Discussion:
Eating horses
(too old to reply)
Jane Gillett
2013-11-17 09:33:46 UTC
Permalink
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.

Any comments?

A few thoughts.....
. There would be regulations on how they were treated as in current farmed
species.
. Drug treatments applied would be recorded and relevant withdrawal periods
applied. If cattle/sheep/pigs have been given medicines they must not be
sold for human food until spcified periods of time, defined by the drug
manufacturers according to medical factors, have passed.
. We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.

Any other?

Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Ophelia
2013-11-17 13:55:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
A few thoughts.....
. There would be regulations on how they were treated as in current farmed
species.
. Drug treatments applied would be recorded and relevant withdrawal periods
applied. If cattle/sheep/pigs have been given medicines they must not be
sold for human food until spcified periods of time, defined by the drug
manufacturers according to medical factors, have passed.
. We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
Any other?
I've lived on the continent long enough that horsemeat in the freezers were
the norm. I didn't eat any but I suppose it depends if you see your horse
as a pet ... unthinkable! It is all meat, but so is man! Best not go
down that track or we would all be vegetarians.
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
Jane Gillett
2013-11-18 19:25:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ophelia
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
A few thoughts.....
. There would be regulations on how they were treated as in current farmed
species.
. Drug treatments applied would be recorded and relevant withdrawal periods
applied. If cattle/sheep/pigs have been given medicines they must not be
sold for human food until spcified periods of time, defined by the drug
manufacturers according to medical factors, have passed.
. We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
Any other?
I've lived on the continent long enough that horsemeat in the freezers were
the norm. I didn't eat any but I suppose it depends if you see your horse
as a pet ... unthinkable! It is all meat, but so is man! Best not go
down that track or we would all be vegetarians.
O, I've just had a bounce on the Email address I had for you. Could you
Email me please - usual address still valid.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Ophelia
2013-11-19 13:15:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Ophelia
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
A few thoughts.....
. There would be regulations on how they were treated as in current farmed
species.
. Drug treatments applied would be recorded and relevant withdrawal periods
applied. If cattle/sheep/pigs have been given medicines they must not be
sold for human food until spcified periods of time, defined by the drug
manufacturers according to medical factors, have passed.
. We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
Any other?
I've lived on the continent long enough that horsemeat in the freezers were
the norm. I didn't eat any but I suppose it depends if you see your horse
as a pet ... unthinkable! It is all meat, but so is man! Best not go
down that track or we would all be vegetarians.
O, I've just had a bounce on the Email address I had for you. Could you
Email me please - usual address still valid.
Done but I don't have another, I've sent it to this one ;-
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
Jane Gillett
2013-11-20 09:08:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ophelia
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Ophelia
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
A few thoughts.....
. There would be regulations on how they were treated as in current farmed
species.
. Drug treatments applied would be recorded and relevant withdrawal periods
applied. If cattle/sheep/pigs have been given medicines they must not be
sold for human food until spcified periods of time, defined by the drug
manufacturers according to medical factors, have passed.
. We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
Any other?
I've lived on the continent long enough that horsemeat in the freezers were
the norm. I didn't eat any but I suppose it depends if you see your horse
as a pet ... unthinkable! It is all meat, but so is man! Best not go
down that track or we would all be vegetarians.
O, I've just had a bounce on the Email address I had for you. Could you
Email me please - usual address still valid.
Done but I don't have another, I've sent it to this one ;-
Received, thanks. I'll resend the other. Nothing earthshattering - well
except to us - just our dog.
Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Phil C.
2013-11-17 15:12:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
Nay.
--
Phil C.
ARW
2013-11-18 21:45:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
Cannibalism if she eats one.
--
Adam


---
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http://www.avast.com
Jane Gillett
2013-11-19 09:51:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by ARW
Post by Jane Gillett
HRH Princess Anne has suggested that if horses were sold for human
consumption in UK it would be better for horse welfare.
Any comments?
Cannibalism if she eats one.
I know some people find her take on life unusual, maybe unacceptable, but I
was impressed during the Centotaph Remembrance Ceremony. She stayed in
Horseguards for the entire procession, including those who were not the
"heads of services etc" for want of a better description; all the other
Royalty, including those a lot younger than her, and even politicians who
are supposed to represent us, left the scene long before.

Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-02 19:56:32 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by ARW
Cannibalism if she eats one.
I know some people find her take on life unusual, maybe unacceptable, but I
was impressed during the Centotaph Remembrance Ceremony.
The Princess Royal is indeed hard working and sensible.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-02 19:53:55 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
I don't think so as the idea is to have a use for surplus horses (and
it has not happened where horse is already eaten as far as I know).
--
Mike... . . . .
RustyHinge
2013-12-03 00:42:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
I don't think so as the idea is to have a use for surplus horses (and
it has not happened where horse is already eaten as far as I know).
And the ready availability of Shetland ponies mitigates against the
hypothesis.
--
Rusty Hinge
To err is human. To really foul things up requires a computer and the BOFH.
RustyHinge
2013-12-03 00:47:22 UTC
Permalink
On 03/12/13 00:42, RustyHinge wrote:

e ready availability of Shetland ponies mitigates against the
Post by RustyHinge
hypothesis.
Bah! Just come out of The Shed - I ought to have said 'militates' in
here innit.
--
Rusty Hinge
To err is human. To really foul things up requires a computer and the BOFH.
Jane Gillett
2013-12-03 09:28:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
I don't think so as the idea is to have a use for surplus horses (and
it has not happened where horse is already eaten as far as I know).
If horsemeat becomes a normal part of our diet (and I see no moral reason
why it shouldn't) then it is important that the safety for human
consumption is as good as for the "standard" meats ie pig, sheep, cattle.
This is importantly concerned with the drugs circulating in the animal at
slaughter. For animals slaughtered for human consumption there are
mandatory "withdrawal periods" following drug administration and you are
not allowed to slaughter an animal for human consumption until that period
is passed and records must be kept to support this practice. I consider it
essential that such measures be introduced for horsemeat if horses are
introduced into the UK food chain whether as a developed food species or
just mopping up the ones which we don't actually want.

That's the human safety side of things. Now the welfare aspects which are
also very important to me. Until you have legal control over the use of
horses (and other animals) as meat then you have no idea how those animals
were kept and killed.

If horsemeat becomes popular for food it will be either bred in UK or
imported (from what conditions I dread to think) so I agree with the
Princess Royal that it may well be best for horse welfare if we developed a
trade for eating horses.

Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
graham
2013-12-03 20:56:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
I don't think so as the idea is to have a use for surplus horses (and
it has not happened where horse is already eaten as far as I know).
If horsemeat becomes a normal part of our diet (and I see no moral reason
why it shouldn't) then it is important that the safety for human
consumption is as good as for the "standard" meats ie pig, sheep, cattle.
This is importantly concerned with the drugs circulating in the animal at
slaughter. For animals slaughtered for human consumption there are
mandatory "withdrawal periods" following drug administration and you are
not allowed to slaughter an animal for human consumption until that period
is passed and records must be kept to support this practice. I consider it
essential that such measures be introduced for horsemeat if horses are
introduced into the UK food chain whether as a developed food species or
just mopping up the ones which we don't actually want.
That's the human safety side of things. Now the welfare aspects which are
also very important to me. Until you have legal control over the use of
horses (and other animals) as meat then you have no idea how those animals
were kept and killed.
If horsemeat becomes popular for food it will be either bred in UK or
imported (from what conditions I dread to think) so I agree with the
Princess Royal that it may well be best for horse welfare if we developed a
trade for eating horses.
Try and develope that trade and horse lovers, PETA and other loonies will be
up in arms. They are forever trying to get the govt to close a horse
abattoir in Alberta and there has been a ban in place in the US for some
time.
Graham
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-04 08:51:10 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Until you have legal control over the use of
horses (and other animals) as meat then you have no idea how those animals
were kept and killed.
If horsemeat becomes popular for food it will be either bred in UK or
imported (from what conditions I dread to think)
while I agree some foreign places will be bad, I don't think you
should make the assumption foreign=bad or even UK=good. The PR idea is
all about not leaving unwanted horses to starve or whatever (in UK, as
she thinks happens now). As you say, the regs might get in the way.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-05 08:55:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Until you have legal control over the use of
horses (and other animals) as meat then you have no idea how those animals
were kept and killed.
If horsemeat becomes popular for food it will be either bred in UK or
imported (from what conditions I dread to think)
while I agree some foreign places will be bad, I don't think you
should make the assumption foreign=bad or even UK=good. The PR idea is
all about not leaving unwanted horses to starve or whatever (in UK, as
she thinks happens now). As you say, the regs might get in the way.
No. I did not mean to imply that all foreign meat breeders had bad welfare
practices although I can see how what I said can be interpreted that way.

I just meant that we have no control over what happens outside our country.
And that ideas of animal welfare are different in other parts of the world.
And, no, we cannot imply that UK=good always but we do have relevant laws
here even if they are sometimes flouted.

Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-06 07:58:51 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
I just meant that we have no control over what happens outside our country.
And that ideas of animal welfare are different in other parts of the world.
And, no, we cannot imply that UK=good always but we do have relevant laws
here even if they are sometimes flouted.
I don't know that much about animal welfare rules across EU, which is
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
--
Mike... . . . .
Giusi
2013-12-06 09:23:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
I don't know that much about animal welfare rules across EU, which is
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious. Not you, necessarily, but the general population. Since you are members and do send parliament representatives, it seems you should want to know what to tell them to do and also to consider the rules/laws important in this world of international production.
Martin
2013-12-06 11:39:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
I don't know that much about animal welfare rules across EU, which is
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious. Not you, necessarily, but the general population.
Since you are members and do send parliament representatives, it seems you should want to know what to tell them to do and also to consider the rules/laws important in this world of international production.
The EU is used as a scapegoat for all that is wrong in Britain. Most of the
problems in Britain are created at home, just as they were before Britain joined
the EU.
--
Martin in Zuid Holland
allegoricus
2013-12-08 20:15:37 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 06 Dec 2013 11:39:21 +0000, Martin <***@address.invalid> wrote:

----------------8><
Post by Martin
The EU is used as a scapegoat for all that is wrong in Britain. Most of the
problems in Britain are created at home, just as they were before Britain joined
the EU.
Agreed.
--
Peter
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-09 08:14:35 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by allegoricus
Post by allegoricus
Post by Martin
The EU is used as a scapegoat for all that is wrong in Britain. Most of the
problems in Britain are created at home, just as they were before Britain joined
the EU.
Agreed.
+2
I think the fishing industry did lose out (no idea if Heath actually
sacrificed it or that's made up) but a lot of the loss of fishing is
down to reduced quotas because the fish is running out. Why didn't our
fishermen go fish in Spanish waters the way we accuse the Spanish of?
For most of it I agree its xenophobic nonsense.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-06 17:25:34 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Giusi
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious
+1
sadly. much of our press schemes for the opposite, with things like
lies about EU rules for fishermen to wear hairnets. China might be a
catalyst for people to wake up and see we need the strength of a
united Europe for the future world of the next evil empire. In Spanish
papers I see photos of British senior EU dignitaries who are totally
ignored by the UK press to avoid showing us having influence.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-07 09:00:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Giusi
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious
Answering two at once......

Perhaps we should learn the lrules - but how would that benefit the person
on the Clapham Ominibus? OK, maybe we'd stopp blaming the EU for certain
things where it wasn't resposnsible but that's about all the knowledge
would bring.
Post by Mike.. . . .
+1
sadly. much of our press schemes for the opposite,
Press prints what sells. Blame the buyers.
Post by Mike.. . . .
with things like
lies about EU rules for fishermen to wear hairnets.
And straight cucmbers, and other....
Post by Mike.. . . .
China might be a
catalyst for people to wake up and see we need the strength of a
united Europe for the future world of the next evil empire.
Are you talking economic or rulers?
Post by Mike.. . . .
In Spanish
papers I see photos of British senior EU dignitaries who are totally
ignored by the UK press to avoid showing us having influence.
As I said - papers print what buyers buy. EU "dignatories" have no allure -
particularly as they "know" (or are under the impression) that they are
either outnumbered - out-vetoed - or, even if they do have any effect, it
will not come to fruition for several years.

I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a halfway
stage.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 10:03:59 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious
Answering two at once......
Perhaps we should learn the lrules - but how would that benefit the person
on the Clapham Ominibus? OK, maybe we'd stopp blaming the EU for certain
things where it wasn't resposnsible but that's about all the knowledge
would bring.
Post by Mike.. . . .
+1
sadly. much of our press schemes for the opposite,
Press prints what sells. Blame the buyers.
No, in this case its often papers persuing the political ojectives of
the owners.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
with things like
lies about EU rules for fishermen to wear hairnets.
And straight cucmbers, and other....
Post by Mike.. . . .
China might be a
catalyst for people to wake up and see we need the strength of a
united Europe for the future world of the next evil empire.
Are you talking economic or rulers?
I'm talking power
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
In Spanish
papers I see photos of British senior EU dignitaries who are totally
ignored by the UK press to avoid showing us having influence.
As I said - papers print what buyers buy. EU "dignatories" have no allure -
particularly as they "know" (or are under the impression) that they are
either outnumbered - out-vetoed - or, even if they do have any effect, it
will not come to fruition for several years.
see above
Post by Jane Gillett
I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a halfway
stage.
??
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-08 10:04:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious
Answering two at once......
Perhaps we should learn the lrules - but how would that benefit the person
on the Clapham Ominibus? OK, maybe we'd stopp blaming the EU for certain
things where it wasn't resposnsible but that's about all the knowledge
would bring.
Post by Mike.. . . .
+1
sadly. much of our press schemes for the opposite,
Press prints what sells. Blame the buyers.
No, in this case its often papers persuing the political ojectives of
the owners.
Weel, that too - although one would expect the owners to have chosen a
market where they can sell their political POV.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
with things like
lies about EU rules for fishermen to wear hairnets.
And straight cucmbers, and other....
Post by Mike.. . . .
China might be a
catalyst for people to wake up and see we need the strength of a
united Europe for the future world of the next evil empire.
Are you talking economic or rulers?
I'm talking power
Could be either I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
In Spanish
papers I see photos of British senior EU dignitaries who are totally
ignored by the UK press to avoid showing us having influence.
As I said - papers print what buyers buy. EU "dignatories" have no allure -
particularly as they "know" (or are under the impression) that they are
either outnumbered - out-vetoed - or, even if they do have any effect, it
will not come to fruition for several years.
see above
Where? The only "above" are press owners and Eu dignatories - and China -
AFAICS.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a halfway
stage.
??
They rule themselves. They haven't handed over part of their rule to
another power.

Anyway, I'll try again to be good about politics and stop here; over to you!
Cheers
Jane

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 11:51:45 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
No, in this case its often papers persuing the political ojectives of
the owners.
Weel, that too - although one would expect the owners to have chosen a
market where they can sell their political POV.
they have
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
with things like
lies about EU rules for fishermen to wear hairnets.
And straight cucmbers, and other....
Post by Mike.. . . .
China might be a
catalyst for people to wake up and see we need the strength of a
united Europe for the future world of the next evil empire.
Are you talking economic or rulers?
I'm talking power
Could be either I guess.
either what?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
In Spanish
papers I see photos of British senior EU dignitaries who are totally
ignored by the UK press to avoid showing us having influence.
As I said - papers print what buyers buy. EU "dignatories" have no allure -
particularly as they "know" (or are under the impression) that they are
either outnumbered - out-vetoed - or, even if they do have any effect, it
will not come to fruition for several years.
see above
Where? The only "above" are press owners and Eu dignatories - and China -
AFAICS.
press owners
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a halfway
stage.
??
They rule themselves. They haven't handed over part of their rule to
another power.
we haven't handed over power to another country, we have formed an
alliance in which we take part, just like the states in the federal
US.
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Janet
2013-12-08 13:02:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a halfway
stage.
??
They rule themselves. They haven't handed over part of their rule to
another power.
!! US media and press reporting reflects whatever mogul owns it.

Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 13:05:55 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Giusi
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
I expect you don't get these opinions in US; they are not in a
halfway
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
stage.
??
They rule themselves. They haven't handed over part of their rule to
another power.
!! US media and press reporting reflects whatever mogul owns it.
we were talking of countries, not the press.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-07 08:51:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Giusi
Post by Mike.. . . .
I don't know that much about animal welfare rules across EU, which is
outside our country but in a zone to which we contribute to controls.
I certainly would not trust China.
It's probably time for the British to learn what EU rules are so they can stop being so xenophobic and suspicious. Not you, necessarily, but the general population. Since you are members and do send parliament representatives, it seems you should want to know what to tell them to do and also to consider the rules/laws important in this world of international production.
Fair comment. But since it's unlikely we can influence the EU very much I
can't see a lot of point in spending more money trying to tell them what to
do than we are already doing.

But, then, I'm one of those who is not sure there's any point in being in
it at all. I don't believe it is stopping European war; if that's going to
happen the EU isn't going to stop it. A common <market> (apart from killing
our fishing industry, which Heath has admitted he was aware of all the time
but hid) was not a bad idea but if we are to have a United States of Europe
then let's get on with it and not remain stuck in the half-way stage. At
least we have the opportunity of a tested constitution if we base it on the
US Constitution.

Pros (as far as I am led to believe);
. Agric uniformity. (Imperfect; very AFAIAA).
. It makes our govt pay money to parts of UK society that it wouldn't have
done otherwise; I imagine that's true. (Explanantion: UK pays money to EU
and EU pays money to certain sections of UK economy).
. It provides a convenient excuse for UK govt for things govt want and
voters don't.

Cons:
. We have make special arrangements - where permitted even - for trade with
countries we would like to trade with eg Commonwealth.
. Like any enormous burocracy it is SLOW.
. Like any enormous burocracy the overheads are enormous. All the burocracy
is EXPENSIVE. Yes, it provides jobs but maybe other things would get done
without those "opportunities".

Neutral:
. Any EU passport holder can travel/live anywhere in EU without visas etc.
AFAIK.

Not sure that all adds up to something useful to UK. We trade with non-EU
countries - China - US - other; what DOES the EU membership get us? OR if
you want to be suitably altruistic, what do we give the EU - apart from
homes for all the people who, we are told, seem to think this is a good
place to live?

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 10:06:08 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
At
least we have the opportunity of a tested constitution if we base it on the
US Constitution.
one of the big mistakes we make is to think we should always copy the
US, their constitution gets them the right to bear arms and endless
argument about things being constitutional rather than right.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-08 10:06:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
At
least we have the opportunity of a tested constitution if we base it on the
US Constitution.
one of the big mistakes we make is to think we should always copy the
US, their constitution gets them the right to bear arms and endless
argument about things being constitutional rather than right.
It is better tested, ie warts and all are at least visible, than somebody's
theoretical ideas.
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 11:53:08 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
one of the big mistakes we make is to think we should always copy the
US, their constitution gets them the right to bear arms and endless
argument about things being constitutional rather than right.
It is better tested, ie warts and all are at least visible, than somebody's
theoretical ideas.
tested and seen to have failed, why would we need anything further
than the EU already has?
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Giusi
2013-12-07 14:15:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
But, then, I'm one of those who is not sure there's any point in being in
it at all.
I don't think this is the time to try being a small island nation of 60 million with no real ties to anyone. It's hard to speak of the Commonwealth and localism in the same paragraph, no? If duty barriers spring up between the UK and everywhere in Europe it will hurt you a lot.

As far as having influence, the UK has equal influence with every other member nation and why would it be different? If you ever take the EU really seriously, you'll take whom you send to it more seriously than at present and you will instruct them gravely. If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums and leaving them to allow staff to decide where to bring weight and where to allow shifts.

If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously, then you will suffer the penalty of living under restrictions designed by those who will benefit from them. The newer members worked hard at getting in and do take the possibilities as worth the effort. It will be those who work at it that reap the benefit.
Janet
2013-12-07 17:10:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Giusi
I don't think this is the time to try being a small island nation of 60
million with no real ties to anyone. It's hard to speak of the
Commonwealth and localism in the same paragraph, no? If duty barriers
spring up between the UK and everywhere in Europe it will hurt you a
lot.

Would that be like those struggling little countries with painful
economies, called Norway, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Monaco? Not being
in the EU doesn't seem to be doing them much harm.

As for "duty barriers"; the first three are founder members of EFTA
(European Free trade Association). Norway and Lichtenstein are both
members of the EEA (European Economic Area).

EFTA-EEA states participate in the EU's Internal Market without being
members of the EU. They also contribute to and influence the formation
of new EEA relevant EU policies and legislation at an early stage as
part of a formal decision-shaping process.


Janet.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 19:12:35 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
EFTA-EEA states participate in the EU's Internal Market without being
members of the EU. They also contribute to and influence the formation
of new EEA relevant EU policies and legislation at an early stage as
part of a formal decision-shaping process.
do you *really* think they get much say? Norway aside, you listed
"parasite" economies attracting offshore type activities and rather
secretive banking, not sure the UK would fit there. Looking at it the
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
graham
2013-12-07 19:55:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
EFTA-EEA states participate in the EU's Internal Market without being
members of the EU. They also contribute to and influence the formation
of new EEA relevant EU policies and legislation at an early stage as
part of a formal decision-shaping process.
do you *really* think they get much say? Norway aside, you listed
"parasite" economies attracting offshore type activities and rather
secretive banking, not sure the UK would fit there. Looking at it the
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?
--
Wel they have been a damn sight more sensible than ANY other nation over
exploitation of their oil resources.
Graham (who sees his own Provincial Govt pissing away the royalties).
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 21:06:34 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by graham
Post by graham
Wel they have been a damn sight more sensible than ANY other nation over
exploitation of their oil resources.
oil is handy to being rich.
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Jane Gillett
2013-12-08 10:29:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by graham
Post by graham
Wel they have been a damn sight more sensible than ANY other nation over
exploitation of their oil resources.
oil is handy to being rich.
Good to still have it. Until somebody decides to take it off you. What
would be EU stance if UK still had oil and EU countries were looking at
paying a lot on the international market?
Jane
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 11:08:40 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Until somebody decides to take it off you. What
would be EU stance if UK still had oil and EU countries were looking at
paying a lot on the international market?
are you seriously suggesting that the EU might confiscate, sequester
or demand to buy at an artificial price national assets?
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Janet
2013-12-08 14:46:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by graham
Post by graham
Wel they have been a damn sight more sensible than ANY other nation over
exploitation of their oil resources.
oil is handy to being rich.
Good to still have it. Until somebody decides to take it off you. What
would be EU stance if UK still had oil
It does. Within the EU, the UK is the largest producer of both oil and
gas; in Europe, the UK is second only to Norway in oil and as
production.


and EU countries were looking at
Post by Jane Gillett
paying a lot on the international market?
see above

Janet.
Janet
2013-12-07 20:28:47 UTC
Permalink
In article <***@4ax.com>,
***@gmail.com says...
Looking at it the
Post by Mike.. . . .
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?
http://www.heritage.org/index/country/norway
http://www.indexmundi.com/norway/economy_profile.html

Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 21:06:12 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Mike.. . . .
Looking at it the
Post by Mike.. . . .
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?
http://www.heritage.org/index/country/norway
http://www.indexmundi.com/norway/economy_profile.html
that wasn't the question.
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 21:08:55 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
that wasn't the question.
I was asking why Norway would be worse off in EU
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Janet
2013-12-07 21:28:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
that wasn't the question.
I was asking why Norway would be worse off in EU
well, that was a bit hard to guess, when what you actually posted was
a question about Norway's advantages outside the EU.

" Looking at it the other way round, I don't see what great advantages
Norway has over our position?"

Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 11:04:56 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
well, that was a bit hard to guess, when what you actually posted was
a question about Norway's advantages outside the EU.
" Looking at it the other way round, I don't see what great advantages
Norway has over our position?"
which, *in context*, means what advantages do they have by not being
in EU.
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Janet
2013-12-07 21:22:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Janet
Post by Mike.. . . .
Looking at it the
Post by Mike.. . . .
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?
http://www.heritage.org/index/country/norway
http://www.indexmundi.com/norway/economy_profile.html
that wasn't the question.
Well, if the question wasn't the one you wrote above, I'm afraid I
can't guess what it was.


Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 11:06:51 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
Well, if the question wasn't the one you wrote above, I'm afraid I
can't guess what it was.
" EFTA-EEA states participate in the EU's Internal Market without
being members of the EU. They also contribute to and influence the
formation of new EEA relevant EU policies and legislation at an early
stage as part of a formal decision-shaping process.

do you *really* think they get much say? Norway aside, you listed
"parasite" economies attracting offshore type activities and rather
secretive banking, not sure the UK would fit there. Looking at it the
other way round, I don't see what great advantages Norway has over our
position?"

very clearly about position re EU.
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
allegoricus
2014-01-05 18:11:34 UTC
Permalink
On Sat, 07 Dec 2013 19:12:35 +0000, Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
EFTA-EEA states participate in the EU's Internal Market without being
members of the EU. They also contribute to and influence the formation
of new EEA relevant EU policies and legislation at an early stage as
part of a formal decision-shaping process.
do you *really* think they get much say? Norway aside, you listed
"parasite" economies attracting offshore type activities and rather
secretive banking, not sure the UK would fit there.
The UK is the centre of the world for quite a lot of dodgy financial
dealings. (q.v. Private Eye).

Sorry to come late to this conversation, I'm playing catch up.
--
Peter
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-07 19:07:01 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Giusi
Post by Giusi
Post by Jane Gillett
But, then, I'm one of those who is not sure there's any point in being in
it at all.
I don't think this is the time to try being a small island nation of 60 million with no real ties to anyone.
agreed
Post by Giusi
It's hard to speak of the Commonwealth and localism in the same paragraph, no?
Why would we need to?
Post by Giusi
If duty barriers spring up between the UK and everywhere in Europe it will hurt you a lot.
I don't think tariff barriers are a likely problem. I think having to
conform to rules we have no say in designing would be.

There are some big defects in the EU, lack of democracy in pushing
through further treaties even when countries have voted no (or where
our govt dishonours promise of a vote) is an obscenity. We now know
that one currency for separate economies does not work for the less
well performing economies like Greece.
I think the EU is a great idea badly implemented and is beginning to
look like a Greater Germany than does not like paying the price of
influence over Europe. I don't know if the right here are mad enough
to leave or if their paymasters might tell them "no".
--
Mike... . . . .
"nothing worth reading was ever written by drinkers of water"
Horace
Jane Gillett
2013-12-08 10:26:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Giusi
Post by Jane Gillett
But, then, I'm one of those who is not sure there's any point in being in
it at all.
I don't think this is the time to try being a small island nation of 60 million with no real ties to anyone.
Norway?

It's hard to speak of the Commonwealth and localism in the same paragraph,
no? If duty barriers spring up between the UK and everywhere in Europe it
will hurt you a lot.

It might well. How much should we lose/spend to try to achieve some sort of
influence? What proportion of our GDP maybe? In otherwords what is it worth
to us?
Post by Giusi
As far as having influence, the UK has equal influence with every other member nation and why would it be different?
Indeed.

If you ever take the EU really seriously, you'll take whom you send to it
more seriously than at present and you will instruct them gravely.


Do you mean we need to send better people? And we need to instruct them
better? Perhaps it should not be used as a reward/position for those whose
position in UK has waned.

If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO
you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums and
leaving them to allow staff to decide where to bring weight and where to
allow shifts.

I think you are probably right but I can't understand why. I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job. Maybe that's the problem; it's a sinecure and
all the holdres need to do is keep it. Maybe it's not considered worth
doing by those who want to be able to achieve their objectives because the
route to that is too cluttered.
Post by Giusi
If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously,
What do we get from it?
Post by Giusi
then you will suffer the penalty of living under restrictions designed by those who will benefit from them.
Yes. Maybe there are other parts of the world we can form more productive
(for us) relationships with. With a decent Navy we may even get our fishing
industry back.

The newer members worked hard at getting in and do take the possibilities
as worth the effort. It will be those who work at it that reap the benefit.

I have my doubts about that. Those who will benefit will be those who can
get most leverage or most increase in their home standards (or those of
their politicians). Maybe the "extra" that the new members feel they will
get will be the improvement compared with what they had prior to joining
and not anything comparable with what the "original" members have managed
to gain for themselves. Rumour has it that De Gaul worked hard to keep UK
out originally since he beieved our influence would have scuppered their
chances of a profitable arrangement early on. We had to come in at a time
when systems were in effect to keep us under control.

Interesting.
Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 12:25:03 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Perhaps it should not be used as a reward/position for those whose
position in UK has waned.
as in Mandleson's case. Brown would now be running EU finances if
Cameron had not blocked him.
Post by Jane Gillett
If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO
you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums and
leaving them to allow staff to decide where to bring weight and where to
allow shifts.
I think you are probably right but I can't understand why. I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job. Maybe that's the problem; it's a sinecure and
all the holdres need to do is keep it. Maybe it's not considered worth
doing by those who want to be able to achieve their objectives because the
route to that is too cluttered.
Post by Giusi
If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously,
What do we get from it?
A say in what and how Europe does things and how they are regulated
and

" the worldÂ’s largest trading bloc, containing half a billion people
with a GDP of £10 trillion. To Britain, membership is estimated to be
worth between £31bn and £92bn per year in income gains, or between
£1,200 to £3,500 for every household."

How would the City, our biggest earner, fare if we were not in EU?
Would international businesses want to be here if not in EU?

As China rises, do you feel safer as an offshore island or part of
Europe?

theres a lot more than that, Google or a sensible newspaper are your
freinds. (The FT thinks we need to be in Europe).
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 14:53:42 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Giusi
If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO
you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums and
leaving them to allow staff to decide where to bring weight and where to
allow shifts.
Look, most UK govts are voted for by less than half the people, they
do things that those voters do not support. How is that different from
EU doing things some voters do not support? Its just a bigger unit.
You see it in the USA when the "fly over" states elect presidents that
New Yorkers etc hate. The only difference is it involves "foreigners"
in the EU. If we think of ourselves as Europeans that objection
disappear. In many cases what is good for Europe is good for UK.

However, there are defects in the way euro democracy works and they
should be addressed.
Post by Giusi
I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job.
who says it isn't?
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-09 09:54:50 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job.
who says it isn't?
(sought after)

sinecure
(EU commissioners are suggested by member govts (one per country) and
have a 5 year term. (Pay is pegged to top civil service jobs)). They
are voted into office by the parliament of MEPs, who are voted in my
the citizens of the EU.

Is that a "sinecure"? People believe a whole load of rubbish put about
by anti EU interests. If you believe the EU might steal our oil or
that being an Eu minister is a job for life it would be good to get
some basic facts about the EU straight before disliking it.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-25 12:45:32 UTC
Permalink
and another thing.. . . .

(EU)
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
What do we get from it?
A say in what and how Europe does things and how they are regulated
and
" the worldÂ’s largest trading bloc, containing half a billion people
with a GDP of £10 trillion. To Britain, membership is estimated to be
worth between £31bn and £92bn per year in income gains, or between
£1,200 to £3,500 for every household."
I will add to that something about the original aim of the EU which
was not about commerce, but about security. Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave, we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.

* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-02-26 09:06:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
and another thing.. . . .
(EU)
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
What do we get from it?
A say in what and how Europe does things and how they are regulated
and
" the worldÂ’s largest trading bloc, containing half a billion people
with a GDP of £10 trillion. To Britain, membership is estimated to be
worth between £31bn and £92bn per year in income gains, or between
£1,200 to £3,500 for every household."
I will add to that something about the original aim of the EU which
was not about commerce, but about security.
They did call it the Common <Market> or EEC; but admittedly said it was
expected to help avoid future war in Europe.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.
Characteristic of this era I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
The trouble with being enthusiastic is that it is very easy to slip into
mob rule; remember Reds under the Beds. I reckon a healthy lack of
enthusiasm helps to keep things sane sometimes.

Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Ophelia
2014-02-26 10:45:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
and another thing.. . . .
(EU)
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
What do we get from it?
A say in what and how Europe does things and how they are regulated
and
" the world's largest trading bloc, containing half a billion people
with a GDP of £10 trillion. To Britain, membership is estimated to be
worth between £31bn and £92bn per year in income gains, or between
£1,200 to £3,500 for every household."
I will add to that something about the original aim of the EU which
was not about commerce, but about security.
They did call it the Common <Market> or EEC; but admittedly said it was
expected to help avoid future war in Europe.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.
Characteristic of this era I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
The trouble with being enthusiastic is that it is very easy to slip into
mob rule; remember Reds under the Beds. I reckon a healthy lack of
enthusiasm helps to keep things sane sometimes.
This really sets out how we got where we are:


--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-26 12:29:33 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Ophelia
Post by Ophelia
http://youtu.be/uyBr9RNx4k0
yes, we were tricked into joining something the common people thought
was a trade club. The question is now are we going to engage and make
it work or just sit around voting for idiots, lunatics and bigots who
want us to be a forgotton island off the coast of europe, ideally
racially pure.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 10:04:54 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
idiots, lunatics and bigots
Sexist

Godfrey Bloom was heard shouting "this room is full of sluts" at a
London event about increasing the number of women in politics.

..."hostile behaviour" for women to wear trousers rather than skirts.
In a book called Women in Trousers: A Rear View, Demetri Marchessini

Facist/anti semetic/holocaust apologists

The letter is said to detail allegations including a young Farage
having "marched through a quiet Sussex village very late at night
shouting Hitler Youth songs". Farage describes the Hitler Youth song
allegation as "baloney".

election candidate is pictured making a supposed Nazi-style salute.

The 57-year-old allegedly wrote: ‘Holocaust means a sacrifice by fire.
Only the Zionists could sacrifice their own in the gas chambers.
‘The Second World Wide War was engineered by the Zionist Jews and
financed by the banksters to make the general public all over the
world feel so guilty and outraged by the Holocaust that a treaty would
be signed to create the State of Israel as we know it today.Â’

suspended for allegedly claiming Jews murdered each other in the
Holocaust to create the state of Israel.

"The Rothschilds are Zionists. There is a difference between Jews and
Zionists. These Psychopaths hide behind and use the Jews. It was
thanks to them that six million Jews were murdered in the War along
with 26 million Russians.”

Racist

caught on camera saying Britain should not send aid to "bongo bongo
land".

A Ukip county councillor admits sharing offensive material about
Muslims on his Facebook page.

councillor Chris Pain described illegal immigrants as "sandal-wearing,
bomb-making, camel-riding, goat-f******, ragheads" on his Facebook
page, though he claims his account was hacked

councillor Peter Lagoda and wife Maria plead guilty to £25k benefit
fraud but denies is racist "because my sister is a wog"

Homophobic

Silvester, who claimed that the floods to have hit the UK in December
and January were caused by same-sex marriage
homosexuality can be cured by Christian prayer.
homosexuals were not "normal" on a Ukip online forum. The Ukip leader,
Nigel Farage, insists he would not expel members for voicing
"old-fashioned" views about homosexuality.

The chairman of Ukip's youth wing is sacked after speaking out in
favour of gay marriage


Nasty

Bloom calls disabled student "Richard III"
compulsory abortion should be considered for foetuses with Down's
syndrome or spina bifida. Geoffrey Clarke's online manifesto....
termination of babies among potential NHS cost-cutting measures. If
born, he says, they would become "a burden on the state as well as on
the family".
more children have been “murdered” as a result of abortion laws than
the number of Jews killed in by the Nazis during the Holocaust
--
Mike... . . . .
Ophelia
2014-02-27 10:25:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
idiots, lunatics and bigots
Sexist
Godfrey Bloom was heard shouting "this room is full of sluts" at a
London event about increasing the number of women in politics.
..."hostile behaviour" for women to wear trousers rather than skirts.
In a book called Women in Trousers: A Rear View, Demetri Marchessini
Facist/anti semetic/holocaust apologists
The letter is said to detail allegations including a young Farage
having "marched through a quiet Sussex village very late at night
shouting Hitler Youth songs". Farage describes the Hitler Youth song
allegation as "baloney".
election candidate is pictured making a supposed Nazi-style salute.
The 57-year-old allegedly wrote: 'Holocaust means a sacrifice by fire.
Only the Zionists could sacrifice their own in the gas chambers.
'The Second World Wide War was engineered by the Zionist Jews and
financed by the banksters to make the general public all over the
world feel so guilty and outraged by the Holocaust that a treaty would
be signed to create the State of Israel as we know it today.'
suspended for allegedly claiming Jews murdered each other in the
Holocaust to create the state of Israel.
"The Rothschilds are Zionists. There is a difference between Jews and
Zionists. These Psychopaths hide behind and use the Jews. It was
thanks to them that six million Jews were murdered in the War along
with 26 million Russians."
Racist
caught on camera saying Britain should not send aid to "bongo bongo
land".
A Ukip county councillor admits sharing offensive material about
Muslims on his Facebook page.
councillor Chris Pain described illegal immigrants as "sandal-wearing,
bomb-making, camel-riding, goat-f******, ragheads" on his Facebook
page, though he claims his account was hacked
councillor Peter Lagoda and wife Maria plead guilty to £25k benefit
fraud but denies is racist "because my sister is a wog"
Homophobic
Silvester, who claimed that the floods to have hit the UK in December
and January were caused by same-sex marriage
homosexuality can be cured by Christian prayer.
homosexuals were not "normal" on a Ukip online forum. The Ukip leader,
Nigel Farage, insists he would not expel members for voicing
"old-fashioned" views about homosexuality.
The chairman of Ukip's youth wing is sacked after speaking out in
favour of gay marriage
Nasty
Bloom calls disabled student "Richard III"
compulsory abortion should be considered for foetuses with Down's
syndrome or spina bifida. Geoffrey Clarke's online manifesto....
termination of babies among potential NHS cost-cutting measures. If
born, he says, they would become "a burden on the state as well as on
the family".
more children have been "murdered" as a result of abortion laws than
the number of Jews killed in by the Nazis during the Holocaust
And they are still better than all the rest. Doesn't say much for them,
does it? ;-)
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 10:32:12 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Ophelia
Post by Ophelia
And they are still better than all the rest. Doesn't say much for them,
does it? ;-)
it doesnt say much for thier supporters if they let UK sleepwalk into
electing neo nazis.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-02-28 08:08:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Ophelia
Post by Ophelia
And they are still better than all the rest. Doesn't say much for them,
does it? ;-)
it doesnt say much for thier supporters if they let UK sleepwalk into
electing neo nazis.
Says a lot about the rest of us.
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Jane Gillett
2014-02-28 08:07:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
idiots, lunatics and bigots
Sexist
Godfrey Bloom was heard shouting "this room is full of sluts" at a
London event about increasing the number of women in politics.
..."hostile behaviour" for women to wear trousers rather than skirts.
In a book called Women in Trousers: A Rear View, Demetri Marchessini
This isn't anything new.
And I haven't worn a skirt for years despite the fact that my rear view
isn't something I'd boast about.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Facist/anti semetic/holocaust apologists
The letter is said to detail allegations including a young Farage
having "marched through a quiet Sussex village very late at night
shouting Hitler Youth songs". Farage describes the Hitler Youth song
allegation as "baloney".
election candidate is pictured making a supposed Nazi-style salute.
It's frightening when that happens but mostly firghtening because it is
<our species> which votes for somebody who acts that way.
Post by Mike.. . . .
The 57-year-old allegedly wrote: ‘Holocaust means a sacrifice by fire.
Only the Zionists could sacrifice their own in the gas chambers.
‘The Second World Wide War was engineered by the Zionist Jews and
financed by the banksters to make the general public all over the
world feel so guilty and outraged by the Holocaust that a treaty would
be signed to create the State of Israel as we know it today.Â’
suspended for allegedly claiming Jews murdered each other in the
Holocaust to create the state of Israel.
"The Rothschilds are Zionists. There is a difference between Jews and
Zionists. These Psychopaths hide behind and use the Jews. It was
thanks to them that six million Jews were murdered in the War along
with 26 million Russians.”
Statements typical of rabble rousers.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Racist
caught on camera saying Britain should not send aid to "bongo bongo
land".
Corporal Jones? Unfortunately CJ with more power.
Post by Mike.. . . .
A Ukip county councillor admits sharing offensive material about
Muslims on his Facebook page.
councillor Chris Pain described illegal immigrants as "sandal-wearing,
bomb-making, camel-riding, goat-f******, ragheads" on his Facebook
page,
Statements typical of rabble rousers.
Post by Mike.. . . .
though he claims his account was hacked
Might have been; it's happening.
Post by Mike.. . . .
councillor Peter Lagoda and wife Maria plead guilty to £25k benefit
fraud but denies is racist "because my sister is a wog"
What's racism charge got to do with benefit fraud?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Homophobic
Silvester, who claimed that the floods to have hit the UK in December
and January were caused by same-sex marriage
homosexuality can be cured by Christian prayer.
homosexuals were not "normal" on a Ukip online forum. The Ukip leader,
Nigel Farage, insists he would not expel members for voicing
"old-fashioned" views about homosexuality.
It's a private club - he/they can expel who he/they want/s to. He can think
what he likes about above aspects of homosexuality; I just don't want him
to have the power to implement his views.
Post by Mike.. . . .
The chairman of Ukip's youth wing is sacked after speaking out in
favour of gay marriage
Nasty
Bloom calls disabled student "Richard III"
Says plenty about Bloom and nothing about student.
Post by Mike.. . . .
compulsory abortion should be considered for foetuses with Down's
syndrome or spina bifida.
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Geoffrey Clarke's online manifesto....
termination of babies among potential NHS cost-cutting measures. If
born, he says, they would become "a burden on the state as well as on
the family".
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
more children have been “murdered” as a result of abortion laws than
the number of Jews killed in by the Nazis during the Holocaust
So? Is he talking about the Jews killed in the not-holocaust?

Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-28 18:27:41 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
..."hostile behaviour" for women to wear trousers rather than skirts.
In a book called Women in Trousers: A Rear View, Demetri Marchessini
This isn't anything new.
And I haven't worn a skirt for years despite the fact that my rear view
isn't something I'd boast about.
No, its something old that nobody should think anymore. Let alone
write a book.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Facist/anti semetic/holocaust apologists
The letter is said to detail allegations including a young Farage
having "marched through a quiet Sussex village very late at night
shouting Hitler Youth songs". Farage describes the Hitler Youth song
allegation as "baloney".
election candidate is pictured making a supposed Nazi-style salute.
It's frightening when that happens but mostly firghtening because it is
<our species> which votes for somebody who acts that way.
indeed, as they did in Germany in 1933 ish
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
The 57-year-old allegedly wrote: ‘Holocaust means a sacrifice by fire.
Only the Zionists could sacrifice their own in the gas chambers.
‘The Second World Wide War was engineered by the Zionist Jews and
financed by the banksters to make the general public all over the
world feel so guilty and outraged by the Holocaust that a treaty would
be signed to create the State of Israel as we know it today.Â’
suspended for allegedly claiming Jews murdered each other in the
Holocaust to create the state of Israel.
"The Rothschilds are Zionists. There is a difference between Jews and
Zionists. These Psychopaths hide behind and use the Jews. It was
thanks to them that six million Jews were murdered in the War along
with 26 million Russians.”
Statements typical of rabble rousers.
or nut cases, or anti semetics
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Racist
caught on camera saying Britain should not send aid to "bongo bongo
land".
Corporal Jones? Unfortunately CJ with more power.
I would be funny if it wasnt frightening, a normal thing to say in,
what, 1920?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
A Ukip county councillor admits sharing offensive material about
Muslims on his Facebook page.
councillor Chris Pain described illegal immigrants as "sandal-wearing,
bomb-making, camel-riding, goat-f******, ragheads" on his Facebook
page,
Statements typical of rabble rousers.
and morons, but yes, UKIP is a "popularist" party, which means they
appeal to the stupid and ignorant.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
though he claims his account was hacked
Might have been; it's happening.
indeed, dangerous thing that FB!
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
councillor Peter Lagoda and wife Maria plead guilty to £25k benefit
fraud but denies is racist "because my sister is a wog"
What's racism charge got to do with benefit fraud?
nothing, it was just funny that while getting in one bit of hot water
they managed to get in another as well.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Homophobic
Silvester, who claimed that the floods to have hit the UK in December
and January were caused by same-sex marriage
homosexuality can be cured by Christian prayer.
homosexuals were not "normal" on a Ukip online forum. The Ukip leader,
Nigel Farage, insists he would not expel members for voicing
"old-fashioned" views about homosexuality.
It's a private club - he/they can expel who he/they want/s to. He can think
what he likes about above aspects of homosexuality; I just don't want him
to have the power to implement his views.
thats an interesting point, a political party as a private club, can
therefore a party be openly racist for instance?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
The chairman of Ukip's youth wing is sacked after speaking out in
favour of gay marriage
Nasty
Bloom calls disabled student "Richard III"
Says plenty about Bloom and nothing about student.
of course
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
compulsory abortion should be considered for foetuses with Down's
syndrome or spina bifida.
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Geoffrey Clarke's online manifesto....
termination of babies among potential NHS cost-cutting measures. If
born, he says, they would become "a burden on the state as well as on
the family".
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
more children have been “murdered” as a result of abortion laws than
the number of Jews killed in by the Nazis during the Holocaust
So? Is he talking about the Jews killed in the not-holocaust?
it seems the party line on abortion might be a little confused by some
members, as is the party on the holocaust. To be fair, Farange throws
out the worst of them, for now.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-26 11:02:59 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
I will add to that something about the original aim of the EU which
was not about commerce, but about security.
They did call it the Common <Market>
that was a lie designed to deflect doubts.
Post by Jane Gillett
or EEC; but admittedly said it was
expected to help avoid future war in Europe.
yes
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
yes, if they think they can, nothing has moved yet and looks less and
less likely as the days pass.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think, the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european, part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
The EU is not "them", it is "us". My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland. This is where Europe is
now, not Little Englands pretending we are "Great Britain" and a force
in the world all alone, defended by the English Channel.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
USA, China, obviously.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.
Characteristic of this era I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
The trouble with being enthusiastic is that it is very easy to slip into
mob rule;
Really? How would enthusuasm for Europe do that? I see no connection.
Post by Jane Gillett
remember Reds under the Beds.
based on fear and paranoia, not enthusiasm.
Post by Jane Gillett
I reckon a healthy lack of
enthusiasm helps to keep things sane sometimes.
In the case of the EU, lack of enthusiasm keeps us ignorant and
powerless. UKIP leader turned up once ever for farm & fisheries
debates IIRC (but claim expenses), they love seeing rules developed
without a UK input to prove how bad the rules are, we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 09:26:31 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
yes, if they think they can, nothing has moved yet and looks less and
less likely as the days pass.
Russian tanks rolling now :-(
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-02-27 10:45:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
I will add to that something about the original aim of the EU which
was not about commerce, but about security.
They did call it the Common <Market>
that was a lie designed to deflect doubts.
Don't know about the original choice of name but certainly a lie
promulgated by Heath. Gather from popular myth that DeGaul made the
original rules deliberately to keep UK out as we might have been
enthusiastic enough and strong enough to stop them making the rules they
wanted.

<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
yes, if they think they can, nothing has moved yet and looks less and
less likely as the days pass.
Is this about Ukraine?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think,
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
Post by Mike.. . . .
the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european,
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport - rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity). But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
(expensive) for no apparent purpose so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection. It just feels like putting your head in the yoke
for no obvious advantage. Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
The EU is not "them", it is "us".
OK. It's nothing to do with "people", it's politics, govts and legal
agreements which don't make sense in all places (see above).
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
Post by Mike.. . . .
This is where Europe is
now, not Little Englands pretending we are "Great Britain" and a force
in the world all alone, defended by the English Channel.
Yes, the "british empire attitude" is slow to leave, I agree, but the point
is it isn't the total reason for people's lack of enthusiasm; some reasons
are real.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
USA, China, obviously.
Not Russia? India? When does S.America rise to strength? Empires come and
go. And I get the impression that their lifetimes are getting shorter.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.
Characteristic of this era I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
The trouble with being enthusiastic is that it is very easy to slip into
mob rule;
Really? How would enthusuasm for Europe do that? I see no connection.
Post by Jane Gillett
remember Reds under the Beds.
based on fear and paranoia, not enthusiasm.
There's sometimes not much difference.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I reckon a healthy lack of
enthusiasm helps to keep things sane sometimes.
In the case of the EU, lack of enthusiasm keeps us ignorant and
powerless.
Agreed. But people feel that if we were not there there would be no case
for Euro-enthusiasm anyway. If they think about it at all ie.
Post by Mike.. . . .
UKIP leader turned up once ever for farm & fisheries
debates IIRC (but claim expenses),
Behaviour of some politicians; as always was; up to other pols or us to
stamp on such.
Post by Mike.. . . .
they love seeing rules developed
without a UK input to prove how bad the rules are,
Standard efficient political device for denigrating and thus getting rid of
what they don't want; give it a bad name so others will reject it. (Give a
dog a bad name...) Time honoured political behaviour. Not limited to any
particular bloc or nationality.
Post by Mike.. . . .
we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
Last first, no I can't. Don't remember commissioner saying anything
directly relevant to my life; ever.
We don't tell our press what to do - well, we do, by choosing what sells
newspapers. Bit of a vicious circle; if the news isn't relevant to UKian's
everyday life then they won't pay to read about it. Up to the skills of the
politicians and they won't bother if it's not part of their objective.

Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Janet
2014-02-27 13:37:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
Last first, no I can't.
Despite endlessly pronouncing your opinions of our role in the EU you
consistently reveal your blinding ignorance of it.


Don't remember commissioner saying anything
Post by Jane Gillett
directly relevant to my life; ever.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The British Commissioner Catherine Ashton is the vice president of the
EU Parliament. She is High Representative of the Union for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy. IOW she is the EU's top-dog foreign
diplomat in world politics.

As such, on your behalf, right now, she is representing the EU's
stance in opposition to Russia, in the current Ukraine stramash

http://www.eeas.europa.eu/statements/docs/2014/140226_03_en.pdf

Janet.
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-28 13:00:46 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Jane Gillett
Don't remember commissioner saying anything
Post by Jane Gillett
directly relevant to my life; ever.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The British Commissioner Catherine Ashton is the vice president of the
EU Parliament. She is High Representative of the Union for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy. IOW she is the EU's top-dog foreign
diplomat in world politics.
As such, on your behalf, right now, she is representing the EU's
stance in opposition to Russia, in the current Ukraine stramash
the exact phrase was "directly relevant to my life" maybe the world
stage isn't that? But I wouldn't be expecting the highest level of EU
activity to directly relate to peoples everyday lives, that's more
your local council or maybe your MP (or MEP even). The anti EU
brigades would be the first to complain if EU commissioners did impact
on daily life! When they don't they make stuff up about fishermen's
hairnets and eurojam.

Margaret Thatcher said "the EU will open windows on the world that
loss of empire is closing" . you don't hear many modern tory
europhobes quoting that one do you? The trouble is, as the US sec of
state once said, an englishman cannot abide a world in which he does
not lead by inherent right. And theres now a party to the *right* of
the tories!
(approx quotes)
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 13:38:47 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
that was a lie designed to deflect doubts.
Don't know about the original choice of name but certainly a lie
promulgated by Heath.
not just Heath, the whole media
Post by Jane Gillett
Gather from popular myth that DeGaul made the
original rules deliberately to keep UK out as we might have been
enthusiastic enough and strong enough to stop them making the rules they
wanted.
Doesn't make sense, De Gaulle had a veto and used it. "non!"
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Events in Ukraine show
that the original objective of securing lasting peace in Europe are
not yet irrelevant and an EU loan to replace a Russian one may be key
in securing a democratic future for Ukraine (or not). How might Russia
act with weaker less united* "adversaries"?
From the current situation, I'd say R. as controlled by Putin would take
control of any area it could.
yes, if they think they can, nothing has moved yet and looks less and
less likely as the days pass.
Is this about Ukraine?
where else?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think,
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
examples?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european,
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport
Thats entirely the **UK**s fault not the EU, the Shengen countries
don't show passports, we didnt join, surprise, surprise.

they are:-
Austria
Hungary
Norway
Belgium
Iceland
Poland
Czech Republic
Italy
Portugal
Denmark
Latvia
Slovakia
Estonia
Liechtenstein
Slovenia
Finland
Lithuania
Spain
France
Luxembourg
Sweden
Germany
Malta
Switzerland.
Greece
Netherlands
Post by Jane Gillett
- rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity).
As we refused to join Schengen, its hardly surprising we need a
document to show when you travel, you see that as unreasonable?
Post by Jane Gillett
But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
*our* activities. How can we not be an effective part of Euro govt
when a commissioner is British?

what were all these doing at the most senior level of the EU?
Catherine Ashton
Leon Brittan
Stanley Clinton Davis, Baron Clinton-Davis
Arthur Cockfield, Baron Cockfield
Roy Jenkins
Neil Kinnock
Peter Mandelson
Bruce Millan
Chris Patten
Ivor Richard, Baron Richard
Christopher Soames, Baron Soames
George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth
Christopher Tugendhat, Baron Tugendhat
Post by Jane Gillett
(expensive) for no apparent purpose
"no apparent purpose", are you joking?
Post by Jane Gillett
so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection.
of course there is. Just you and many others do not see reports of it
because of press bias and lack of interest
Post by Jane Gillett
It just feels like putting your head in the yoke
for no obvious advantage.
increased trade with Europe is an obvoius advantage, ask the city if
it fancies not being in the EU and still being the banking hub it is
(our biggest earner), then theres is free movement of labour, its
reckoned to generate some thousands per head annually.
Post by Jane Gillett
Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
that assumes (nuclear) war between US and USSR? WW1 and WW2 both
started without the US. Tanks may at this moment be rolling in the
Crimea, its not a matter of the standard outdated cold war scenario.
Russian or other expansionism may be Europes next problem.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
guns and tanks. Vetos. United front, all the usual things.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
The EU is not "them", it is "us".
OK. It's nothing to do with "people",
free movement of labour isnt about people? Jobs arent about people?
Security isnt about people? What would you expect it to be that it
isnt exactly?
Post by Jane Gillett
it's politics, govts and legal
agreements which don't make sense in all places (see above).
what doesnt make sense? Remember much reported here about EU mad rules
is untrue.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
They are us. What rules are not working?
Post by Jane Gillett
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
in some places probably. Do you think the Germans follow the rules? Of
course they do. Many rules here are gold plating of EU law.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
This is where Europe is
now, not Little Englands pretending we are "Great Britain" and a force
in the world all alone, defended by the English Channel.
Yes, the "british empire attitude" is slow to leave, I agree, but the point
is it isn't the total reason for people's lack of enthusiasm; some reasons
are real.
most are based on press lies
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
USA, China, obviously.
Not Russia? India?
no
Post by Jane Gillett
When does S.America rise to strength?
not soon.
Post by Jane Gillett
Empires come and
go. And I get the impression that their lifetimes are getting shorter.
you have been reading Foundation and Empire again :-)
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Then there is Turkey, wavering between westernised and Islamisised.
Characteristic of this era I guess.
Post by Mike.. . . .
* we could of course be more united without half hearted Cameron & Co
The trouble with being enthusiastic is that it is very easy to slip into
mob rule;
Really? How would enthusuasm for Europe do that? I see no connection.
Post by Jane Gillett
remember Reds under the Beds.
based on fear and paranoia, not enthusiasm.
There's sometimes not much difference.
opposites IMHO
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I reckon a healthy lack of
enthusiasm helps to keep things sane sometimes.
In the case of the EU, lack of enthusiasm keeps us ignorant and
powerless.
Agreed. But people feel that if we were not there there would be no case
for Euro-enthusiasm anyway. If they think about it at all ie.
Post by Mike.. . . .
UKIP leader turned up once ever for farm & fisheries
debates IIRC (but claim expenses),
Behaviour of some politicians; as always was; up to other pols or us to
stamp on such.
Post by Mike.. . . .
they love seeing rules developed
without a UK input to prove how bad the rules are,
Standard efficient political device for denigrating and thus getting rid of
what they don't want; give it a bad name so others will reject it. (Give a
dog a bad name...) Time honoured political behaviour. Not limited to any
particular bloc or nationality.
but still true in spades for UKIP, who else does that?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
Last first, no I can't. Don't remember commissioner saying anything
directly relevant to my life; ever.
We don't tell our press what to do - well, we do, by choosing what sells
newspapers.
large parts of our press are owned by anti european interests who
actively lie at us to get us to become /remain a tool of the USA.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 14:02:23 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport
Thats entirely the **UK**s fault not the EU, the Shengen countries
don't show passports, we didnt join, surprise, surprise.
to clarify, once past UK border I can drive between France, Belgium,
Italy, France, Spain, Portugal etc and there are *no* border controls
or requirements for papers beyond my driving licence for driving
matters, as here. There's just a board showing local speed limits and
a "welcome to xxxx" sign.
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 18:58:20 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
examples?
do UK's rules work from Shetland to South Shetland (Falklands) and
Gibraltar?
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-02-28 08:49:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
that was a lie designed to deflect doubts.
Don't know about the original choice of name but certainly a lie
promulgated by Heath.
not just Heath, the whole media
Result of "free press"?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Gather from popular myth that DeGaul made the
original rules deliberately to keep UK out as we might have been
enthusiastic enough and strong enough to stop them making the rules they
wanted.
Doesn't make sense, De Gaulle had a veto and used it. "non!"
To keep UK out, that's the myth.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think,
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
examples?
Farming requirements for disease are different in different climates.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european,
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport
Thats entirely the **UK**s fault not the EU,
Doesn't matter whose fault and it's not a major issue regqrdless of the
fact that I mentioned it.
Post by Mike.. . . .
the Shengen countries
don't show passports, we didnt join, surprise, surprise.
they are:-
<snip list for brevity>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
- rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity).
As we refused to join Schengen, its hardly surprising we need a
document to show when you travel, you see that as unreasonable?
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
*our* activities.
Yes. <Our> activities. have to be since we've added our name and so must
take responsibility for anything the EU does.
Post by Mike.. . . .
How can we not be an effective part of Euro govt
when a commissioner is British?
what were all these doing at the most senior level of the EU?
Catherine Ashton
Leon Brittan
Stanley Clinton Davis, Baron Clinton-Davis
Arthur Cockfield, Baron Cockfield
Roy Jenkins
Neil Kinnock
Peter Mandelson
Bruce Millan
Chris Patten
Ivor Richard, Baron Richard
Christopher Soames, Baron Soames
George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth
Christopher Tugendhat, Baron Tugendhat
It's not obvious.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
(expensive) for no apparent purpose
"no apparent purpose", are you joking?
It's not apparent. And if they take no trouble to inform their own
nationals what they are doing then I don't think much of them. Of course, I
do agree that the nationals, including me, should lobby for more info.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection.
of course there is. Just you and many others do not see reports of it
because of press bias and lack of interest
Press bias, agreed. Lack of interest? I admit guilt to not being interested
in <everything> but I think there needs to be more obvious information
available, created by those who are involved in the actions. They should be
ensuring that their nationals are kept aware of what they are doing.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
It just feels like putting your head in the yoke
for no obvious advantage.
increased trade with Europe is an obvoius advantage, ask the city if
it fancies not being in the EU and still being the banking hub it is
(our biggest earner), then theres is free movement of labour, its
reckoned to generate some thousands per head annually.
OK.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
that assumes (nuclear) war between US and USSR? WW1 and WW2 both
started without the US.
That was then.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Tanks may at this moment be rolling in the
Crimea, its not a matter of the standard outdated cold war scenario.
Russian or other expansionism may be Europes next problem.
And US is going to stand by and watch?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
guns and tanks. Vetos. United front, all the usual things.
War on the ground again? So out of EU, and without US, UK will just become
part of whoever "expands" into us, else, with EU it's threats and war
throughout Europe?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
The EU is not "them", it is "us".
OK. It's nothing to do with "people",
free movement of labour isnt about people? Jobs arent about people?
Security isnt about people? What would you expect it to be that it
isnt exactly?
Got a bit confused here; labour movement - yes; immigration - yes; banking
- guess they are powerful enough to ensure that we stay in; security? see
above.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
it's politics, govts and legal
agreements which don't make sense in all places (see above).
what doesnt make sense? Remember much reported here about EU mad rules
is untrue.
Mcu press report is true. Some Agric issues not of press interest are true.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
They are us. What rules are not working?
There have been agric issues, some of which have been due to UK
glodplating; if there were not the EU rules, our govt wouldn't have felt
the opportunity to interfere. SHould our govt have the right to goldplate?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
in some places probably. Do you think the Germans follow the rules? Of
course they do. Many rules here are gold plating of EU law.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
This is where Europe is
now, not Little Englands pretending we are "Great Britain" and a force
in the world all alone, defended by the English Channel.
Yes, the "british empire attitude" is slow to leave, I agree, but the point
is it isn't the total reason for people's lack of enthusiasm; some reasons
are real.
most are based on press lies
Some.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
USA, China, obviously.
Not Russia? India?
no
Post by Jane Gillett
When does S.America rise to strength?
not soon.
Post by Jane Gillett
Empires come and
go. And I get the impression that their lifetimes are getting shorter.
you have been reading Foundation and Empire again :-)
US v Rome?

<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
UKIP leader turned up once ever for farm & fisheries
debates IIRC (but claim expenses),
Behaviour of some politicians; as always was; up to other pols or us to
stamp on such.
Post by Mike.. . . .
they love seeing rules developed
without a UK input to prove how bad the rules are,
Standard efficient political device for denigrating and thus getting rid of
what they don't want; give it a bad name so others will reject it. (Give a
dog a bad name...) Time honoured political behaviour. Not limited to any
particular bloc or nationality.
but still true in spades for UKIP, who else does that?
Listen to any politician avoiding difficult responses at some time or
other. Hard to know whether UKIP is leading or reflecting UK public opinion.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
Last first, no I can't. Don't remember commissioner saying anything
directly relevant to my life; ever.
We don't tell our press what to do - well, we do, by choosing what sells
newspapers.
large parts of our press are owned by anti european interests who
actively lie at us to get us to become /remain a tool of the USA.
Certainly. It would be good if the "good guys" representing us took the
responsibility to "ensure" their view got to the public as well.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-28 18:40:28 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
not just Heath, the whole media
Result of "free press"?
I think almost everybody (including Thatcher) were pro then, its
changed a lot!
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Gather from popular myth that DeGaul made the
original rules deliberately to keep UK out as we might have been
enthusiastic enough and strong enough to stop them making the rules they
wanted.
Doesn't make sense, De Gaulle had a veto and used it. "non!"
To keep UK out, that's the myth.
he did, its not a myth!
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think,
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
examples?
Farming requirements for disease are different in different climates.
and can that not be accomodated?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european,
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport
Thats entirely the **UK**s fault not the EU,
Doesn't matter whose fault and it's not a major issue regqrdless of the
fact that I mentioned it.
OK
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
the Shengen countries
don't show passports, we didnt join, surprise, surprise.
they are:-
<snip list for brevity>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
- rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity).
As we refused to join Schengen, its hardly surprising we need a
document to show when you travel, you see that as unreasonable?
No.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
*our* activities.
Yes. <Our> activities. have to be since we've added our name and so must
take responsibility for anything the EU does.
Post by Mike.. . . .
How can we not be an effective part of Euro govt
when a commissioner is British?
what were all these doing at the most senior level of the EU?
Catherine Ashton
Leon Brittan
Stanley Clinton Davis, Baron Clinton-Davis
Arthur Cockfield, Baron Cockfield
Roy Jenkins
Neil Kinnock
Peter Mandelson
Bruce Millan
Chris Patten
Ivor Richard, Baron Richard
Christopher Soames, Baron Soames
George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth
Christopher Tugendhat, Baron Tugendhat
It's not obvious.
It is to me
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
(expensive) for no apparent purpose
"no apparent purpose", are you joking?
It's not apparent. And if they take no trouble to inform their own
nationals what they are doing then I don't think much of them. Of course, I
do agree that the nationals, including me, should lobby for more info.
I dont think thats the case, they want to inform people, much of our
press ignores them. I have seen the british commisioner on spanish TV,
never here.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection.
of course there is. Just you and many others do not see reports of it
because of press bias and lack of interest
Press bias, agreed. Lack of interest?
both
Post by Jane Gillett
I admit guilt to not being interested
in <everything> but I think there needs to be more obvious information
available, created by those who are involved in the actions. They should be
ensuring that their nationals are kept aware of what they are doing.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
It just feels like putting your head in the yoke
for no obvious advantage.
increased trade with Europe is an obvoius advantage, ask the city if
it fancies not being in the EU and still being the banking hub it is
(our biggest earner), then theres is free movement of labour, its
reckoned to generate some thousands per head annually.
OK.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
that assumes (nuclear) war between US and USSR? WW1 and WW2 both
started without the US.
That was then.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Tanks may at this moment be rolling in the
Crimea, its not a matter of the standard outdated cold war scenario.
Russian or other expansionism may be Europes next problem.
And US is going to stand by and watch?
who knows, we might need a Pearl Harbour. US might be looking towards
Asia now.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
guns and tanks. Vetos. United front, all the usual things.
War on the ground again? So out of EU, and without US, UK will just become
part of whoever "expands" into us, else, with EU it's threats and war
throughout Europe?
I think the tanks are used as threats, as Russian ones right now in
Crimea.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
The EU is not "them", it is "us".
OK. It's nothing to do with "people",
free movement of labour isnt about people? Jobs arent about people?
Security isnt about people? What would you expect it to be that it
isnt exactly?
Got a bit confused here; labour movement - yes; immigration - yes; banking
- guess they are powerful enough to ensure that we stay in; security? see
above.
how do the banks ensure we stay in, I wonder?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
it's politics, govts and legal
agreements which don't make sense in all places (see above).
what doesnt make sense? Remember much reported here about EU mad rules
is untrue.
Mcu press report is true. Some Agric issues not of press interest are true.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
They are us. What rules are not working?
There have been agric issues, some of which have been due to UK
glodplating; if there were not the EU rules, our govt wouldn't have felt
the opportunity to interfere. SHould our govt have the right to goldplate?
well, it has that right, are you arguing for more EU power? :-)
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
in some places probably. Do you think the Germans follow the rules? Of
course they do. Many rules here are gold plating of EU law.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
This is where Europe is
now, not Little Englands pretending we are "Great Britain" and a force
in the world all alone, defended by the English Channel.
Yes, the "british empire attitude" is slow to leave, I agree, but the point
is it isn't the total reason for people's lack of enthusiasm; some reasons
are real.
most are based on press lies
Some.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we
both hanker after lost empires and refuse to live in the real world of
not being superpowers.
Who <are> the "superpowers" now?
USA, China, obviously.
Not Russia? India?
no
Post by Jane Gillett
When does S.America rise to strength?
not soon.
Post by Jane Gillett
Empires come and
go. And I get the impression that their lifetimes are getting shorter.
you have been reading Foundation and Empire again :-)
US v Rome?
the book? Sci-Fi
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
UKIP leader turned up once ever for farm & fisheries
debates IIRC (but claim expenses),
Behaviour of some politicians; as always was; up to other pols or us to
stamp on such.
Post by Mike.. . . .
they love seeing rules developed
without a UK input to prove how bad the rules are,
Standard efficient political device for denigrating and thus getting rid of
what they don't want; give it a bad name so others will reject it. (Give a
dog a bad name...) Time honoured political behaviour. Not limited to any
particular bloc or nationality.
but still true in spades for UKIP, who else does that?
Listen to any politician avoiding difficult responses at some time or
other. Hard to know whether UKIP is leading or reflecting UK public opinion.
both?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
we constantly fail
to fully embrace the EU, how often do you see the British commisioner
mentined in our press, can you even name her?
Last first, no I can't. Don't remember commissioner saying anything
directly relevant to my life; ever.
We don't tell our press what to do - well, we do, by choosing what sells
newspapers.
large parts of our press are owned by anti european interests who
actively lie at us to get us to become /remain a tool of the USA.
Certainly. It would be good if the "good guys" representing us took the
responsibility to "ensure" their view got to the public as well.
they don't control the media. Thats what people read.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-02-28 15:43:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Gather from popular myth that DeGaul made the
original rules deliberately to keep UK out as we might have been
enthusiastic enough and strong enough to stop them making the rules they
wanted.
Doesn't make sense, De Gaulle had a veto and used it. "non!"
Yes. The veto would have been the mechanism used; I believe the myth, if
that's what it was, said.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Russia would not join of course for the same reason we may leave,
It's a large block which does not want anybody telling it what to do.
as is indeed your view I think,
I think so in cases where it is "One rule for all" regardless of geography,
climate (agric) or social history. One rule does not always work well in
all parts of Europe, geographically at least.
examples?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
the EU is "them telling us", you do
ont see yourself as a european,
Yes. Although I don't feel strongly either way! It doesn't help when they
tell me I have to pay £80 for a passport
Thats entirely the **UK**s fault not the EU, the Shengen countries
don't show passports, we didnt join, surprise, surprise.
they are:-
Austria
Hungary
Norway
Belgium
Iceland
Poland
Czech Republic
Italy
Portugal
Denmark
Latvia
Slovakia
Estonia
Liechtenstein
Slovenia
Finland
Lithuania
Spain
France
Luxembourg
Sweden
Germany
Malta
Switzerland.
Greece
Netherlands
You confirm that Denmark is one. Interesting that it does not seem to have
outlawed sow stalls yet. Perhaps it's too soon to expect it, after all,
twelve years is only a short time since it was reported as being required.
Unfortunately our farmers have been coping with the more expensive pork
production resulting from obeying the ban while Denmark - did you say it's
Shengen? - deeper embedment in EU? - has been allowed by its govt and by
the EU to avoid complying with the ban. Maybe that has changed recently.
There are probably others; Denmark is the one which sticks in my mind - we
see a lot of Danish pork in UK.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
- rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity).
As we refused to join Schengen, its hardly surprising we need a
document to show when you travel, you see that as unreasonable?
What does "membership of EU" mean then? How do the members of Austria -
Netherlands above prove their membership? Do they have a Shengen passport
How much does that cost?
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
*our* activities.
OK. Won't argue. As we're not in Shengen then I don't know when we "belong"
and when we don't.
Post by Mike.. . . .
How can we not be an effective part of Euro govt
when a commissioner is British?
We will be an effective part when our population considers itself an
effective part which is when our "representatives", at whatever elevation,
take the responsibility of keeping the UK population up to date with what
they are doing in "representing" them.
Post by Mike.. . . .
what were all these doing at the most senior level of the EU?
Catherine Ashton
Leon Brittan
Stanley Clinton Davis, Baron Clinton-Davis
Arthur Cockfield, Baron Cockfield
Roy Jenkins
Neil Kinnock
Peter Mandelson
Bruce Millan
Chris Patten
Ivor Richard, Baron Richard
Christopher Soames, Baron Soames
George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth
Christopher Tugendhat, Baron Tugendhat
Perhaps they'd like to tell us if it's not too much trouble.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
(expensive) for no apparent purpose
"no apparent purpose", are you joking?
Post by Jane Gillett
so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection.
of course there is. Just you and many others do not see reports of it
because of press bias and lack of interest
That's very likely the reason; it is in no way a justification. I'll take
responsibility for <my> lack of interest but not for lack of information
from the EU reps themselves as I believe it is their responsibility to get
the message back and if the press don't carry it then they should take
adequate steps to overcome that particular glitch.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
that assumes (nuclear) war between US and USSR?
Why? There's no nuclear war in Iraq or Afghanistan AFAIK.
Post by Mike.. . . .
WW1 and WW2 both
started without the US. Tanks may at this moment be rolling in the
Crimea, its not a matter of the standard outdated cold war scenario.
Russian or other expansionism may be Europes next problem.
Very likely. I expect UK will be involved; would be whether EU members or
not and we happen to be members. We have been involved in other wars.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
guns and tanks. Vetos. United front, all the usual things.
EU incl UK - we ARE members I think. We meet our obligations in other
respects, why not in fighting?

<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
They are us. What rules are not working?
We have a different climate. It affects agriculture. The same rules don't
necessarily work as well everywhere. Also see Denmark/pork above as an
example.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
in some places probably. Do you think the Germans follow the rules? Of
course they do.
Yes. Germany will do.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Many rules here are gold plating of EU law.
Agreed. Usually by people who are not at the sharp end of production.

Anywy, this is getting too long again.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-28 19:03:26 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
You confirm that Denmark is one. Interesting that it does not seem to have
outlawed sow stalls yet. Perhaps it's too soon to expect it, after all,
twelve years is only a short time since it was reported as being required.
Unfortunately our farmers have been coping with the more expensive pork
production resulting from obeying the ban while Denmark - did you say it's
Shengen? - deeper embedment in EU? - has been allowed by its govt and by
the EU to avoid complying with the ban. Maybe that has changed recently.
There are probably others; Denmark is the one which sticks in my mind - we
see a lot of Danish pork in UK.
Shengen !=EU

I dont know where we are on stall compliance, but the only chance of
having high welfare and fish stock conservation etc is across
countries
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
- rather stay at home! (Home being
where I don't have to pay money for identity).
As we refused to join Schengen, its hardly surprising we need a
document to show when you travel, you see that as unreasonable?
What does "membership of EU" mean then? How do the members of Austria -
Netherlands above prove their membership? Do they have a Shengen passport
How much does that cost?
there is no such thing as a Shengen passport. Outside the Shengen area
you need your national passport to enter the Shengen area as for other
countries. Inside Shengen area, free passage for all. If we were in
Shengen, you would travel to France Italy etc without a passport. When
I drive from France to Belgium or Spain to Potugal, there is nothing,
no border control, no changing money, nothing.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But it is partly, maybe even
mainly, because our govt doesn't act as though it is an effective part of
European govt other than sending "representatives" to their activities
*our* activities.
OK. Won't argue. As we're not in Shengen then I don't know when we "belong"
and when we don't.
EU isnt Shengen. We are in EU, not in euro, not in Shengen. Half
hearted as usual.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
How can we not be an effective part of Euro govt
when a commissioner is British?
We will be an effective part when our population considers itself an
effective part which is when our "representatives", at whatever elevation,
take the responsibility of keeping the UK population up to date with what
they are doing in "representing" them.
its more people and media taking an interest in them, your MEP would
probably love enquiries.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
what were all these doing at the most senior level of the EU?
Catherine Ashton
Leon Brittan
Stanley Clinton Davis, Baron Clinton-Davis
Arthur Cockfield, Baron Cockfield
Roy Jenkins
Neil Kinnock
Peter Mandelson
Bruce Millan
Chris Patten
Ivor Richard, Baron Richard
Christopher Soames, Baron Soames
George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth
Christopher Tugendhat, Baron Tugendhat
Perhaps they'd like to tell us if it's not too much trouble.
the media dont report it.
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
(expensive) for no apparent purpose
"no apparent purpose", are you joking?
Post by Jane Gillett
so there's little in the way of a "live
and viable" connection.
of course there is. Just you and many others do not see reports of it
because of press bias and lack of interest
That's very likely the reason; it is in no way a justification. I'll take
responsibility for <my> lack of interest but not for lack of information
from the EU reps themselves as I believe it is their responsibility to get
the message back and if the press don't carry it then they should take
adequate steps to overcome that particular glitch.
I suspect they do, but who reads EU websites etc?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Guess if somebody like Russia attacked we'd
become a battleground between R & US whether we were members or not.
that assumes (nuclear) war between US and USSR?
Why? There's no nuclear war in Iraq or Afghanistan AFAIK.
I was referring to the old situation
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
WW1 and WW2 both
started without the US. Tanks may at this moment be rolling in the
Crimea, its not a matter of the standard outdated cold war scenario.
Russian or other expansionism may be Europes next problem.
Very likely. I expect UK will be involved; would be whether EU members or
not and we happen to be members. We have been involved in other wars.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
part of it, as many Brits do not, now
in a more powerful bloc able to stop Russian expansionism and stand up
to China.
How do we or even Europe "stand up to them"? Favourable trading (tax)
conditions I guess.
guns and tanks. Vetos. United front, all the usual things.
EU incl UK - we ARE members I think. We meet our obligations in other
respects, why not in fighting?
no reason I know of
Post by Jane Gillett
<snip>
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
My freinds daughter works in Madrid,
her boyfriend works in Germany, we have met them for dinner when in
Spain, your delivery man might be from Poland.
Fine. No problem. Makes life interesting.
Provided we're not obliged to live according to rules which work for them
but not for us.
They are us. What rules are not working?
We have a different climate. It affects agriculture. The same rules don't
necessarily work as well everywhere. Also see Denmark/pork above as an
example.
all the countries have slightly different climates. Denmark issue is
not about climate, surely?
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
AND provided that if WE keep to the rules, which we generally do, then
those rules are equally enforced in all the other parts of Europe, which we
believe they are not, in agric at least.
in some places probably. Do you think the Germans follow the rules? Of
course they do.
Yes. Germany will do.
Post by Mike.. . . .
Many rules here are gold plating of EU law.
Agreed. Usually by people who are not at the sharp end of production.
Anywy, this is getting too long again.
and duplicated!
--
Mike... . . . .
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-28 21:11:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
What does "membership of EU" mean then? How do the members of Austria -
Netherlands above prove their membership? Do they have a Shengen passport
How much does that cost?
this explains better than me (remember Shengen is just about border
controls, nothing else)

"The Schengen Agreement led to the creation of Europe's borderless
Schengen Area in 1995. The treaty was signed on 14 June 1985 between
five of the then ten member states of the European Economic Community
near the town of Schengen in Luxembourg. It proposed the gradual
abolition of border checks at the signatories' common borders.
Measures proposed included reduced speed vehicle checks which allowed
vehicles to cross borders without stopping, allowing of residents in
border areas freedom to cross borders away from fixed checkpoints and
the harmonisation of visa policies.[1]

In 1990 the Agreement was supplemented by the Schengen Convention
which proposed the abolition of internal border controls and a common
visa policy. The Schengen Area operates very much like a single state
for international travel purposes with external border controls for
travellers entering and exiting the area, and common visas, but with
no internal border controls. It currently consists of 26 European
countries covering a population of over 400 million people and an area
of 4,312,099 square kilometres (1,664,911 sq mi).[2]

Prior to 1999, the Schengen treaties and the rules adopted under them
operated independently from the European Union; however, the Amsterdam
Treaty incorporated them into European Union law, while providing
opt-outs for the only two EU member states which had remained outside
the Area: Ireland and the United Kingdom. Schengen is now a core part
of EU law and all EU member states without an opt-out who have not
already joined the Schengen Area are legally obliged to do so when
technical requirements have been met. Several non-EU countries are
also included in the area."
--
Mike... . . . .
Phil Cook
2014-02-28 21:51:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
etc, etc.

Is there any chance you two could get a room?
--
Phil Cook
Mike.. . . .
2014-03-01 08:18:10 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Phil Cook
Post by Phil Cook
Is there any chance you two could get a room?
FB is a better place but Jane (or Janet) don't seem over keen :-)
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2014-03-01 09:05:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phil Cook
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
etc, etc.
Is there any chance you two could get a room?
Sorry. Have shut up now.

However. Bandwidth is the only realistic complaint; nobody's stopping the
rest of the posters putting finger to key.

Cheers
jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2014-02-27 14:18:23 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
When does S.America rise to strength?
to be a superpower the s. american countries would need to band
together, open borders and form a federation, a bit like the other
potential superpower, Europe.
--
Mike... . . . .
Janet
2013-12-08 14:41:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jane Gillett
Do you mean we need to send better people? And we need to instruct them
better? Perhaps it should not be used as a reward/position for those whose
position in UK has waned.
It isn't.
Post by Jane Gillett
If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO
you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums
Nope. We elect them.
Post by Jane Gillett
I think you are probably right but I can't understand why. I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job. Maybe that's the problem; it's a sinecure and
all the holdres need to do is keep it.
There is no "sinecure". UK Members in the European Parliament are
elected, by us, the voters of the UK.

To keep the job after its 5-year term they would need to be re-elected
at the next election , standing on their previous performance as an MEP.
The next European Parliament election is in May 2014.

Lets hope Jane intends to vote and knows who her current MEP's are, how
they performed so far, whether they have changed political allegiance
etc.

Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 15:02:49 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Janet
Post by Janet
Post by Jane Gillett
Do you mean we need to send better people? And we need to instruct them
better? Perhaps it should not be used as a reward/position for those whose
position in UK has waned.
It isn't.
Mandleson?
Post by Janet
Post by Jane Gillett
If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO
you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums
Nope. We elect them.
We elect MEPs, that's not where the power lies
Post by Janet
Post by Jane Gillett
I think you are probably right but I can't understand why. I'd have thought
that representing UK at EU would have set someone up for life so it would
have been a sought-after job. Maybe that's the problem; it's a sinecure and
all the holdres need to do is keep it.
There is no "sinecure".
If Brown had got that job, when did I vote him in? When did I vote for
Kinnocks role in the EU? A number of people have secured top jobs in
Europe after losing elections in UK or having to resign. The EU needs
either more direct elections or more power to the parliament.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-10 08:38:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Giusi
Post by Jane Gillett
But, then, I'm one of those who is not sure there's any point in being in
it at all.
I don't think this is the time to try being a small island nation of 60 million with no real ties to anyone. It's hard to speak of the Commonwealth and localism in the same paragraph, no? If duty barriers spring up between the UK and everywhere in Europe it will hurt you a lot.
As far as having influence, the UK has equal influence with every other member nation and why would it be different? If you ever take the EU really seriously, you'll take whom you send to it more seriously than at present and you will instruct them gravely. If your best cannot sway the majority, then you lose that one. But IMO you are giving these representative jobs away like little premiums and leaving them to allow staff to decide where to bring weight and where to allow shifts.
If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously, then you will suffer the penalty of living under restrictions designed by those who will benefit from them. The newer members worked hard at getting in and do take the possibilities as worth the effort. It will be those who work at it that reap the benefit.
Going back to this post I actually do agree. You will generally get more
out of something if you take it seriously.
But.
I think you also have to define carefully just WHO is going to have to,
bear the consequences ie "take it seriously" and WHO is going to get the
benefit and the two groups of people are not necessarily the same.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-10 21:19:56 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Giusi
If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously, then you will suffer the penalty of living under restrictions designed by those who will benefit from them. The newer members worked hard at getting in and do take the possibilities as worth the effort. It will be those who work at it that reap the benefit.
Going back to this post I actually do agree. You will generally get more
out of something if you take it seriously.
UK voters could take a *lot* more interest in what MEPs are doing.
Post by Jane Gillett
But.
I think you also have to define carefully just WHO is going to have to,
bear the consequences ie "take it seriously" and WHO is going to get the
benefit and the two groups of people are not necessarily the same.
dont see how you can "define" that. It varies according to what is
going on and the people who are "taking it seriously" are surely the
MEPs and commisioners?.
--
Mike... . . . .
Jane Gillett
2013-12-14 07:26:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Giusi
If you do not respect the EU and take it seriously, then you will suffer the penalty of living under restrictions designed by those who will benefit from them. The newer members worked hard at getting in and do take the possibilities as worth the effort. It will be those who work at it that reap the benefit.
Going back to this post I actually do agree. You will generally get more
out of something if you take it seriously.
UK voters could take a *lot* more interest in what MEPs are doing.
I think it would help if UK govt didn't appear to treat the EU as a
repository or reward for used politicians - those who were well known and
often well respected but have now politically outlived their usefulness in
internal UK politics and have to be offered other "opportunities".
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But.
I think you also have to define carefully just WHO is going to have to,
bear the consequences ie "take it seriously" and WHO is going to get the
benefit and the two groups of people are not necessarily the same.
dont see how you can "define" that. It varies according to what is
going on
Yes. It will vary with context.
Post by Mike.. . . .
and the people who are "taking it seriously" are surely the
MEPs and commisioners?.
Dunno. Presumeably they are if they are earning their salaries.

I think the problem is that processes are so far away from your average UK
public, so ungettatable by UK public, and take so long that they don't seem
to be anything we, as public, have any active part to play in.

We are even told that actual decisions are not made by our representative
MEPs but by the high officials (commissioners) who have been put there by
our govt officials and not by us.

At least with UK politics we CAN get at our MPs and what they say is
sometimes reported if the press consider it newsworthy and it's also
regularly reported in summary in the media so we have an idea what's going
on even if it's not always accurate; in the EU, the press are aware that
the issues won't become real for a long time so won't sell papers.

We have a history of being an independent nation, we were in two minds
about whether we wanted to be in a common <market> although that seemed to
have some benefits, we were'nt consulted at all AFAICR about being put into
a "Closer Union" for want of a better name so all in all it really isn't
something a lot of UK natives view with any particular enthusiasm. In
general we are either fairly uninterested or positively anti - which do you
want?

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-14 10:37:54 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
UK voters could take a *lot* more interest in what MEPs are doing.
I think it would help if UK govt didn't appear to treat the EU as a
repository or reward for used politicians - those who were well known and
often well respected but have now politically outlived their usefulness in
internal UK politics and have to be offered other "opportunities".
thats commisioners, not MEPs
Post by Jane Gillett
Post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
But.
I think you also have to define carefully just WHO is going to have to,
bear the consequences ie "take it seriously" and WHO is going to get the
benefit and the two groups of people are not necessarily the same.
dont see how you can "define" that. It varies according to what is
going on
Yes. It will vary with context.
Post by Mike.. . . .
and the people who are "taking it seriously" are surely the
MEPs and commisioners?.
Dunno. Presumeably they are if they are earning their salaries.
I think the problem is that processes are so far away from your average UK
public, so ungettatable by UK public, and take so long that they don't seem
to be anything we, as public, have any active part to play in.
Do they take any longer than change in the UK? Sometimes the EU is
ahead of UK. Is Europe so far away? The Daily Mail would have it so.
Post by Jane Gillett
We are even told that actual decisions are not made by our representative
MEPs but by the high officials (commissioners) who have been put there by
our govt officials and not by us.
Indeed, that is a weakness. EXACTLY the same as in UK. EXACTLY.
Post by Jane Gillett
At least with UK politics we CAN get at our MPs and what they say is
sometimes reported if the press consider it newsworthy and it's also
regularly reported in summary in the media so we have an idea what's going
on even if it's not always accurate; in the EU, the press are aware that
the issues won't become real for a long time so won't sell papers.
You can get at your MEP, do you know who it is? Most don't. The press
not reporting EU properly with a "fog in channel - continent cut off"
set of attitudes is a problem.
Post by Jane Gillett
We have a history of being an independent nation,
How is that different from France or Spain? Much of the impetus came
from WW2, it should now come from China. We are 60m, too small to go
it alone. Look at how the Chinese laughed at that fool Cameron sucking
up to them, even while there the state press laughed at him and us.
China never rewards weakness or buys other than on value.
Post by Jane Gillett
we were in two minds
about whether we wanted to be in a common <market> although that seemed to
have some benefits, we were'nt consulted at all AFAICR about being put into
a "Closer Union"
indeed, the press and poiticians lied about it, in the internet age
people might have looked at the Treaty of Rome online but nobody
ordered a paper copy then.
Post by Jane Gillett
for want of a better name so all in all it really isn't
something a lot of UK natives view with any particular enthusiasm. In
general we are either fairly uninterested or positively anti - which do you
want?
Neither
--
Mike... . . . .
Never eat on an empty stomach
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-14 13:58:28 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I think the problem is that processes are so far away from your average UK
public, so ungettatable by UK public, and take so long that they don't seem
to be anything we, as public, have any active part to play in.
further comments on that.
How "gettatable" is David Cameron? I have a vote once every few years
in a seat that always returns a conservative, I have no say in who
leads the conservative party. So how can I have any influence on
events here or in Europe?
Well, I can join whichever party seems best and then (if its labour,
dont know about lib dem or UKIP) I get a vote for the leader. I can
also draw things to the attention of MPs or MEPs. More effecively, I
can join pressure groups which are active in UK or Europe.

Where are the decisions that will shape Europes future going to be
made (even in UK leaves)? In Brussels.

I have a tiny say, who would expect otherwise? I think the real reason
people feel disconnected is that large parts of the press
intentionally ignore the EU politics and/or make up lies about it.

There are things wrong with EU procedures, as with UK ones, thats not
a good reason to isolate ourselves to being a small offshore island,
would you rather allly more with the US, a state with capital
punishment, no universal healthcare, no proper gun control, high
violent crime rates, low life expectancy and so on, not to mention
politics owned by big money, with a lot of poverty, an hyterical fear
of socilialism and infrastructure that is starting to fall apart.
--
Mike... . . . .
If the Daily Mail goes to the wall who would stand up for the persecuted minority
of people from comfortable areas?
Alan Partridge
Jane Gillett
2013-12-15 14:03:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Mike.. . . .
Post by Jane Gillett
I think the problem is that processes are so far away from your average UK
public, so ungettatable by UK public, and take so long that they don't seem
to be anything we, as public, have any active part to play in.
further comments on that.
How "gettatable" is David Cameron? I have a vote once every few years
in a seat that always returns a conservative, I have no say in who
leads the conservative party. So how can I have any influence on
events here or in Europe?
Well, I can join whichever party seems best and then (if its labour,
dont know about lib dem or UKIP) I get a vote for the leader. I can
also draw things to the attention of MPs or MEPs. More effecively, I
can join pressure groups which are active in UK or Europe.
Where are the decisions that will shape Europes future going to be
made (even in UK leaves)? In Brussels.
I have a tiny say, who would expect otherwise? I think the real reason
people feel disconnected is that large parts of the press
intentionally ignore the EU politics and/or make up lies about it.
There are things wrong with EU procedures, as with UK ones, thats not
a good reason to isolate ourselves to being a small offshore island,
would you rather allly more with the US, a state with capital
punishment, no universal healthcare, no proper gun control, high
violent crime rates, low life expectancy and so on, not to mention
politics owned by big money, with a lot of poverty, an hyterical fear
of socilialism and infrastructure that is starting to fall apart.
Try to answer both posts.

UK govt using EU position for no-longer-votepulling UK politicians; MEPs or
commissioners? The difference doesn't seem very important except that it's
<our> representatives who are being left out in the cold while UK govt's
nominees have some access to the power.

Getting at DC? Wouldn't expect to but I'd expect to have access to my UK
voting rep viz MP (NOT the commissioner) and, if appropriate (IMO) relevant
UK minister (and I have written to a minister and received an answer albeit
only on one occasion). For probably several reasons I neither know my MEP
nor would expect any communication on my part to receive any attention from
MEP or some commissioner or other. Lack of knowledge probably because I
don't know how EU works - procedures etc - and maybe as both reason and
consequence it's not worth press coverage as it wouldn't sell papers. As
for press lies; does anybody trust them anyway? Vicious circle.

References to US were to knowledge of US constitution; at least that's a
machine we've seen in operation so we know its strengths and weaknesses
rather than some theoretical system which has never been tried. Yes, I
agree with all the points Mike has made about failings in the US and would
rather we kept our versions generally. But that's no reason tomove our
centre of control to systems much further away and of less access to our
people's control <unless> it is for the reason that <we have no choice> -
we'll fold if we don't. That doesn't mean we have to like it but it would
be a good idea to try to get our population to feel they have some
relationship and benefit with it which could be positive rather than all
negative, delay and prohibition.
That'll do.

Cheers
Jane
--
Jane Gillett : ***@higherstert.co.uk : Totnes, Devon.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-16 07:21:56 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
Getting at DC? Wouldn't expect to but I'd expect to have access to my UK
voting rep viz MP (NOT the commissioner) and, if appropriate (IMO) relevant
UK minister (and I have written to a minister and received an answer albeit
only on one occasion). For probably several reasons I neither know my MEP
nor would expect any communication on my part to receive any attention from
MEP or some commissioner or other. Lack of knowledge probably because I
don't know how EU works - procedures etc - and maybe as both reason and
consequence it's not worth press coverage as it wouldn't sell papers.
You *can* contact your MEP, how EU works is on Wikipedia or elsewhere,
why not find out? Its not hard.
I dont believe the reason for a lot of negative press on EU is to sell
papers, its political by the owners.
Post by Jane Gillett
As for press lies; does anybody trust them anyway? Vicious circle.
sadly people believe a lot of stuff the bad papers print
Post by Jane Gillett
References to US were to knowledge of US constitution; at least that's a
machine we've seen in operation so we know its strengths and weaknesses
rather than some theoretical system which has never been tried.
The EU isnt a theoretical system, its there and running. The Lisbon
Treaty is IIRC effectively the constitution.
--
Mike... . . . .
If the Daily Mail goes to the wall who would stand up for the persecuted minority
of people from comfortable areas?
Alan Partridge
Janet
2013-12-16 12:23:16 UTC
Permalink
In article <***@higherstert.co.uk>,
***@higherstert.co.uk says...

For probably several reasons I neither know my MEP
Post by Jane Gillett
nor would expect any communication on my part to receive any attention from
MEP
https://www.writetothem.com/
Post by Jane Gillett
or some commissioner or other. Lack of knowledge probably because I
don't know how EU works - procedures etc -
So, do you vote for your area's MEPs? Their next election is in May
2014.

http://www.europarl.org.uk/en/your_MEPs/List-MEPs-by-region/South-
West.html

Janet
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-16 13:26:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Janet
https://www.writetothem.com/
I was just about to post that :-)


"Your Members of the European Parliament

Your 4 South West MEPs represent you in the European Parliament. They
scrutinise proposed European laws and the budget of the European
Union, and provide oversight of its other decision-making bodies.

Write to all your MEPs

Sir Graham Watson (Liberal Democrat)
William (The Earl of) Dartmouth (UKIP)
Giles Chichester (Conservative)
Trevor Colman (UKIP)

The Conservative MEPs for your region have informed us that they have
divided it into areas, with one MEP dealing with constituent
correspondence per area, so we only show that MEP above; you can
contact the others here:

Julie Girling (Conservative)
Ashley Fox (Conservative)"


No different at all than contacting MP or minister, all done with a
single click on the above website, I suspect MEPs, especially non BNP
Lite, will be keen to show they are responsive to consituents.

http://ec.europa.eu/commission_2010-2014/

" Who is who – Barroso Commission – European Commission

Barroso, José Manuel [President]
Ashton, Catherine [Vice-President]High Representative of the Union
for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy"

Ashton in British and running foreign affairs, in case you think UK
has no input at the top table (but commissioners are not supposed to
persue national agendas)

" Reding, Viviane [Vice-President]Justice, Fundamental Rights and
Citizenship
Almunia, Joaquín [Vice-President]Competition
Kallas, Siim [Vice-President]Transport
Kroes, Neelie [Vice-President]Digital Agenda
Tajani, Antonio [Vice-President]Industry and Entrepreneurship
Šefc(ovic(, Maroš [Vice-President]Inter-Institutional Relations
and Administration
Rehn, Olli [Vice-President]Economic and Monetary Affairs and the
Euro"..............<snip>.

We are now a smaller fish if you like, but in a bigger pond. China is
currently openly laughing at the UK as small and irrelevant - (largely
Camerons fault for thinking he could go it alone), they will not
laugh at Europe so easily.

Does the EU see the west country as a priority? Probably not. But does
the British government? In the EU, the West Country might well qualify
for regional development aid (I know in Thatchers day councils were
effectively not allowed to apply - how *not* to deal with being in
Europe).
--
Mike... . . . .
If the Daily Mail goes to the wall who would stand up for the persecuted minority
of people from comfortable areas?
Alan Partridge
Giusi
2013-12-06 09:20:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike.. . . .
Following a post by Jane Gillett
Post by Jane Gillett
We'd probably evolve a breed of horses with specific "eating quality"
characteristics.
I don't think so as the idea is to have a use for surplus horses (and
it has not happened where horse is already eaten as far as I know).
It's done here. My friend who breeds and rears horses for meat has a glorious herd of chunky horses perhaps halfway, physically, between a draft horse (is that shire horse up there?) and a saddle or quarter horse. They range over a hill between Umbertide and Gubbio, one stallion, as must be, and 20-odd mares with their young. Thrilling to watch. They are not quite wild but not tame, either, and probably live more like horses originally did than any other than wild herds in far off places.
Mike.. . . .
2013-12-08 15:08:57 UTC
Permalink
Following a post by Giusi
Post by Giusi
between a draft horse (is that shire horse up there?)
a heavy horse with hairy feet, once used as a war horse by the likes
of King Arthur. Yes, I think.
--
Mike... . . . .
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