Nonsense. At least in the UK, beers are popular at all levels.
The statistics (anecdote?) in the OP just suggests that the working classes used to drink a lot of beer, and now they drink less of it, not that the happy consumption of it is a class based thing.
Eggs ought to be kept in a dry place, but the inside of a fridge tends to have a level of humidity higher than a cupboard. They also ought to be kept away from other smells or flavours, such as one usually finds in a fridge.
There's not much point putting eggs in the fridge.
You're probably comparing UHT milk with pasteurised homogenised milk, which seems to be the norm for Northern Europe. I agree that UHT can be an unpleasant surprise for people used to pasteurised homogenised milk.
In France in most supermarkets I go to in the south-centre of France one can buy...
The increase in the use of English is a global trend, so it seems strange to accord credit or blame for it in Europe to the EU.
It would make more sense to associate it with the prevailing economic and social reality.
You ignored it, but it nonetheless did answer your question about how the UK could financially sustain itself beyond the constraints of an EU superstate.
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