3. Before Brexit, a British person could wake up and decide to take a job in Barcelona, start a business in Berlin, retire in France, or study in Amsterdam.

No applications.
No waiting.
No uncertainty.

Just the same rights as everyone else.
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4. That freedom wasn’t unusual.

It already exists across huge parts of the world:
• EU countries
• The Nordic Passport Union
• Australia–New Zealand
• Even within the UK
• And between UK and Ireland.

Freedom of Movement is not radical. It is normal cooperation between neighbours.
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5. The real loss is opportunity.

• Young people lost the right to build careers across a continent.
• Businesses lost access to talent and markets.
• Families lost the ability to live near each other.

These were ordinary freedoms that millions quietly relied on.
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