I don't want to burst your bubble @
MikeMercury, but I'm afraid that this immigration is not going to stop just because you own your own borders (which you always did - the UK did not belong to Shengen). Look at all the people amassed in Calais who are still hoping to get a passage to the UK and who, incidentally, are not Europeans. This immigration is not going to stop just because you're leaving the union. You're an island, it is true, but people don't have to come in swimming across the Channel as might once have been the case. They'll arrive in planes some way or another. (Which reminds me, in ages when transport was much more difficult, the Vikings still managed to invade Old England. So whatever one says, or thinks or does, one is never safe from invasion.)
I've been listening to the young ones who are all devastated (majorly) by what the older generations have done to them by voting out. Although there are younger voices out there who also think the UK needed to get out, most of the younger generation just don't understand this. I'm not sure the aging population of the UK has been fair to their younger generations, so this
charity begins at home mentality seems misplaced, at least as far as the young generations are concerned. They wanted to belong to Europe and to have that mobility that Europe offered. If the younger generation didn't turn out to vote, I suspect it's because they didn't really know what was at stake, nor did they understand all these arguments that didn't make sense to them. They may also have been a little too confident (as many people were) that the referendum would come up with a decision to remain. I know some 16 year-olds would have liked to be consulted on what is going to be a legacy for their adulthood. They've been robbed of that choice.
What's more, where do you expect the people manning your health service will come from? Jobs and qualifications? Britain has let its youth down on a point of principle that could be set right, since there is a will (the democracy that you keep mentioning). I'm afraid now you won't have any say in what the E.U. will decide about trade, social and political arrangements. I feel sorry for all those who feel betrayed by the scare-mongering and the lies (on both sides, I'll agree). Good luck with whatever comes next.