All of th arguments arguments below point towards the TTIP being less likely in the EU and more likely in the UK.
What we need in this century is less centralisation of power but more cooperation between countries using modern tools.
Be careful what you wish for; you may get it.
Power finds a way. Where political power wanes, corporate power becomes ascendant. Unlike political power, corporate power is not accountable to the likes of thee and me; it is only accountable to its shareholders.
That way lies the TTIP.
Yes and that is my concern with the EU it is the one stop shop for corporations to to their deals far far away in the eyes of the people who will not even know they are being shafted but for leaks.
Exactly the same point can be made about any one country. So that isn't a valid point against the EU.
It is also easier for corporations to bribe/bludgeon/ignore politicans in one country than in 28 countries.
I think these corporations should be made to deal with each and every country where the debate will happen at a national level rather than behind closed doors in the EU government.
Any such debate would be behind closed doors in the individual countries. So that isn't a valid point against the EU.
On the one hand a very sensible group of centralised people is great because it means that in one fell swoop they can disapprove of unfair rules that corporations would like but it's a double-edged sword because if and when corporations do get their way with this oversized government we all get the decision.
In the EU each country has slightly different internal politics, so even if X appeals to one or more countries, it is more or less guaranteed that some group somewhere will raise the alarm. Think of it as the political equivalent of FOSS's "many eyes".
Note that the French politicians (and some others) are currently against the TTIP, whereas many of our politicians are in favour of it.
The problem I find is that people are not involved or interested in politics except for when it comes to complaining about their losses and they generally just blame the wrong person. Making your governance less complex and bringing the debates closer to the people I hope will inspire more people to get involved and allow more to understand what is going on. How many debates in the UK have we had about TTI P? The BBC won't even mention it by name. From my memory and I listen to a lot radio 4 stuffed full of political news I have only heard the name once or twice and it has only been referred to by name after a lot of attention was generated by grassroots organisations. If the BBC has to refer to it it usually just calls it a controversial trade deal after all we don't want to give people a name we don't want to objectify it because once you have identified it you can talk about it properly but the BBC which is the servant of our government does our government is bidding and we have a Conservative government which loves privatisation loves corporate interests and will happily let this happen without telling us about it. Obama threatened that we will be last in line for any trade deals with America will I tell you what bring it fucking on he can now stick to that not that I think he or his successors or underlings will.
I don't follow that chain of reasoning. But I do agree about people blaming the wrong thing - blaming the EU in this case.
If you look at local politics (down to the town level) about local issues that directly affect local people,
they still don't get involved. Why would that be any different at a national level?