You have then made the massive leap to suggest the reason the over 75s intend to vote that way is because of your so called peace dividend, having lived through the war.
I really didn't.
I merely stated that this age demographic is made up of those who lived through World War 2, and that this may be a factor. Of course, there will be many other factors.
However, considering that this age demographic (65+) share a lot of similarities across all sub-demographics, and that one of the few key differences for the demographic which is 9 points less in favour of leave is that they lived through mass European war, perhaps it isn't so much of a "leap" as you think.
Some WW2 veterans also seem to echo that suggestion:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...eterans-come-out-against-brexit-a7019646.html
Someone is 75 will have been born in 1941 and would have been 4 at the end of the war, an age at which children are still not really aware of the world beyond their street.
My own grandmother can remember hiding in air-raid shelters as a very young child. When a country is carrying out mass bombing runs over where you live, perhaps it sticks in the mind of younger folk more than you think.
That aside, this is 75+. Not 75 year olds only. The majority of that demographic will probably remember it quite vividly.
Let's stop with this notion that the EU brought peace to Europe - it didn't.
I believe it did.
As I mentioned earlier in this thread, deterrence from attacking fellow European states (i.e. NATO) only solves the symptom. Working together so countries have no hostile feelings towards each other solves the cause.
When it comes to European stability, there's a big difference between countries being hostile but being unable to attack each other, countries being on neutral terms and tolerating each other, and countries actually working together as close allies where they cooperate and share resources.
War has been waged across Europe virtually non-stop for thousands of years - right up to recent memory. We are easily the most war-torn continent in human history. The majority of reasons have been due to nationalism where countries have looked out only for themselves with total disregard for each other, but the European Union has put that to bed.
And whilst we currently live in peace with fellow European states with alliances closer than ever before, other continents made up of so many individual nations, such as Asia and Africa, continue with war, hostilities and tensions.