Well, we're making a bit of progress - I'm pleased we can now agree that the EU commissioners are not 'self-appointed'.
The Commissioners are the executive of the EU
Agreed.
they are therefore responsible for all decisions, direction and leadership.
No they aren't. The Commission proposes and drafts legislation, which then has to be passed by the directly elected Parliament and the Council of Ministers representing the 28 democratically elected governments. If it is passed, it's the Commission's job to implement it.
It is the equivalent of a senior civil servant being Prime Minister.
Not really. A better analogy would be with government ministers, as the 28 commissioners all have a specific area of responsibility.
Once they take office they have to take an oath of elegance to the EU, its beliefs and agree to put its needs above national government.
The oath is that the commissioners will be completely independent in carrying out their duties, acting in the widest interests of the EU and not in the interests of the country which nominated them. In other words, they are not national representatives. Would anyone want it any other way?
It is completely undemocratic.
That simply isn't true, as explained above. It is undoubtedly a democratic system. But it's not perfect, and many people across Europe would like the Commission to be more accountable on a day-to-day basis than it currently is. The question is, how to achieve that. The sheer size of the EU population (half a billion people) is part of the problem. As Winston Churchill once said, ''Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.'
On the subject of the referendum itself, I've got a creeping feeling that we may be heading for Brexit. Hatter and I can argue about democracy, but I doubt whether most people care much about that. The issue which seems to be prevailing is immigration, and I think we could be heading for a gigantic and historic leap in the dark, with who knows what consequences. Scary..........