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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 9.00am | |
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Originally posted by Spiderman
So he didn’t say he doesn’t? Maybe he was not prepared to discuss his finances to a journalist, not unreasonable is it? Without spending lots of time looking through every recorded statement I cannot provide you direct evidence but common sense and circumstantial evidence put the issue beyond any reasonable doubt in my mind. He has made a small fortune from his activities and now lives well. That has been his motivation. Not to get his supporters to donate funds so they can be directed to victims.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 9.04am | |
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Originally posted by PalazioVecchio
the main conning was the stealthy progression of the EU from a trading bloc into a Political Union. we were codded. The EU were codding. If you pardon the Fisheries Pun. We weren’t the least conned. We weren’t involved and said we would never get involved in any kind of move towards federalism. If and when it happens will be the time when the two speed Europe, which has been predicted for at least 40 years, will finally occur.
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Teddy Eagle 19 Jan 24 9.11am | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
Pretty safe offer to make wasn’t it? He got 2.2% of the vote. Might it just have been more self aggrandising? Certainly it might but out of fairness let's see the list of others who made a similar offer.
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georgenorman 19 Jan 24 9.50am | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
We weren’t the least conned. We weren’t involved and said we would never get involved in any kind of move towards federalism. If and when it happens will be the time when the two speed Europe, which has been predicted for at least 40 years, will finally occur. You talk of the people being conned. Let us go back to 1971 when Ted Heath, arguably the worst Prime Minster we have ever had was steering us towards joining the EEC. He told the House of Commons that, "Joining the community does not entail a loss of national identity or an erosion of essential national sovereignty." In June 1971, a leaflet was sent to every home in the UK, promising that, “there is no question of Britain losing essential sovereignty”. Then, in a television broadcast in January 1973 to mark the signing of the Treaty of Rome, Edward Heath blithely stated, “There are some in this country who fear that, in going into Europe, we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears, I need hardly say, are completely unjustified.” This despite him commissioning a secret Treasury report that stated that if Britain entered the Common Market it could end up inside a federal Europe with a single currency, and be left with less independence than individual states in the US. The loss of national sovereignty was confirmed by Judge Bruce Morgan on April 9, 2001. He said that, when the UK joined the Common Market in the 1970s, parliament and the British people “quite voluntarily surrendered the once seemingly immortal concept of the sovereignty of parliament and legislative freedom”.
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Stirlingsays 19 Jan 24 10.16am | |
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Originally posted by georgenorman
You talk of the people being conned. Let us go back to 1971 when Ted Heath, arguably the worst Prime Minster we have ever had was steering us towards joining the EEC. He told the House of Commons that, "Joining the community does not entail a loss of national identity or an erosion of essential national sovereignty." In June 1971, a leaflet was sent to every home in the UK, promising that, “there is no question of Britain losing essential sovereignty”. Then, in a television broadcast in January 1973 to mark the signing of the Treaty of Rome, Edward Heath blithely stated, “There are some in this country who fear that, in going into Europe, we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears, I need hardly say, are completely unjustified.” This despite him commissioning a secret Treasury report that stated that if Britain entered the Common Market it could end up inside a federal Europe with a single currency, and be left with less independence than individual states in the US. The loss of national sovereignty was confirmed by Judge Bruce Morgan on April 9, 2001. He said that, when the UK joined the Common Market in the 1970s, parliament and the British people “quite voluntarily surrendered the once seemingly immortal concept of the sovereignty of parliament and legislative freedom”. Seconded. One of the worst PMs in history. The future will curse his name.
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Hrolf The Ganger 19 Jan 24 2.24pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
You obviously confuse crap with the truth. I am not really surprised. Don’t like the public school boys? Choose someone else and convince others to. Our government can decide who comes here. They don’t want to admit the illegals anymore than you do. That’s not the problem. It’s doing it that is. Making decisions is easy. It’s the implementation of them that’s the hard bit. Allowing managed immigration is absolutely necessary at the moment. Several parts of the economy would struggle badly without it. Universities need international students to survive. Keeping families intact is a moral duty. You might want us to ignore international law and treaties but the implications of doing so could be very damaging to our reputation and standing. British integrity is one of our few remaining bargaining chips. I certainly don't confuse anything you say with sense. You think that the ECHR will have any meaning when we are unable to sustain our society owing to weight of numbers? Will the average Briton be weeping for economic migrants when their child can't be seen by a doctor when he is seriously ill. But you keep talking about our'reputation'. Do you think people will be worrying about that when our society crumbles because we can't even dictate who enters our country? You are as dim as the fools that run this place, and you won't be here to reap the consequences of this utter madness.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 8.00pm | |
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Originally posted by Teddy Eagle
Certainly it might but out of fairness let's see the list of others who made a similar offer. You know as well as me that such a list doesn’t exist. Nor needs to. Y-L is unique in his behaviour. No one else has made such a profit out of misery in this matter.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 8.14pm | |
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Originally posted by Hrolf The Ganger
I certainly don't confuse anything you say with sense. You think that the ECHR will have any meaning when we are unable to sustain our society owing to weight of numbers? Will the average Briton be weeping for economic migrants when their child can't be seen by a doctor when he is seriously ill. But you keep talking about our'reputation'. Do you think people will be worrying about that when our society crumbles because we can't even dictate who enters our country? You are as dim as the fools that run this place, and you won't be here to reap the consequences of this utter madness.
No one wants economic migrants to be freely admitted. Let’s lay that myth for good. The problem is not the shared desire, it’s the practicalities of achieving it Spreading scare stories about crime rates caused by immigration helps no one. We need to sufficiently resource the police and justice system to deal with any issues and then ensure our new citizens understand, accept and abide by our laws and expectations. The answer to that lies in our own hands. It requires action. Not moaning. How many can arrive? That depends on how many we need to keep our economy functioning and that’s unknown. What’s not unknown is what we must do when they arrive. Which is to ensure they become hardworking, responsible and respectful citizens as soon as possible. We need to make them one of us, and no longer one of them.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 8.35pm | |
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Originally posted by georgenorman
You talk of the people being conned. Let us go back to 1971 when Ted Heath, arguably the worst Prime Minster we have ever had was steering us towards joining the EEC. He told the House of Commons that, "Joining the community does not entail a loss of national identity or an erosion of essential national sovereignty." In June 1971, a leaflet was sent to every home in the UK, promising that, “there is no question of Britain losing essential sovereignty”. Then, in a television broadcast in January 1973 to mark the signing of the Treaty of Rome, Edward Heath blithely stated, “There are some in this country who fear that, in going into Europe, we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears, I need hardly say, are completely unjustified.” This despite him commissioning a secret Treasury report that stated that if Britain entered the Common Market it could end up inside a federal Europe with a single currency, and be left with less independence than individual states in the US. The loss of national sovereignty was confirmed by Judge Bruce Morgan on April 9, 2001. He said that, when the UK joined the Common Market in the 1970s, parliament and the British people “quite voluntarily surrendered the once seemingly immortal concept of the sovereignty of parliament and legislative freedom”.
TheJudge was mistaken. He was a pretty obscure District Judge expressing a personal opinion. Not a senior member of the judiciary responsible for advising the government on constitutional law. His remark was therefore only a little more relevant than you offering an opinion down the pub. I would debate his opinion with him but ignore yours.
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Teddy Eagle 19 Jan 24 8.46pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
You know as well as me that such a list doesn’t exist. Nor needs to. Y-L is unique in his behaviour. No one else has made such a profit out of misery in this matter. But he did make the offer. Unlike anyone else.
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Hrolf The Ganger 19 Jan 24 10.18pm | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
No one wants economic migrants to be freely admitted. Let’s lay that myth for good. The problem is not the shared desire, it’s the practicalities of achieving it Spreading scare stories about crime rates caused by immigration helps no one. We need to sufficiently resource the police and justice system to deal with any issues and then ensure our new citizens understand, accept and abide by our laws and expectations. The answer to that lies in our own hands. It requires action. Not moaning. How many can arrive? That depends on how many we need to keep our economy functioning and that’s unknown. What’s not unknown is what we must do when they arrive. Which is to ensure they become hardworking, responsible and respectful citizens as soon as possible. We need to make them one of us, and no longer one of them. How can you cater for an ever increasing number of arrivals? I have seen no 'action' other than making the problem worse on a yearly basis. It is quite painful to see your naivety. It's more painful to imagine the kind of country my grand children will grow up in. We both know that Britain has become over reliant on migrants, and that business wants cheap and available labour to suppress wages and easily replace staff who don't accept poor conditions. Have you been to hospital lately? The NHS is no longer fit for purpose, even with migrant workers making up the numbers. It needs to improve the quality of staff as well as those numbers. Training and recruitment of British people should be a priority instead of agency staff and foreigners. Half of them are incompetent and the risk of malpractice is greater than ever. The average person does not benefit at all from mass immigration, and neither do they want it. People like you are the obstacle.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 19 Jan 24 11.50pm | |
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Originally posted by Teddy Eagle
But he did make the offer. Unlike anyone else. We don’t know that, or if people quietly donated. Not everyone seeks to make a political gesture out of something he knows very well he won’t have to fulfil. I am not going to tell you all my charitable acts, who I support or how extensively. The opinion of all the authorities trying to handle these awful cases is that Y-L made their work much more difficult and diverted resources onto having to deal with him that were better used elsewhere.
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