The post you are reporting:
Say all what things, Sid? For the record, I have an A level in the period of history you see fit to lecture me on, and your interpretation of history is subjective, to say the very least.
The system of alliances that led to the outbreak of WW1 is to blame for that particular conflict, nothing to do with Britain staying remote from Europe. I would be interested to see how a Serb terrorist assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire could have anything to do with British isolationationist politics - it is quite beyond me, and likewise how German expansionism in the 30s has anything to do with British isolationism is again nonsense. Especially as appeasement negotiations between Germany and other nations were held through the British Embassy in Switzerland in 1938 and 39 - hardly the act of trying to keep ones noses out of things. TBH, you're twisting history to suit your own political beliefs, irrespective of the truth.
If you honestly believe that the EU is anything other than a Franco/German club making decisions best suited to themselves, you are failing to see the truth of the matter: Great Britain is an irrelevance to them, we are no longer the superpower you seem to think we are. Even with British involvement, the EU is dissolving into petty squabbles - like the recent Balkan war. Are you trying to tell me that Britain was suddenly not a part of the EU as war broke out? We've been full members since long before the Balkan war, but that's what I'm trying to stress - we're just one of a number of faceless delegates at meaningless (and expensive) Euro conferences that are powerless to do anything meaningful when hostilities do surface.
I respect that we're never going to agree on this, but there can be no valid reason as to why so many successive election manifesto promises have been broken by political parties of all colours. If any party gave an unequivocal commitment to a referendum on continued British membership of the EU, UKIP would be dead in the water overnight. However, the continued denial of the right of the British people to have a say in the future of the country will just mean that the UKIP argument will continue louder and stronger, and those who see UKIP as not right-wing enough for their purposes will continue to support even more right wing parties in ever increasing numbers.