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Badger11 Beckenham 05 Apr 20 12.59pm | |
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Originally posted by Matov
All of this. We can never be so reliant on a foul Communist regime ever again. And energy independence has to be the primary concern with the reality that a Europe that embraces Russia has all of that solved. More fracking, more money spent on viable alternatives and with Russia in the fold, vast amounts of mineral resources. Europe can feed, clothe and power itself if there is a collective will. Guilty as charged by the way of being hooked on the cheap consumer goods from China. From my mobile to lap tops to clothing and so on. That has to stop. Individuals can make a real difference here if we vow to reject Chinese goods. And me I have a Chinese phone so yes I am a hypocrite. What we need now are UK entrepreneurs to provide us with an alternative I would be willing to pay a little more to buy British or European.
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DANGERCLOSE London 05 Apr 20 1.02pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
Hopefully it will refocus minds everywhere in Europe.I trust it will stop any suggestions in the UK that the EU is anything other than a group of nations acting collaboratively when it is in their common interest to do so, whilst stopping those in the EU who would like to change that. That's though a long way down the road. Dealing with the crisis comes first. Agreeing the needed extension next. EU reform after that, and then us rejoining that reformed EU. You know it makes sense!!!
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the silurian The garden of England.(not really) 05 Apr 20 1.04pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
Hopefully it will refocus minds everywhere in Europe.I trust it will stop any suggestions in the UK that the EU is anything other than a group of nations acting collaboratively when it is in their common interest to do so, whilst stopping those in the EU who would like to change that. That's though a long way down the road. Dealing with the crisis comes first. Agreeing the needed extension next. EU reform after that, and then us rejoining that reformed EU. You know it makes sense!!!
in your strange mind it may make sense!
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cryrst The garden of England 05 Apr 20 1.24pm | |
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Many brexit voters enjoy eu rules yes.
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Badger11 Beckenham 08 Apr 20 12.12pm | |
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EU talks over yirus package stall basically its a north south divide with the North expected to fund the poorer countries only they don't seem to keen on it. Meanwhile the EU chief scientist has resigned he's fed up up with the EU (welcome to the party). With all the in fighting going on I was half expecting the French and the Irish to blame us they probably haven't got round to it yet. Edited by Badger11 (08 Apr 2020 12.12pm)
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Badger11 Beckenham 09 Apr 20 8.58am | |
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Oh dear what a shame it's all going Pete Tong. ""Italy's prime minister has told the BBC that the European Union risks failing as a project in the coronavirus crisis.""
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Matov 09 Apr 20 11.15am | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
Oh dear what a shame it's all going Pete Tong. ""Italy's prime minister has told the BBC that the European Union risks failing as a project in the coronavirus crisis."" Huge pressures and in many ways, the cause of its own problems. For decades its proponents presented it as the solution to all Europes woes in a kind of soft focus huggy kind of fashion and when the s*** does hit the fan in a serious way, it is revealed as being nothing more than a talking shop that spews out legislation for the sake of it. And the single currency? It makes zero sense now for Italy, Greece and even Spain to remain in it. To a lesser extent Ireland as well. The first three are so reliant on tourism that the impact of this is going to be huge. And they have no fiscal control over how they deal with that. Ireland will need to make a choice soon between continuing to be a tax-haven that is a thorn in the side for a lot of European countrys or whether it actually wants to truly be a European nation with all that entails. Salvini is waiting in the wings in Italy and Le Pen in France. Both have a chance of assuming leadership in the next 2 years or running the establishment so close that they cause chaos anyway. The East European nations are refusing to play ball over the migrant crisis and with us sailing away as well, and taking our financial ball with us, the EU is in dire trouble. Can it survive in its current form? It will try but I suspect that its own inflexibility with be its downfall. A rocky decade ahead me thinks. We are better off out of it but we will still have to bear the brunt of the bow waves as it crashes head-long into the storm.
"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." - 1984 - George Orwell. |
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chris123 hove actually 09 Apr 20 11.27am | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
Oh dear what a shame it's all going Pete Tong. ""Italy's prime minister has told the BBC that the European Union risks failing as a project in the coronavirus crisis."" It's to be expected that a country puts its own national interests first - just glad we're out.
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mezzer Main Stand, Block F, Row 20 seat 1... 09 Apr 20 11.29am | |
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There was a dress rehearsal for what's coming down the tracks, quite quickly, in 2011. The EU survived then, but the writing was on the wall. The UK heeded the warning (admittedly with most people probably not fully understanding why) in 2016. Others will most likely begin to follow from the 2021 elections onwards. The fall out will be pretty severe globally (markets wise). It usually takes a while, but harsh reality usually wins over idealism in the end.
Living down here does have some advantages. At least you can see them cry. |
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chris123 hove actually 09 Apr 20 11.32am | |
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Originally posted by Matov
Huge pressures and in many ways, the cause of its own problems. For decades its proponents presented it as the solution to all Europes woes in a kind of soft focus huggy kind of fashion and when the s*** does hit the fan in a serious way, it is revealed as being nothing more than a talking shop that spews out legislation for the sake of it. And the single currency? It makes zero sense now for Italy, Greece and even Spain to remain in it. To a lesser extent Ireland as well. The first three are so reliant on tourism that the impact of this is going to be huge. And they have no fiscal control over how they deal with that. Ireland will need to make a choice soon between continuing to be a tax-haven that is a thorn in the side for a lot of European countrys or whether it actually wants to truly be a European nation with all that entails. Salvini is waiting in the wings in Italy and Le Pen in France. Both have a chance of assuming leadership in the next 2 years or running the establishment so close that they cause chaos anyway. The East European nations are refusing to play ball over the migrant crisis and with us sailing away as well, and taking our financial ball with us, the EU is in dire trouble. Can it survive in its current form? It will try but I suspect that its own inflexibility with be its downfall. A rocky decade ahead me thinks. We are better off out of it but we will still have to bear the brunt of the bow waves as it crashes head-long into the storm. I doubt Greece can with all its euro and USD debt.
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Matov 09 Apr 20 11.36am | |
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Originally posted by mezzer
There was a dress rehearsal for what's coming down the tracks, quite quickly, in 2011.
And it was the US who had to intervene in the end, dragging Nato with it, to act decisively. Europe did nothing other than stand by with its arms embargo whilst hundreds of thousands of people were massacred.
"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." - 1984 - George Orwell. |
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Matov 09 Apr 20 11.40am | |
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Originally posted by chris123
I doubt Greece can with all its euro and USD debt.
Peoples lives at at stake here. Not a few but 10,000's of thouands. To protect what? Banks who bribe and cajole behind the scenes? Whilst I still believe it is impossible to claim with any certainty about what the world will look like post-Corona, I am convinced that the sheer scale of it will change almost everything we previously considered to be the norm.
"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." - 1984 - George Orwell. |
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