Over breakfast just now I was talking to John about travel once again. He was telling me how he knows people who travel from place to place across Europe, moving from one city to another across the continent. He also explained how, as a Polish man, he can get trains to all kinds of fascinating cities across the EU where he can live and work. To be honest, as wonderful as his descriptions sounded, they also filled me with sadness, tinged with an intense anger. While I know that it would still be possible in principle for brits to do something similar, the fact remains that, ten years ago, fifty-two percent of us were fooled into voting to cut the country off from this union of nations. Travelling across Europe is now far harder and bureaucratic for us. Through an act of abject xenophobia, we trapped ourselves behind a wall of paperwork.
I know that yesterday I directed everyone to a video explaining how we should be more understanding and less dismissive of the kind of people who voted for Trump and Brexit. Yet the fact remains that, were it not for them, we would still be free to live and work throughout Europe: we’d still be able to explore and roam as we wanted, working alongside all kinds of people, experiencing new cultures; we would still be part of a wider, broader community. As someone who believes in such unions, and who relishes the notion of people from across the globe working together as one, the fact that we are now cut off from that boils my blood with rage. Be they physical, rhetorical or bureaucratic, borders are borders: they divide and imprison us all. Call me a member of the metropolitan liberal elite if you like, but John’s stories of wandering across Europe by train sounded so captivating and wondrous, that the thought that that might no longer be possible for guys like me, due to idiots fooled into voting for something they didn’t understand in the name of ‘taking back control’, is utterly gut wrenching.




