Britain long ruled the waves, and many of its citizens have now voted for it to control its own borders, and make its own decisions, free of EU control. Is this about sovereignty, or identity, or something else entirely? It’s complicated, and often not in the ways you’d expect.
People have been moving around, and borders have been shifting around, for as long as there have been people. Who gets to say who belongs, and who doesn’t? Chandran Kukathas, who heads the London School of Economics’ department of government, argues that a free society should tolerate difference, and (relatively) open borders, and quit fearing Muslims as a group.
When big things happen, there’s nothing like sitting down with smart friends over a beer (or coffee, or whatever), and kicking around ideas about what it all means, and where it’s all going. In this episode, host Mary Kay Magistad checks in with old friends in Dublin, London and Berlin, to see how Brexit looks from where they sit, and how it might affect their lives.
German political strategist Simon Vaut on the European Union and global politics.