No worries, always happy to put the degree to some use
It's that kind of thing that shows just how intangibly complex the entire organisation is, which in turn makes the question of 'In, or out?' a far more complex question than it appears. It's actually slightly difficult to comprehend what the organisation actually is. And when the work it does has some very intangible benefits (to your average man on the street, the benefits it is able to bring to him tend to be far less obvious than the bad stuff the papers tell him about. Things like allowing the director of the company he works for to far more easily serve one of the largest consumer bases in the world, itself part of the one of the largest economic areas there is, which secures his job ultimately. What he does see is a load of Poles in the city centre and stories about cucumbers not being straight enough - which are usually hoaxes) the question is daft.
And theres not a hope in hell of making a sensible debate come about in the run up to a referendum, because you simply can't adequately explain the rights and wrongs of the situation in quick simple terms. What can do is scaremonger and mislead though - on both sides of the debate.
But thats all by the by, the referendum won't happen, precisely because the politicians in the mainstream know leaving would be a nightmare and theres a chance the public would vote to leave.