Could you expand on this? I appreciate that you might be being facetious (given that adequate regulation might be able to mitigate the pressures of migration) but I've been finding it difficult to work out what I think of the EU's policy of freedom of movement. (Would it be fair to even characterise it as a neoliberal policy, and the EU as neoliberal as a whole, given the EU's protection for workers' rights and relative crackdown on unfair business practice?)
Perhaps I have also succumbed to British tabloid EU scaremongering, but I would also describe myself as Eurosceptic. Part of me feels inclined to believe that if a removal from free movement agreements is what is required to help equalise the British economy's geographical inequalities then (provided it doesn't first crash the economy) that may be not such a bad thing, but then I also recognise that it isn't the EU's fault that successive British governments have failed (if they could even have been said to have tried) to mitigate the pressures of migration into country.