"That is the closest it can actually say to 'dislike of forieners and immigrants'"
And it's not even close, Eddie. I can't really explain this any clearer, but wanting to control immigration (which I do) is poles apart from disliking foreigners, or worse, of being racist (which I'm not). Not much annoys me these days but this correlation does. As I said earlier it is constantly cited whenever immigration is discussed. As soon as anybody suggests that immigration should (and indeed must) be controlled they are immediately branded as racists. Of the people who voted to leave principally to control immigration, you have no way of knowing how many (if any) of them are racists. I know you have made an exception of me, which I appreciate. But to my way of thinking, normally associating people who want to control immigration as racists is as offensive as racism itself.
Unfortunately this viewpoint has held sway here in the UK for decades and as a result debating the question of immigration has become almost taboo. In the year to last March, more than 630,000 people arrived to settle in the UK (a far more pertinent figure than the disingenuous "net" migration figures). Almost half of these came from the EU, a number over which the UK has absolutely no control. People fretting over this are not racists. They see that many parts of the UK are struggling to cope with the numbers (of all races) already here. To equate that worry with racism because you've seen a few idiots abuse their corner shopkeeper is, I'm sorry to say, badly out of order.