KIND OF A RANT ALERT! (Better warn you first! :) )
I will (would?) be voting no on the Constitution - and any other EU Referenda. I would be particularly anti-EU (though not anti-Europe). Various reasons - the main being that I think the EU has completely lost its way and isn't good for the average person in Europe any more.
It seems to have no concept of democracy - witness the Nice referendum, and the suggestions before the French referendum that if the result was No, it would be run again. If ever Ireland dare to vote against the EU, we're chastised as troublemakers, but when it suits the EU, we're the model students. This isn't politics - this is pure propoganda.
I don't believe Union has much to offer Joe Soap on the street either, and previous Referenda seem to have gotten through here based on propoganda from the Government. The euro in particular is brilliant because you'll now be able to see how much everything costs in Europe (lie - you could always see what stuff cost, and in any case, I don't care) and because it'll be so much easier to spend money in foreign countries (lie - credit cards and PASS cards made this easier long before). We were scaremongered with the idea that joining the euro was absolutely vital to our economy (lie - Denmark, Sweden and the UK are doing grand).
I personally feel the EU is getting rid of Irish culture too. The metric system is brilliant because...well, becasue we tell you it is. Postcodes are brilliant because of the wonderfully vague logic that "it's better for Irish business". We seem to have gotten on grand without these, and several letters in the Irish Times suggest that, underneath everything, the only thing postcodes are good for is increasing the volume of mail - which can only mean junk mail. I dislike intensely the way Ireland and GB is being forced to change everything (right down to the emergency services number) to fall in line with mainland Europe. It's probably petty, I know, but it doesn't say much for the EU's appreciation of the various cultures in its area. The fact that little or no attempt is made to justify these various changes - instead, we're bullied into making them - doesn't say much for the EU's agenda. Many people in Holland said they were voting no because they said Holland wasn't becoming less and less Dutch, so it seems I'm in no way alone in these views either.
I should qualify the remark that I'm anti-EU but pro-Europe by saying that I think the idea of all the countries in Europe getting together is probably one of the best in the history of the continent. However, the notion that we have to do everything the same and be effectively a United States of Europe is one I do not subscribe to at all.
Incidentally, regarding the Constitution, how many countries have actually passed it in a referendum? Spain is the only one, I think? Seven or eight countries have passed it through Government ratification. How can such a big issue (or indeed, many of the other big EU issues) be passed simply on the Government's say-so instead of by a referendum of the people? Or am I missing something here.
Feel better now - thanks foot.ie! :)