth. We've said this before. Here is a prediction: Perhaps not in your time, but there'll come a day when there are only five currencies in the world, because continents will start understanding that unification creates peace and prosperity. Separation creates chaos. What a concept. …”

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