No, jake, you are wrong (at leas as far as I am concerned).
My dislike of the EU has many foundations, but here are a few of the more important:
I do not like the way it has morphed from a trading bloc (an admirable and sensible arrangement and one which I wholeheartedly support) into an organisation whose sole intention seems to be the creation of a Europe consisting of simply one nation. The 27 member states are simply too diverse to be satisfactorily subject to one set of laws, one set of financial rules, one economy and, most important of all, one currency.
I do not like the notion that we must share our wealth, resources, public services and space with people from nations with whom we have nothing in common and to whom we owe nothing and have no obligations.
I do not like the free movement of people throughout the continent. By this I mean freedom to settle and work (or not, as the case may be). People should only be allowed to settle in the UK if they have a definite job to take up (which cannot be filled by somebody already here) and are sponsored by a responsible employer. It is utter madness to allow hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people to settle here from abroad to either not work at all or to take up low skilled jobs. We do not need any more unskilled labour in this country yet wave after wave of low skilled workers pour in because we have no say over who is allowed to settle here.
I do not like the single currency. Although we are not part of it the Euro is causing untold damage to the UK economy and indeed to the rest of the world, not to mention the hardship it has wreaked among the peripheral nations that use it. On purely logical grounds it would never have been countenanced and was set up simply to satisfy the vanity of politicians intent on creating a Federal Europe. They see it as their crowning glory but refuse to see what a disastrous project it has been.
There are many, many other reasons why I dislike the EU and would prefer to see the UK out of it. We gain no benefit from it which we could not otherwise have if it did not exist or existed simply as a Free Trade association and it will be interesting to see the outcome of the attempts to establish an EU:US trading federation.
None of this has anything to do with patriotism or pride. It is simply common sense for a nation to want to control its own affairs and the UK will never be able to do that whilst a member of the EU.