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legaleagle 25 Mar 15 8.31pm | |
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Read the man's own words above.They are very clear.Notwithstanding the attempts of revisionists on the right later to try to distort Churchill's views at that time (late 1940s),so that even you now spout the revisionism as "its well known that" as if fact.If you still disagree,so be it and let's move on.
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Stirlingsays 25 Mar 15 9.01pm | |
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Quote legaleagle at 25 Mar 2015 8.31pm
Read the man's own words above.They are very clear.Notwithstanding the attempts of revisionists on the right later to try to distort Churchill's views at that time (late 1940s),so that even you now spout the revisionism as "its well known that" as if fact.If you still disagree,so be it and let's move on. Oh the folly of selective revision. Churchill also said, 'If Britain must choose between Europe and the open sea, she must always choose the open sea' He also wrote, in the same article where he refers to a 'united states of Europe'. `We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe but not of it. We are linked but not comprised.' Maybe you didn't know those words. In pro-Europeans who use....nay abuse Churchill's memory by taking his words out of the context of a destroyed Europe are armchair Internet researchers. The world of 1947 is massively different to today....Churchill forsaw Britain acting as a kind of god-parent to a European entity. Sorry legal.....He just wasn't an egalitarian lefty.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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crystal balls The Garden of Earthly Delights 25 Mar 15 9.19pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 25 Mar 2015 9.01pm
Quote legaleagle at 25 Mar 2015 8.31pm
Read the man's own words above.They are very clear.Notwithstanding the attempts of revisionists on the right later to try to distort Churchill's views at that time (late 1940s),so that even you now spout the revisionism as "its well known that" as if fact.If you still disagree,so be it and let's move on. Oh the folly of selective revision. Churchill also said, 'If Britain must choose between Europe and the open sea, she must always choose the open sea' He also wrote, in the same article where he refers to a 'united states of Europe'. `We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe but not of it. We are linked but not comprised.' Maybe you didn't know those words. In pro-Europeans who use....nay abuse Churchill's memory by taking his words out of the context of a destroyed Europe are armchair Internet researchers. The world of 1947 is massively different to today....Churchill forsaw Britain acting as a kind of god-parent to a European entity. Sorry legal.....He just wasn't an egalitarian lefty. The EU has never been a "lefty" organisation. It has always been primarily a business and trade orientated organisation, with some safeguards against exploitation of workers. But the two main reasons it has existed, to compete with the US "single market" and to lessen the chances of military disputes between members, are primarily to ensure that business goes on uninterrupted and profitably. I would say that Churchill's vision has to a large extent come to pass. This was continued by Mrs Thatcher and in subsequent legislation that received both Tory and business support. And still the majority of businesses in the UK support EU membership, even in the face of some (UKIP) opposition.
I used to be immortal |
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legaleagle 25 Mar 15 10.02pm | |
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.duplicate post.sorry! Edited by legaleagle (26 Mar 2015 12.01am)
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legaleagle 25 Mar 15 10.03pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 25 Mar 2015 9.01pm
Quote legaleagle at 25 Mar 2015 8.31pm
Read the man's own words above.They are very clear.Notwithstanding the attempts of revisionists on the right later to try to distort Churchill's views at that time (late 1940s),so that even you now spout the revisionism as "its well known that" as if fact.If you still disagree,so be it and let's move on. Oh the folly of selective revision. Churchill also said, 'If Britain must choose between Europe and the open sea, she must always choose the open sea' He also wrote, in the same article where he refers to a 'united states of Europe'. `We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe but not of it. We are linked but not comprised.' Maybe you didn't know those words. In pro-Europeans who use....nay abuse Churchill's memory by taking his words out of the context of a destroyed Europe are armchair Internet researchers. The world of 1947 is massively different to today....Churchill forsaw Britain acting as a kind of god-parent to a European entity. Sorry legal.....He just wasn't an egalitarian lefty.
Churchill's oft quoted remarks about choosing between Europe and the open sea (so often misapplied by Euro Sceptics)were made in 1944,a few years before the speeches I have referred to.The remarks were made to General De Gaulle in the context of a dispute between them relating to President Roosevelt. Shortly before the D-Day landings Churchill told him every time Britain had to “decide between Europe and the open sea, it is always the open sea that we shall choose.” Churchill went on:"Every time I have to decide between you and Roosevelt,..I shall always choose Roosevelt.” Nothing whatsoever to do with a post war united Europe. I note the article you quote from. But that doesn't take away from the speeches I have also quoted from in c.1947.I believe "your article" was published in I think February 1930 and written for an American readership,many many years earlier and before the rise of Hitler and the horrors of World War Two which formed the basis for Churchill's post-war views and speeches. Second, the question of Churchill being a "lefty" or not (and I agree he most certainly wasn't) is completely irrelevant,as is your misguided assumption that the "founding fathers" of European were some sort of egalitarian "lefty" grouping (ie that well known anti-lefty,De Gaulle).It is overlooked today the extent to which pre-Maggie the Conservative Party used to be anything but an almost uniformly anti-European unity grouping.There is a danger in reducing any and every discussion point into "left" and "right" and seeking to pigeon hole it that way.
Edited by legaleagle (26 Mar 2015 9.07am)
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nickgusset Shizzlehurst 25 Mar 15 10.29pm | |
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UKIP candidate quits because he is not racist. lolz
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Hoof Hearted 26 Mar 15 10.37am | |
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To save time and effort lads, can you post up when the mainstream media has not published a scandal story about UKIP. Anyways.... I thought Miliband getting mullered yesterday by Cameron in PMQT over VAT was a better/funnier story.
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TheJudge 26 Mar 15 11.28am | |
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The irony is that people considering voting for UKIP are probably less concerned with Europe or race and more sick and tired of the constant tirade of left,liberal,PC,fascism that we are all constantly bombarded with.
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Schuloff Hackney 26 Mar 15 12.09pm | |
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Quote legaleagle at 25 Mar 2015 10.03pm
Quote Stirlingsays at 25 Mar 2015 9.01pm
Quote legaleagle at 25 Mar 2015 8.31pm
Read the man's own words above.They are very clear.Notwithstanding the attempts of revisionists on the right later to try to distort Churchill's views at that time (late 1940s),so that even you now spout the revisionism as "its well known that" as if fact.If you still disagree,so be it and let's move on. Oh the folly of selective revision. Churchill also said, 'If Britain must choose between Europe and the open sea, she must always choose the open sea' He also wrote, in the same article where he refers to a 'united states of Europe'. `We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe but not of it. We are linked but not comprised.' Maybe you didn't know those words. In pro-Europeans who use....nay abuse Churchill's memory by taking his words out of the context of a destroyed Europe are armchair Internet researchers. The world of 1947 is massively different to today....Churchill forsaw Britain acting as a kind of god-parent to a European entity. Sorry legal.....He just wasn't an egalitarian lefty.
Churchill's oft quoted remarks about choosing between Europe and the open sea (so often misapplied by Euro Sceptics)were made in 1944,a few years before the speeches I have referred to.The remarks were made to General De Gaulle in the context of a dispute between them relating to President Roosevelt. Shortly before the D-Day landings Churchill told him every time Britain had to “decide between Europe and the open sea, it is always the open sea that we shall choose.” Churchill went on:"Every time I have to decide between you and Roosevelt,..I shall always choose Roosevelt.” Nothing whatsoever to do with a post war united Europe. I note the article you quote from. But that doesn't take away from the speeches I have also quoted from in c.1947.I believe "your article" was published in I think February 1930 and written for an American readership,many many years earlier and before the rise of Hitler and the horrors of World War Two which formed the basis for Churchill's post-war views and speeches. Second, the question of Churchill being a "lefty" or not (and I agree he most certainly wasn't) is completely irrelevant,as is your misguided assumption that the "founding fathers" of European were some sort of egalitarian "lefty" grouping (ie that well known anti-lefty,De Gaulle).It is overlooked today the extent to which pre-Maggie the Conservative Party used to be anything but an almost uniformly anti-European unity grouping.There is a danger in reducing any and every discussion point into "left" and "right" and seeking to pigeon hole it that way. It is worth remembering that the Common Market (as was) was originally The European Coal and Steel community. It was set up primarily to create a fluidity of supply to a redeveloping post-war Europe, and conflict free industrial growth in what at the time were still two major industries sited in the heart of Europe. And that the locus of the operation was in Luxembourg as it sat at the crossroads of coal and steel production. Of course Jean Monet, the inspiration for the treaty had a view to maintaining the peace in Europe as well - that no army would ever annex productive forces. Back in 1979, just a few years after the UK's accession, I was enrolled in a postgraduate programme to study the emerging political system. My course required a period spent in Luxembourg with occasional visits to Brussels and Strasbourg. As a 22 year-old I thought the new European project was in all member countries' interests. However, even then I could not escape the feeling that 'the club' was a bureaucrat's delight - and that was with less than half the present-days membership. So, I did not stay on and become immersed in the system. At that time, there was broad parity amongst member-states, and the idea of free movement of labour, capital and services ( art. forty eight) would not lead to enormous shifts of labour over a whole continent. In fact, Germany's development hinged on Turkish gasterbeiter. For a searing analysis of what life was like for those migrant workers I recommend reading Günter Wallraffs's remarkable exposé The Lowest of the Low.
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Kermit8 Hevon 26 Mar 15 12.16pm | |
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Quote TheJudge at 26 Mar 2015 11.28am
The irony is that people considering voting for UKIP are probably less concerned with Europe or race and more sick and tired of the constant tirade of left,liberal,PC,fascism that we are all constantly bombarded with.
Edited by Kermit8 (26 Mar 2015 12.22pm)
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jamiemartin721 Reading 26 Mar 15 2.02pm | |
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In fairness I think, given the climate of the cold war, and Churchills regard for totalitarianism, he would likely as not seen the EU as the preferable option. He was nothing if not pragmatic. Throughout the 50s to the 80s, the threat of communism was decisive in bring the nations of Europe in to alliance, legally, militarily and economically. The idea that the UK has in anyway surrendered its Sovereignty to the EU is a gross exaggeration, trotted out every time the ECHR rules against the British (but never mentioned when the reverse happens). And its typically a rallying call of nationalism for people who don't understand that actually all the ECHR does is present an independent commission of judges to rule on conflicts created by legislation (ie where two or more laws in a country are in conflict). Its kind of odd that people seem to want to claim 'Churchill' as one of their own, as outside of WWII he was a fairly poor politician, prone to a bit of opportunism and jumping parties. As a politician in peaceful times, he wasn't all that.
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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reborn 26 Mar 15 2.06pm | |
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Reasons to vote UKIP Edited by reborn (26 Mar 2015 2.06pm)
My username has nothing to do with my religious beliefs |
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