What BBC won't tell you about Brexit: Decline of Britain since 1973 EEC ...
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 28 Φεβ 2016
Bilderberg exposed in Dresden 6. Anglo-American Tyranny to divide Germany and Russia, Manfred Petritsch: Alles Schall und Rauch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pka6P...
What the BBC won't tell you about #Brexit II
Documentary evidence the EEC and EU was designed in 1942 in Berlin by the Nazis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rXox...
German Panzer Banks Crush Greece, Washington Winces
http://www.strategic-culture.org/news...
Lobbying: the Dark Force' behind the Brussels machinery
Best documentary by far on who REALLY runs the EU
The Brussels Business
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMuUE...
Here's the next session of Pippa's show (audio only)
http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/pr...
Decline of Britain since 1973
EEC & EU as 'soft-fascist' German cartel
Tony Gosling, Pippa Jones
Talk Radio Europe - 26Feb16
No single market
We are meant to be operating under the bloc's Single Market mechanism as an EU member.
The
EU describes it as "one territory without any internal borders or other
regulatory obstacles to the free movement of goods and services." It's
basically meant to stimulate competition and trade, improve efficiency,
and helps cut prices.
We are meant to operate as one. Basically, it
only works if all countries are identical and work as a hive, like the
Borg in Star Trek. That sounds like a Utopian ideal, and it has not
worked at all.
At the beginning of September, my colleague Oscar
Williams-Grut pointed out that the so-called Single Market has a massive
problem – Germany.
German manufacturing is a booming behemoth, while
almost every other nation bar Greece is at some sort of low. Britain's
manufacturing sector is not he same as it was back in 1950s, and we now
depend a lot on imports and exports (I will come to this later).
Greece's
rebalancing towards exports has been achieved simply by imports
collapsing. All you need to do is take one look at that country and
realise there is nothing about that nation that is rebounding at the
moment.
At the mercy of Germany
Concerns over the Single
Market being a whole load of poppycock are more relevant than ever,
especially since the eurozone debt crisis of 2009.
First and
foremost, even though we are meant to be part of one big unit, we have
no fiscal union to address underperforming areas.
In Britain, for
example, London may generate greater amounts of wealth than certain
regions in the country. If somewhere like Nottingham was struggling, the
money is redistributed to pay for welfare or prop up the local economy.
Infrastructure, like new railway lines, could be installed to link
cities and create greater connection for people working or looking to
expand business.
In the EU, we don't have this. Just look at Greece
and the sorry mess it is. Sure, we lend money and force them to gut
their country from the inside out, but a loan is not a re-distribution
of wealth. Countries that need to devalue their currency to spur exports
can't. The bloc is not a "single" anything.
Destroying national sovereignty
Relinquishing
national sovereignty sounds a lot like right-wing hooey, but having a
look at how the EU has operated in the worst of times hasn't resolved
any of these concerns.
Sovereignty is meant to be when a state has
the absolute power to govern itself, make, execute, and apply laws, and
impose and collect taxes.
Of course, being part of a union means we
should all technically share that burden and have a say in what laws are
enacted, while also making sure others aren't penalised to the
advantage of other nations. It shouldn't be all bad.
Take a look at
Greece again. The country has teetered on the brink of collapse so many
times, it might as well jump off the cliff. But it can't because it's
stuck with loans it doesn't want, that seem near impossible for it to
pay back.
The one time it did show some semblance of sovereignty or
power was at its referendum on the bailout. The public voted against the
extremely harsh (and arguably necessary) conditions in exchange for
emergency cash. And we all know how that turned out – an utterly
pointless exercise.
All that happened is that Greece wound up owing
its creditors so much that they used it against them in their next round
of negotiations.
Renegotiations look impossible
There are a
few things that Britons are getting really tired of, and a growing
mountain of examples to show how the UK doesn't really have much of a
say in what happens within the bloc.
Since 2010, the EU has
introduced over 3,500 new laws affecting British business. Business for
Britain highlighted in its report in June that the sheer volume of red
tape that affects the UK is costing billions.
"The British Chambers
of Commerce has shown that the total cost of EU regulation is £7.6
billion per year," said the report. "Since the Lisbon Treaty came into
force in December 2009, it has cost British businesses £12.2 billion in
extra regulation."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pka6P...
What the BBC won't tell you about #Brexit II
Documentary evidence the EEC and EU was designed in 1942 in Berlin by the Nazis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rXox...
German Panzer Banks Crush Greece, Washington Winces
http://www.strategic-culture.org/news...
Lobbying: the Dark Force' behind the Brussels machinery
Best documentary by far on who REALLY runs the EU
The Brussels Business
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMuUE...
Here's the next session of Pippa's show (audio only)
http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/pr...
Decline of Britain since 1973
EEC & EU as 'soft-fascist' German cartel
Tony Gosling, Pippa Jones
Talk Radio Europe - 26Feb16
No single market
We are meant to be operating under the bloc's Single Market mechanism as an EU member.
The
EU describes it as "one territory without any internal borders or other
regulatory obstacles to the free movement of goods and services." It's
basically meant to stimulate competition and trade, improve efficiency,
and helps cut prices.
We are meant to operate as one. Basically, it
only works if all countries are identical and work as a hive, like the
Borg in Star Trek. That sounds like a Utopian ideal, and it has not
worked at all.
At the beginning of September, my colleague Oscar
Williams-Grut pointed out that the so-called Single Market has a massive
problem – Germany.
German manufacturing is a booming behemoth, while
almost every other nation bar Greece is at some sort of low. Britain's
manufacturing sector is not he same as it was back in 1950s, and we now
depend a lot on imports and exports (I will come to this later).
Greece's
rebalancing towards exports has been achieved simply by imports
collapsing. All you need to do is take one look at that country and
realise there is nothing about that nation that is rebounding at the
moment.
At the mercy of Germany
Concerns over the Single
Market being a whole load of poppycock are more relevant than ever,
especially since the eurozone debt crisis of 2009.
First and
foremost, even though we are meant to be part of one big unit, we have
no fiscal union to address underperforming areas.
In Britain, for
example, London may generate greater amounts of wealth than certain
regions in the country. If somewhere like Nottingham was struggling, the
money is redistributed to pay for welfare or prop up the local economy.
Infrastructure, like new railway lines, could be installed to link
cities and create greater connection for people working or looking to
expand business.
In the EU, we don't have this. Just look at Greece
and the sorry mess it is. Sure, we lend money and force them to gut
their country from the inside out, but a loan is not a re-distribution
of wealth. Countries that need to devalue their currency to spur exports
can't. The bloc is not a "single" anything.
Destroying national sovereignty
Relinquishing
national sovereignty sounds a lot like right-wing hooey, but having a
look at how the EU has operated in the worst of times hasn't resolved
any of these concerns.
Sovereignty is meant to be when a state has
the absolute power to govern itself, make, execute, and apply laws, and
impose and collect taxes.
Of course, being part of a union means we
should all technically share that burden and have a say in what laws are
enacted, while also making sure others aren't penalised to the
advantage of other nations. It shouldn't be all bad.
Take a look at
Greece again. The country has teetered on the brink of collapse so many
times, it might as well jump off the cliff. But it can't because it's
stuck with loans it doesn't want, that seem near impossible for it to
pay back.
The one time it did show some semblance of sovereignty or
power was at its referendum on the bailout. The public voted against the
extremely harsh (and arguably necessary) conditions in exchange for
emergency cash. And we all know how that turned out – an utterly
pointless exercise.
All that happened is that Greece wound up owing
its creditors so much that they used it against them in their next round
of negotiations.
Renegotiations look impossible
There are a
few things that Britons are getting really tired of, and a growing
mountain of examples to show how the UK doesn't really have much of a
say in what happens within the bloc.
Since 2010, the EU has
introduced over 3,500 new laws affecting British business. Business for
Britain highlighted in its report in June that the sheer volume of red
tape that affects the UK is costing billions.
"The British Chambers
of Commerce has shown that the total cost of EU regulation is £7.6
billion per year," said the report. "Since the Lisbon Treaty came into
force in December 2009, it has cost British businesses £12.2 billion in
extra regulation."
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