eurealist.co.uk

non partisan comment on the European Union and Westminster politics

 

The vision of a shared future

Giving the lie to the idea of a two speed EU, president of the European Parliament, Hans-Gert Poettering, has told Bild am Sonntag. That

“As long as the reform treaty is not in force, there cannot be any new accessions to the EU, perhaps with the exception of Croatia,”

He said that there would have to be debates about the future of the EU and the idea of a two-speed Europe, in which a core group of members, advance before the others, will play a role.

“I would however prefer that all the countries in the EU move to a shared future.”

That in a nutshell is the default game plan, but the point is a “shared future” so it is all about achieving a united Europe, at the end of the day.

It is important to see the reality of this because we will be told that the EU is going in our direction, that will be a lie, because it is not and will never go in our direction, it is going in the direction of a united EU, it is that just different states will be travelling at different speeds to reach the same objective.

What the EU elites really need to understand is it the final objective, to which we object, we do not want a united federal Europe we do not want to be a subservient state in the United States of Europe.

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On June 15, 2008
At 10:06 am
Comments : 0
 
 

Federal Turkey Feared

The leader of Turkey’s ultra-nationalist opposition party warned yesterday that the country could face a serious threat of division if the process to grant rights to Turkish citizens of Kurdish origins demanded by the European Union is not stopped.

If this dark process is not stopped, our country will be drifting into a federal state structure with, at the beginning, one and then many partners sharing its sovereignty, Devlet Bahçeli, leader of the Nationalist
Movement Party
(MHP) said yesterday at his party’s group meeting in Parliament.

The MHP believes the reforms made for EU membership will weaken the unitary structure of the state and argues that Turkish citizens of Kurdish origins will be encouraged to demand self-determination rights.

Turkey was facing the danger of losing its national identity through EU impositions, Bahçeli advised that the country should review its ties with the 27-member bloc before its relations worsen. Today’s conditions and the philosophy of the ongoing negotiations make it clear that we cannot share a joint future with Europe

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On April 23, 2008
At 5:41 pm
Comments : 0
 
 

EU ministers call for wage restraint

Amid reports of ever rising prices, many of them caused by extra costs on business of meeting EU regulations on everything from social costs to environmental legalisation.

As reported in Busines Standard The EU is suddenly becoming worried about inflation with annual inflation in the 15-member eurozone provisionally estimated to have risen to 3.5 per cent last month, a 16-year high and far above the European Central Bank’s target rate of close to 2 per cent.

In February the Commission predicted a 2008 inflation rate of 2.6 per cent - the highest since the start of European monetary union in 1999 - and growth of 1.8 per cent. But is expected to revise those figures to raise its inflation forecast and cut its economic growth forecast later this month.

So what is the EU government going to do about it? Well it obvious they are going to have to do something to keep the inflation levels down, perhaps they will start a massive burning of the regulations, thus freeing industry from EU imposed shackles, or perhaps not! it look as if the ones who will be asked to make cuts are the wage earners, Governments, employers and trade unions across the eurozone were warned on Friday not to negotiate wage deals that risk pushing inflation to ever higher record levels and punishing the poorest members of society. EU Regulations of course do not punish the poorer members of society.

In Britain, thankfully, not part of the eurozone yet! According to some figures what with EU regulations arriving at the rate of 3,500 a year, the cost to us of membership is £100 billion per annum or 9% of our economy. According to the 2005 Anual Report of the Government’s Better Regulation Task Force. David Arculus, its Managing Director says EU regulation is now our biggest industry.

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Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On April 7, 2008
At 12:04 pm
Comments : 0
 
 

An ever expanding EUniverse

Elmar Brok MEP, EP Rapporteur on the Enlargement Strategy, sees a high degree of agreement with regard to its future implications.

The EEA model also offers a visible political and economic added value for ENP states but also for example with respect to their internal security. In addition, the EEA model provides an enormous flexibility as an intermediate stage between the previous neighbourhood policy and full membership. At the end of this process, a far-reaching transfer of the EU acquis can be possible, such as in the case of Switzerland or Norway, Brok concluded.

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On April 5, 2008
At 10:11 am
Comments : 0
 
 

The EU Splashing our money about all over the place

The EU is to invest in operations of spas in the Asia-Pacific region by training up to 1,000 spa therapists over the next two years.

The programme has two key objectives. The first is to improve the business potential of 50 spa operators from each of the four participating countries by providing spa services that conform to European standards of spa operation.

The second is to enhance business relationships between spa operators and travel agents in the participating countries, in order to increase spa visits by European travelers.

I suppose they will tell us they need to spend this money to protect EU Citizens. But I cannot see what benefit it can be for British taxpayers to assits turism projects in the Asia-Pacific region. Perhaps EU Eletes spend their time in spars in Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, but do the majority of the rest of us have any money spare for the air ticket.

The EU has also given another a €61million grant to the Philippines.

The money is to help towards funding a series of reforms recently planned by the Philippines government for the health service, better protection of human rights and efforts towards finding peace with Muslim rebels.

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On
At 9:24 am
Comments : 3
 
 

QUOTES

“If there are further steps to European integration, the people should have their say at a general election or in a referendum.

“Tony Blair, In 1997

The unification of Europe is near”
Laeken Declaration, 15 December 2001,

“The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights (ECR) will be no more binding than the Beano or the Sun”.

Keith Vaz, Labour Minister for Europe,

“The Europe of Maastricht could only have been created in the absence of democracy.”

Claude Cheysson, French Foreign Secretary 1981-1984.

“There are some in this country who fear that in going into Europe, we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears I need hardly say are completely unjustified”

Ted Heath,

“No government dependent upon a democratic vote could possibly agree in advance to the sacrifice that any adequate plan [to build the EU] must involve. The people must be led slowly and unconsciously into their abandonment of their traditional economic defences…”

Lord (Peter) Thorneycroft,

“I have never understood why public opinion about European ideas should be taken into account.”
Raymond Barre, Mayor of Lyons and French Prime Minister

 

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On
At 7:13 am
Comments :Comments Off
 
 

My 50 Reasons to loathe the EU

On this day when the Euro enthusiast are gathering to celebrate the 50th birthday of the European Project by patting themselves on the back for a job well done, whilst in the real world the real people of the European nation states have indicated in recent polls that they are not as enthused with the project as they are supposed to be. And in response to the silly 50 reasons to love the EU in the Independent this week, it occurred to me that now would be as good a time as any to post a few reasons why I oppose the EU.

 

 

 

1. It is undemocratic

http://www.teameurope.info/FSno1-whyundemocratic-FINAL.pdf

2. It has created a political elitist class which is increasingly insulating itself and its policies from public accountability.

3. It has removed the sovereignty of our Parliament in most areas of government power and has therefore reduced our national political debate to the few areas that are still within the remit of the people we elect, which is why the main political parties are so close on so many areas of public concern.

4. It has removed the sovereignty of British Citizens to elect and dismiss their own law makers, by passing so much power to the EU we the votes cannot choose between different policies because the political parties simply do not offer us the choice as they are bound by the EU.

5. Reduced consumer choice- with its bureaucratic mania for controlling everything it has removed choice by insisting that all products conform to it own rules. Instead of equal recognition of products to allow each state to sell into every other state the EU has defined what they may sell.

http://www.google.com/search?q=illegal+tomatoes+&hl=en&start=10&sa=N

6 Harmonisation: Reduces the available produce on the shelf- by listing only those products which may be sold and the cost of having a product enterd on the list is prohibitive. Thus we loose the richness of historic fruit and vegetable diversity and miss out on new products.

http://www.cen.eu/catweb/cwen.htm

7. Mass immigration: uncontrolled mass immigration has a detrimental effect on wages and increases the pressure on our housing transport hospitals etc.

8. REGIONALISATION: The regionalization of Britain has only taken the course it has because of EU influence trough its funding.

9. Take over of Higher education system:

SOCRATES, DELTA, REMTEX, TEMPUS and EUROCIS European Commission’s Human Capital and Mobility (HCM) programme, and funding from the Training and Mobility of Researchers (TMR) and NECTAR programmes CEMP (Creation of European Management Practice) The Jean Monnet Project CORDIS, EU-funded Academic Associations and Organisations

10. Propaganda: The EU using our money to promote its-self trying to convince us that the EU is a wonderful project to us when we do not have the choice in the first place

11. European Document Centres and high street shops in order to “promote and develop the idea of the EU as our nation state and study in the field of European Integration

12. No demos There does not exist a single group of people in respect of whom the EU could be a democracy there is not an EU wide political party, there is not an EU wide press.

13. No mandate: Even if there were or is a European demos, what is done by the Commission is not in response to any expressed or felt need of the citizens. In normal democratic politics you have occasional elections, during which time certain issues are publicly discussed. Whoever wins power has some justification for carrying out whatever programme they were proposing while trying to get elected.

14.Accounts: The EU’s accounts have not been signed off for several years by the EU s own accountants.

15. Lack of Transparency

16. ECJ partiality

The Court of Justice of the European Communities (ECJ) is not an independent court but owes a duty of loyalty to the EU Commission and has been used ion the past to extend the power of the EU beyond the agreed treaties.

17. CAP Common Agricultural Policy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Agricultural_Policy

18. CFP Common Fisheries Policy and the destruction of our fishing industry http://ec.europa.eu/fisheries/cfp_en.htm

19. “new approach” to technical harmonisation. I see the affect of this as totally ridiculous, My electricitian is about 55 years old has been to college to learn his trade and has kept himself up to date by studying the latest proposals yet he is forced to pay an inspector to check hi work for a period of six months so that he can continue in business, my previous electricitian decided he had enough and looked for another job.

http://eureferendum.blogspot.com/2004/11/more-hidden-integration.html

20. EU Arrest Warrant; now we can be arrested in our own home by our own police at the request of a foreign court and extradited to that courts jurisdiction without any protection from our own government even for crimes which are not recognised in Britian.

21. The Euro, although we are not a member of the euro region there is an ongoing attempt to create the Euro as the currency of the whole EU, if we remain in the EU at some stage we will have to convert to the Euro.

22. The EU Constitution, Voted down by the French and Dutch yet still in the background many EU based moves to represent it, either in is its entirety or piecemeal so that we do not get the chance of referendum. The Constitution refounds the EU as an international actor in its own right with its Constitution superior to member states Constitutions and for the first time recognises in a treaty that EU Law is superior to state law. The Berlin Declaration acknowledges the intention to refund the Union and has set a deadline goal of achieving a renewed common foundation for the European Union before the 2009 elections to the European Parliament. For we know that Europe is our common future. If we do then It would be very nice to actually have a voice!

23. Its anti Christian values : There is something fundamentally wrong with an organisation purporting to be democratic, when the view of the EU Parliament is that there is no place for the basic values of millions of its citizens.

24. Socialism; Nothing wrong with socialism but it should be recognised as only one form of political thought to place it at the heart of the constitutional settlement denies other political thought.

25. The cost of membership: The E U will cost every man, woman and child in Britain £873 this year the combined direct and indirect costs in 2007 will amount to £100,000 a minute, or £52.4 billion. Britain has given nearly £200 billion to the EU since joining what was then the EEC in 1973. Even the European Commission has admitted that excessive regulation could be costing up to 12 per cent of GDP. Put it into perspective, just £1 billion will pay for 222,000 hip replacements, or 46,893 nurses, or 38,782 teachers, or 34,585 police officers.

26. ID Cards

27. EU Passports

28. Forced Citizenship of the EU

29. Trade Deficit Before joining the EU the UK had a trading surplus with other EU countries. Today we have a visible trading loss of £100,000 million. Between 1973 - 1993 EU trade registered a £70,000 million loss.

30. Directives: It took 1368 EU Directives to create the Single Market. One directive can cost Industry £1,000,000,000 (e.g. Waste Monitoring. 94/62 - official estimate!). Such EU law is uniquely, and savagely, enforced by huge new armies of UK bureaucrats. Costs and threats of criminal sanctions ruin many small to medium sized firms. For example, 400 abattoirs (half the industry total) only serving local areas, never exporting, were forced to close! In 1973 there were 343 Regulations, 143 Directives and 194 ‘Other’ EU laws. By 1996 these figures were 3070 Regulations, 2964 Directives and 8037 ‘Others’. They bypass UK Parliamentary control using Statutory Instruments and Ministerial Orders. UK Civil Servants, “translating” EU law, always make things far worse.

31. EU Law corpus Juris

32. it can’t last

http://eureferendum2.blogspot.com/2007/03/success-of-eu.html

33. It is attempting to create an armed force I do not believe such an anti democratic organisation should control military force.

34. Massive overregulation, of just about every area of life

35. There is a distinct feeling of alienation between the people and the political leaders.

36. Federalism:

37. The break up of Great Britian as a political entity and the destruction of Britian as our nation state.

38. Lies and misdirection.

39. Fundamental Rights, I do not want the EU to gift me the right to life or the right to freedom of speech etc. Which I already have, only to retain the right to remove it in the interest of the Union.

40. Life has got much worse since we joined the Union.

41. The working time directive: I do not want a Eurocrat in Brussels to dictate how many hours I choose to work.

42. Border control immigration, it is our nation state we pay the bills and we should decide who comes to live and work in our country.

43. Turning our back on our Commonwealth friends when Britian was in dire straits in the last two world wars it was people from our Commonwealth who chose to fight for us, we traded across the globe with these countries.

44. EU Embassies and diplomatic service: The EU is not a nation state it is not my nation state and I do not want it to represent me or my country abroad, I do not want to be forced to use an EU embassy and I certainly do not want to see one in London. There is no legal power for the EU to even set up this service it was one of the proposals in the Constitution which has not been ratified.

45. EU waste management:

46. Road Pricing the Galileo space programme:

47. Rapid Reaction Force: we are spending so much on preparation for this futuristic battlefield force that we have little left to correctly supply our troops for the actions they are being asked to undertake now.

48. Pushing the secular adgenda: Conflicting values, the right to religious freedoms and the right to abortion or gay marriage are contradictory principles. By choosing to promote the secular view the EU denies its own fundamental rights.

49: No perceived limits to the power of the EU: The EU continually extends its power, cooperation in one area is deemed to require cooperation in others the Monnet Method. So an open border policy will eventually lead cooperation in criminal law because we cannot prevent even know criminals from entering the country. This is calculated to eventually lead to the creation of one nation state with one central government.

50: Treason: The crime that dare not speak its name; out ministers swear allegiance to the British state not to the EU, after all we elect them and we pay them and they could not hold their positions of power without taking the oath of allegiance. They should therefore work only for the benefit of the British state and the British people. Instead they agree to proposals in the EU forum which do not benefit the British people and they agree to pass powers away from the British parliament, and allow those we have not elected and cannot dismiss to influence our nation state.



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Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On March 25, 2007
At 10:10 am
Comments :1
 
 

Ownership Unbundling

Just for those who still like to believe the EU is somehow democratic because the Commission is only after all a glorified civil service at the behest of the member states through the Council.

Senior EU officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that Brussels will table a piece of legislation which would force large energy companies to sell off part of their business in order to fully separate production and distribution.

The so-called “ownership unbundling” is seen by Brussels as key to boosting competition and bringing down consumer prices.

According to the summit conclusions, EU leaders approved “effective separation of supply and production activities from network operations, based on independently run and adequately regulated network operation systems which guarantee equal and open access to transport infrastructures and independence of decisions on investment in infrastructure.”

They also agreed that any move towards unbundling should take account of the specific characteristics of the gas and electricity sectors and of national and regional markets.

However the member states argue they have not committed themselves to any specific legal model and “The summit did not call for ownership unbundling,” it would appear that although some nation states including Britian would like to proceed with this others including France and Germany are set against the idea.

Meanwhile, the commission seems to be taking full advantage of the EU states’ wrangling, with its officials saying Brussels “is not going to give up the idea [of ownership unbundling] just because discussion has not finished yet.”

I rather like that “just because the discussion is not finished yet” has the ring of we are not going to wait until you have given your consent but are going to force the issue.

One diplomat told EUobserver in response to the commission’s legal plans, “it was not a surprising move,” given that the EU’s executive arm has been clear about its preference all along.


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Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On March 19, 2007
At 12:27 pm
Comments : 0
 
 

EU fishing policy morally wrong

The EU fisheries commissioner Joe Borg says that the EU fisheries policies that encourage the throwing away of thousands of tonnes of dead fish are “morally wrong” and must be reformed.

According to the United Nations Worldwide, 8 per cent of the catch is discarded, but in some waters around Scotland and Ireland it reaches almost 90 per cent. Up to 880,000 tonnes of fish are thrown back, dead, into the North sea annually.

A recent study found the Dutch beam trawler fleet discarded almost half its catch. This cost it €160m ($210.1m, £108m) annually in future revenues, 70 per cent of the value of its annual landing.

I suppose one shouldn’t carp we have after all only been screaming about this stupidity for so many years that even the Conservative party managed to produce a report on better fishing practices of course Mr Cammaron has dropped the idea and consigned the report to the dustbin along with many other conservative policies. But now when the EU fisheries policy has brought the industry to its knees and practically destroyed stocks of some fish the commissioner finally is thinking about doing something. But he is expecting a tough fight when he presents his plans which seems to include reducing the fishing fleet.


I do not know if this actually makes sense, many fish are thrown back because they would take the boat over its limit, I will wait to see what Eureferendum has to say after all Dr North does know of what he writes.

Full story FT



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Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On February 20, 2007
At 5:18 pm
Comments : 0
 
 

Support for the EU can be equated with a semi religious belief

J Clive Mathews seems to be a firm supporter of a utopian European vision, who nevertheless is prepared to support the EU Nightmare that is in reality the only one on offer, in the hope that it will all work out right in the end.  

Having crossed swords with Nosemonkey on his Blog several times, I have arrived at the eccentric confluence of thoughts that to a certain extent I agree with just about everything he writes, unless he happens to be writing about the EU, it is then that fundamentally I disagree with his position. Perhaps because when he writes about the EU he generally lets his European vision cloud his otherwise excellent judgment.

 
Oddly I might even agree with his vision
To preserve as much as possible of the cultures of the individual nations and regions, a far, far looser banding together is the only solution - a confederation, not a federation, if you will.”

The self admitted inconsistencies in Nosemonkey approach can be clearly seen in the his recent soul searching post Philosophicae Nasalis larvatus* when he writes;

Support for the EU can ONLY be justified by idealism and hope. The reality is currently simply too shoddily organised, too wasteful and too self-satisfied to be deserving of anything approaching enthusiastic support, and is often extremely difficult to defend against the anti-EU lot’s accusations, even when they are entirely unjustified.

Although admitting the problems with the EU he disregards that reality and rather like a celebrant of an ideology, justifies his belief in romantic aspirations for the future and asks us to belive beyond reason. He says it is difficult to defend the EU against accusations, but then goes on to say those are entirely unjustified. Which rather begs the question if the accusations are unfunded- baseless- without foundation- or unjustified why on earth is it so extremely difficult to defend against them?

To be fair Nosemonkey is absolutely open and honest, because he fully accepts the fallibility of his approach. 

“Perhaps an explanation is due… Though I’m afraid that, due to the rampant inconsistencies in my approach to politics, my utter lack of a unified value system, and the fact that I haven’t really thought it all through properly (the following will be written entirely off the top of my head)”

Without trying to Fisk an already admitted off the top of the head post, many of the things mentioned in the post chime with my own views, for instance:

“The biggest mistake of the originators of the EU project was to think that it could all be acheived in their lifetimes. It takes, at the very least, decades to shift ideas on something as fundamental to most people as national identity, and that is what the EU is, at its most basic level, trying to do.”

 One piece of evidence for this is runs thus “It took the best part of three centuries after the conquest of Wales before that principality became a stable part of the union, and (thanks to the Jacobite threat) a good two centuries after the union of the crowns of England and Scotland before they were able peacefully to coexist (and many questions brought by the formal union 300 years ago this year have still not been settled).”

One thing which he might well have added was that there was one hundred years between the union of the English and Scottish Crowns before the union of the states. In that hundred years there was a great deal of negotiations manoeuvring and not least a bloody civil war in England into which Scotland was eventually dragged the Scottish Parliament was dissolved and then later reinstated and in England we ended up with what can only be termed as an (illegal) revolutionary state.   

To selectively quote Nosemonky “I like the idea, I see the potential, but I worry about the reality. I am both optimistic and pessimistic at the same time, both cynical of the chances of and idealistic in my hope for its success. The only thing I am certain of is that the people who are currently providing the guiding hand for the union seem to have an even less clear idea than I do of what it is actually for, and what it should be aiming to be. The whole thing needs to be re-thought - and needs to be re-thought before the remaining good-will evaporates.” He added as a final note “For that way lies disaster.” Many would disagree!

 
In all it would I do not think it would be over fastidious to read the argument that the European Project is a good plan but practically everything about it would need to be changed for it to be successful.   

The problem is I cannot see how we can get from where we are to where Nosmonkey would like to be without totally destroying and unpicking all that the EU has done in the past fifty years.

 
In 1952 Monnet made it absolutely clear what the European project was about, and that without question was a United Sates of Europe, along the same lines as the United Sates of America. That is what was in the minds of the Founding Fathers of the project when the designed the template for the Union, that is reason why we have a Customs Union in the fist place.

 

It might well be argued that not everything has gone to plan, the political union may have been sidelined by the French later in the 1950s but it was only delayed, and replaced with the Monnet Method whereby political union could be advanced under the guise of a common market, but now we are clearly seeing the revival of the political union and the advancement of military integration.    

 
We are already beyond the limits of a confederation and are heading towards a unitary style of central government rather than a federation. A confederation for instance would not require us all to become citizens of the EU, as the rules would only apply to our sovereign nation states of which we were citizens. Of course a confederation is also a road to follow in the creation of either a federation http://www.politicalinformation.net/encyclopedia/Federalism.htm or a Unitary state. http://www.politicalinformation.net/encyclopedia/Unitary_state.htm

 

To assert that Support for the EU can ONLY be justified by idealism and hope. Is one thing but to then make the same claim for the Rejection of British membership of the EU does not make the sense.

 “Where my pro-EU stance comes from my conclusion that Britain (and the majority of other western European countries) are past their prime and likely to continue to decline without banding together for strength in numbers, the “let’s pull out of the EU” case is based on what I’d argue is an even more shaky premise: that despite losing the Empire and the industry which made her the greatest economy in the world, Britain will somehow manage to maintain her position amongst the world’s leading economies and powers ad infinitum, even while existing in splendid isolation."

 

This is shot through with inaccurate assumptions even if he is right that European countries are likely to continue to decline without banding together, that is not an argument for the present and likely future direction of the EU, it is not an argument for creating a powerful central government. Further, to my knowledge EUsceptics do not oppose the EU because we belive in some future of splendid isolation, but because we do not belive the EU offers us anything worth having. We see it as nothing more than an attempt to force a centralised union on the sovereign nation states and the peoples of Europe, we see it as Eurocratic nightmare, where the meanings of words like democracy, freedom of choice, accountability have to be changed to meet new EU definitions which signify nothing like the original meanings, where centrally controlled polling replaces real elections, where instead of a change of government we get a change of management. Where there is absolutely no mechanism available for the people to change the direction because the people have been decisively omitted from the very beginning. In short we belive in democracy, the EU despite all its pretensions and posturing is not only non democratic but anti-democratic.




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Filed under : A solution in search of a problem, The Constitution of the EU, Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On January 8, 2007
At 3:25 pm
Comments : 2
 
 

Fishing days off

It is late so I beg forgiveness for my flight of fancy brought on by this report in the Scotsman;

After 30 odd years of the EU controlling our fishing industry we find ourselves in the unenviable position of to many fishermen chasing to few fish, this despite the fact that we have already cut our fishing fleet to the bone.

Ben Bradshaw, Britain’s fisheries minister, and Ross Finnie, Scotland’s rural affairs minister, have made it clear that the demand by Joe Borg, the European Fisheries Commissioner, for substantial reductions in the number of days skippers will be able to fish next year is totally unacceptable. And yesterday they vowed to fight for a fairer deal for UK trawlermen.

Mr Borg originally called for a 25 per cent cut in the 173 days Scottish skippers can currently spend at sea. On Tuesday he tabled a compromise deal for a 20 per cent reduction. And late yesterday afternoon he tabled a further compromise for a 15 per cent cut which was immediately condemned as “disastrous” by fishermen’s leaders.

The EU idea is that in order to conserve stocks we should cut the fishing fleet and limit the number of days allowed for fishing has not worked, but true to form even thought there are viable alternatives the EU turns its deaf ear and just keeps on plugging away, keeps on demanding further cuts.

I don’t really think my fantasy thoughts would work, but I was just wondering as the EU churns out so many rules and regulations the elitists might like to try to take onboard that which they have forced on our fishermen. Perhaps as they are over-producing in the dictates department, they just might consider cutting down the days they devoted to their work, obviously the fewer days they are at it, the fewer rules and regulations will be produced. Of course they would have to take on board that a cut in pecuniary benefits would go along with their lower production rate. I was thinking that perhaps we could initially hone down the days they were forced to produce to just one or two a month. Eventually we might even be in a position to do away with them altogether, we could then use those MPs we elect to Westminster to fill in the gaps left by the EU elites you know making the laws we want for the benefit of this country.

But then I am forgetting we also have the EU to thank for the Common Agricultural Police sorry I mean Policy, I bet the buggers would be demanding set aside payments.

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On December 21, 2006
At 3:41 am
Comments : 0
 
 

Soon only panty liners will have wings !!

In march An Englishman’s Castle noted that only one in Four new recruits to the Parachute Regiment are being trained to jump because of a shortage of planes. Today Documents leaked to The Sunday Telegraph reveal that no new recruits or even serving members of the Parachute Regiment or airborne forces will be trained in military parachuting from next year until 2011. The cost-cutting programme is being launched after defence chiefs warned that spiralling costs of complex equipment and the demands of military operations would create a financial “black hole” in the MoD of £868 million by the end of the next year.

Eureferendum has been saying for ages that something like this would happen because we are spending so much money on the big stuff we do not have enough left to finance the army for relatively low level operations. If I understand it correctly the big expensive complex equipment is not really going to be much use except in pitched battle situations even if it eventually works, and when it does become operational it will only be of use in operations with other EU states because the computer systems will not be able to talk to USA Forces.

The Telegraph says that Ian Andrews, the 2nd permanent undersecretary of state proposes measures including a “moratorium on recruitment” of civilian manpower and that all “existing contracts for agency or casual staff be terminated”.

Instead of flying to meetings around the world, senior officers should “encourage staff to consider video conferencing, e-mail or the telephone”.

Perhaps Tony and his clique could take the same advice and remain on British soil, at least then they might begin to appreciate that they were elected by the British people to run the British government. But then unlike the Paras and the SAS pigs might fly.

Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On December 17, 2006
At 3:07 am
Comments : 0
 
 

An Historical Failure

The German government is starting as it means to go on.

EU Ministers set out yesterday a timetable for reviving the Constitution, with the hope of concluding negotiations on a new document by late 2008.

In a move to isolate countries which have not ratified, the18 countries that have already ratified will attend a meeting in Madrid on 26 January.

A separate meeting amongst countries that have not yet ratified the Treaty will be held a month later on 27 February.

These meetings will enable Germany (which assumes the presidency 1 January) to formulate a report on the future evolution of the EU Constitution.

Angela Merkel made it clear yesterday that she will use the German Presidency to get the European Constitution talks back on track. she said “I would consider it an historical failure if we do not succeed in working out the substance of the constitutional treaty by the time the next European elections take place,” she said the German government would work “intensively” during the six-month Presidency “so that such a treaty, based on our common values, can go into force.”

EUobserver reports that Jose Barroso is confident that the Constitution will be revived saying, ”I believe we are going to make real progress during the next presidency”.


The European Voice reports Margot Wallström, European commissioner for communication as saying

You cannot disregard citizens. It is important to make sure the renegotiation is not only about horse-trading behind closed doors,” “I know the German presidency says that there should not be too many people involved in the negotiation, but we could invite the European Parliament, national parliaments, the civil society, to show that we welcome contributions on the future of Europe.”

She added that getting input from citizens, national parliaments and the European Parliament would be crucial not only for showing that Europe listened to its people, but also for “anchoring” any new treaty text in the member states and helping it win their approval.

The commissioner urged “a co-ordinated effort, a public consultation on any new text simultaneously in all member states”.

“I am not talking only about referenda: if referenda are not possible, according to national traditions, different ways of consultation can be chosen: in some member states it could go through the national parliament, in others there could be consultation through electronic methods, and so on; the important thing is to consult the people.”

While member states could choose the method, “they should do it the same day, in a co-ordinated way, to give the impression the whole of Europe is engaged in this”.


When will these people get it into their heads that this is not an EU wide initiative, each Nation State Member must decide on its own if it wishes to transfer these powers to the EU, all they are trying to do is to use the numbers of people in some countries like for instance Germany, to suggest that the majority of the people want this, but they will not actually be asking the German people to vote in a referendum. So they will not be country the Germans who do not want it or even proving a majority of them do.



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Our Health Service in Hock

Our Health Service in Hock for many Years to come and for future generations to pay off. Anne Palmer 26.8.2006.

The Health Service WAS ours. We paid for it through our taxes and it remains (for now) free at the point of service. We pay for it in the same way we pay for our politicians to allegedly work for us, and they, on our behalf keep the National Health Service free at the point of delivery.

I am writing this to open the public’s eyes at the way EU law forces Member States to reorganise their welfare services, looking also at the affects of free movement and competition practices on health care. It tends to result in national welfare institutions being replaced by private providers. The process is not being discussed by the public because it is not being debated openly by our MP’s. What comes under “Welfare reform” is not being led by welfare reform at all. The major cause is that EU law as it stands authorises a great deal more interference in welfare than has been thought about. Our National Heath Service that developed here in the UK after the Second World War may be gone forever (if we do not fight for it to remain) and there may never be a public discussion about this but it may disappear without anyone realising it

Welfare is perhaps the last bastion of nationalism, but it is one nationalism that the vast majority of people will most definitely want to keep, it poses however, a problem for the European Union, for how can the Union, that is dedicated to the removal of national borders allow our welfare state to remain as it is when other member state’s welfare systems are not all free at the point of delivery? Are WE the odd one out, yet again?

Even now, although people are concerned at how many hospitals are closing and nurses and doctors are being made redundant, have no idea WHY this is happening, and even less understand perhaps why I am putting the first point of blame on to our involvement in the European Union and my second point of blame to the present Labour Government.

What happens to our Welfare system brings the EU right into our homes because there are very few people that get through life without at least one spell in hospital. I have only touched on the subject lightly because in everything else to do with the EU, it will eventually require our hospitals to be “liberalised”, “opened up” magic words, “open to competition” taken over in the same way that most of our great industries have been taken over.

There are two choices, one, just stand back and let it happen, or two, fight for your health service as those before you fought to get it put there for us all to use free at the point of delivery.

I can remember the day our National Health Service was born. Although it was the Atlee Government that created the National Health Service (NHS) based on the Beverage Report in 1942 Aneurin Bevan carried out the actual introduction of the Service for the launch July 5th 1948. I never met the man although I spent one whole afternoon with Jenny Lee, his wife, in my mid 20’s when taking part in a fashion show. (Organised by the Local Labour group) She was a remarkable dynamic lady.

Before the introduction of the NHS, we as a family used to pay hospital ‘fee’s’ of one (old) penny a week, but at least we were able to have hospital treatment as long as we were ‘in the hospital fund’ club.

The NHS covers four separate (once) publicly funded systems, General Practitioners, Accident and Emergency, long term health care and Dentistry. Since 1948 we have all had the use of them and perhaps taken them for granted far more than we should have done.

There has always been Private Health care for those that could pay for it or prefer the privacy provided by private care. It is usually paid for through private insurance. NHS services on the other hand are “free at the point of delivery” paid for by our taxes and I understand the budget for 2006-7 is £96 billion. It employs over 1 million people and is reputed to be the largest employer in Europe if not the world, depending on who is the teller! We, the people, by way of our taxes, employ them all.

Things seemed to roll along fine until 1997, but the urge to join the euro by Prime Minister Blair started the changes I am writing about here. My attention was drawn to The Times (In 2003), which reported that if (and we may not have that option of “if” one day) we join the Euro, the European Central Bank had warned Britain it might have to give up its National Health Service. Even the Bolton Evening News, May 2003 reported that, “Britain would be forced to scrap the NHS if we joined the euro, so warns the ECB, saying free health care could be slashed to just emergency services”.

Also, “The ECB recommends jettisoning the NHS in favour of private health care, saying Britain’s aging population will send NHS costs soaring, and euro-zone rules would not allow Gordon Brown to borrow necessary funds to foot the bill”. Does Britain have an aging population more so than any other country?

But hold on, this is a Labour Government we are talking about and a Labour Government to boot, that brought the NHS into being, it was their pride and joy, yet we now have a Labour government that wants to end our Sterling currency by joining the euro, has signed up to an EU constitution and knowingly by their actions now, are destroying our NHS system. How can I say that? Because it is privatising our NHS “by the back door”. I have read two quite separate papers that refer to what they are doing as “Enron by the Thames”, and, “an Enron accounting system”.

An informative booklet on the “Services Directive” (A race to the Bottom) by Brian Denny, explains how EU rules attack public services, jobs, pay, pensions and collective bargaining rights”. Plain speaking indeed. “Following the exclusion of healthcare from the Services Directive, the EU Commission immediately announced plans for a new separate directive by the end of 2006 to open up health services to free market competition. Not surprisingly, the ECJ ruling have helped this process along by using internal market arguments first mooted in the Services directive.” If the EU does not get their way in one matter, they will get their way in another.

“Page 5”, “EU Health Spokesman Margaritis Schinas said that the ECJ ruling on patient mobility, ‘clearly states that there is scope for community action to achieve public health objectives’. He went on to claim that patent mobility was covered under Art 95 of EU Treaties covering internal market rules.

As already pointed out above, the ECB report from May 2003 called on Euro zone members to reform health services and although we are not in the Euro, we still have to abide by the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP). One way round the removal of the ability to “borrow” more money was to introduce Public Private Partnership (PPP) or, Private Financing Initiative (PFI) into the Health Sector and turning hospitals into Trusts. According to Brian Denny, these moves have already led to a cash crisis in the NHS and the loss of over 7000 jobs.

The EU also wants more power over healthcare, which does not surprise me at all. Alan Milburn once said though, “As long as there is a Labour Government, the NHS will be funded from general taxation and health care available according to need and not ability to pay”. I think he forgot to mention that the Health Service as we know it would be gone, that it would be slashed with hundreds of excellent nurses and Doctors abandoned, Hospitals closed, with not all medicines available to all.

Is this what all this is about? To come into line with the ECB? So that we can abandon sovereignty over our sterling currency and reserves or the authority to control our interest rates? Only the rich will be able to have peace of mind if they fall ill for they will be the only ones that will be able to afford to pay. The elderly, old and poor will no longer be cared for. Vote for Labour?

According to the World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3860 March 2006 (By Jack M Mintz and Michael Smart), “Incentives for Public Investment under Fiscal Rules” (page 10) “To produce health services, governments employ doctors and nurses and construct hospital buildings. The hospital buildings are obviously capitol inputs used in producing health services and should be amortized under capitol budgets and doctor and nurses salaries should be expensed. The health services, however, are arguably consumption goods to reduce pain and suffering even though an element of public capitol might be entailed if current health services improve the long-run productivity of workers (who later remit taxes to the government). Some judgment is needed to determine whether any health service expenditure should amortise under public accounts since a majority of health expenditures tend to be focussed at the end of a person’s life”.

(Page 12) “The Maastricht Treaty contains a provision requiring member states to avoid running “excessive” deficits, whether or not they have adopted the euro. A protocol to the treaty specifies in turn that members’ fiscal stance is to be judged by two criteria; whether the budget deficit is less than 3 percent of GDP, and whether the total government debt exceeds 60 percent of GDP. If the Council determines a deficit is excessive, there is a procedure to encourage its elimination. The Council may issue warnings and impose deposit requirements and, eventually, fines. The SGP corresponds to the provisions of the Maastricht excessive deficits procedure, but it clarifies the terms, introduces monitoring procedures, and it gives the Council greater teeth in the event of violations. Under the SGP, deficits may exceed the 3 percent level if the excess is “exceptional, temporary, and limited in size”. Some discretion is accorded to the Council in determining whether this provision should apply”

(Page 13)“The UK has also moved to accrual accounting for financial reporting. For budgetary purposes, the UK Government focuses on two main “flow” measures of the fiscal stance.

(i) adherence to the golden rule is measured by the current budget surplus, defined as difference between tax revenues and current public spending (including depreciation):

(ii) the government also reports public sector net borrowing (PSNB). Both measures are accrual-based concepts: the PSNB can be contrasted with the previous use of the Public Sector Net Cash Requirement (PSNCR), which was essentially the cash deficit.

“ In particular, proceeds from privatisation and other asset sales are excluded from the PSNB, but not the PSNCR. Both the current budget surplus and the PSNB are cyclically adjusted before the fiscal rules are applied”.

“These rules impact on public investment spending. The UK for example is WELL WITHIN the 60 percent gross debt limit specified in the Maastricht Treaty (its own 40 per cent net debt limit is surely more binding). Net borrowing in the UK is currently about 1,8 percent of GDP, and substantially less on cyclically adjusted bases. While an increase in investment there is planned, it may be that the UK Government’s reliance on largely off-budget Public Finance Initiatives means that the Maastricht deficit limit is unlikely ever to be more binding than the golden rule policy” End of quotes.

Although this paper is mainly about the NHS, and the mess we are in through PFI/PPP, the latter two have been used in many areas, the London underground for one major venture. Recorded in Hansard for the 24th July 2006, Col 1387W A question was asked about PFI Contracts. The answer given was, “There are currently over 500 projects that have been signed and are now in operation. Around a further 200 projects have reached financial close, but are yet to become operational. The combined capitol value of all signed projects is over £48 billion. Information on PFI projects that have reached financial close may be found from the ‘PFI Signed Projects List’ on the Treasury’s public website”.

“At the time of the Budget around 80 projects were at the preferred bidder stage and around 155 had yet to appoint a preferred bidder. The estimated capitol value of these projects is around £26 billion”. End of Quote.

I am looking at PFI as, ‘on the never, never’. If I ran up hire purchase debts into the hundred thousands, it would not just take me thirty years to pay off, but it seems as if I might expect my children and grandchildren to continue paying off my debts long after I have left this earth. From all the businesses that I have found, this Country will ‘be in hock’ if not bankrupt, and what for eh? So that we can either eventually join the euro, and/or stay in the European Union and be governed by it forever? How can one Government, a Labour Government at that, that is supposed to be all for the people, run up so much debt and what on earth for? Labour has taken something very special from which each and every one of us at some time in our lives, have been glad the NHS is there for us, yet is prepared to see it trashed just to remain in what is, without doubt, about turning into a federal, political state and a totalitarian state at that. Many MPs we now know, (and can prove) knew that from before we joined the European Community.

My poor father, a very strong true Labour man, must be spinning in his grave. Mind you, he would not recognise these men of Labour as the Labour’ he once so admired.

George Monbiot woke up to what was going on in this field on 27th June 2002 when he wrote, “PPPs are a Public Fraud”. He began his article with “Poor visibility corrupts; invisibility corrupts absolutely.” He wrote, (please remember this was written in 2002), “ As the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) points out, the government allows public bodies to reclaim the VAT on privately funded projects, but not on publicly backed schemes, thereby favouring private finance by 17.5 percent. National health Service trusts have to pay the Treasury a 6 per cent “capitol charge” on the buildings they own. Private builders have no such obligation. The Government gives local authorities an annual grant of 11.5 percent of the value of the Public Finance Initiative scheme they commission, but there is no corresponding sweetener for publicly funded projects. Private financiers are permitted to use “discount rates” way out of line with inflation. This false accounting masks the appalling value for money offered by private finance. As the British Medical Journal (BMJ) report shows, 39 per cent of the price of PFI hospitals is incurred by the extra cost of borrowing. Governments have a better credit rating than corporations, so they can borrow more cheaply. As interest is levied across the 25 or 30 years of the project, small differences in rates contribute vastly to the cost.”

He asks, “So why is the Government forcing public bodies to fleece the taxpayer? In 1997, it claimed that the purpose of the PFI was to reduce government borrowing. But PFI does not reduce borrowing: instead it defers and extends it.” One of the headlines used was, “The policy has the potential to bankrupt the UK”, and I believe that to be true. End of quotes.

How on earth did we get into this mess? Under funding of the NHS to begin with? In the mid 1990’s, under the Conservative Government of John Major, a number of hospitals effectively opted out of central NHS to become Trusts. Can anyone else remember the waste of money on new logos? At around the same time we started to see or hear of hospitals and medical centres being built using PFI. Which as we already know involves the building of public buildings by private companies, which are then “rented back” to the NH Trust at a higher long-term price which is only to be expected because the firms have to make a profit to stay in business. Under the NHS, the taxpayer owns the hospitals and paid the salaries. Where is our compensation for losing that asset? We are expected to pay far more now under PFI.

This disastrous PPP/PFI adventure has almost gone off the scale, under New Labour. To me, we are beginning to see ‘rationing’, we are being kept fit, we have to lose weight (might we not be treated if we are overweight?) We have to stay healthier so we are discouraged every which way from smoking. (Will we be refused treatment if we DO still smoke?) Our children may not be allowed the “Gob-stoppers” we once used to stuff our mouths with because the “We are watching what you eat” patrol are on the lookout, what the children eat at meal times. (Animal farm was but a comic compared to today’s lot)

In the “Health Unions Briefing for MPs”. July 2006, it becomes obvious the Unions are concerned, for they “recognise that across England (Scotland etc are devolved) NHS organisations are being forced to make cuts which affect patient services. Trusts have been told by the Government that they have to pay off their debts by the end of the year and are having to cut jobs and services in order to meet this target”. “Nearly one third of all trusts are in debt. There have been a growing number of compulsory redundancies in trusts across England. Although these have, largely, been dealt with through freezing posts and natural waste there are a whole range of measures taking place such as closure of departments and severe cuts in education and training, which will have a huge impact on standards of care and services to patients, both in the short and long term.”

Although there is a great deal more to this subject, I will say ‘finally’ in looking to Hansard on the last day before recess in the House of Commons where there is a mixture of questions and comments from different MPs that reveal what is happening (or not happening) in their area re Health care and in the hospitals. It is not only enlightening, but also frightening. It may well bring anger in the revealing. The closing of wards, beds and hospitals could be prevented if we came out of the European Union now.

We could build and pay up front for the hospitals we need if we did not have to obey EU laws or pay our alleged “Share” of the EU budget that is wasted, wasted, wasted. We could do what we liked with our own money; we most certainly would not have to be held back by the Stability and Growth Pact. We would become a sovereign State once again and our own politicians would have to do the job we pay them for from the day they are elected. The Union is still attempting to become the all-powerful state it wants to be, (It is stealthily and undemocratically working toward that end now) it must become one without the United Kingdom of Great Britain for we will indeed be “Better off out”. Anne Palmer.

Notes: Others quoted in the paper above. Jack Mintz is the Deloitte and Touch LLP Professor of Taxation. J L Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and President and CEO of the CD Howe Institute. Michael Smart is Associate Professor, Dept of Economics at the University of Toronto. The paper was prepared as part of the World Bank’s Latin American Regional studies program.

Last day before recess,

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmhansrd/cm060725/debtext/60725-1069.htm I urge you to read it.

Works noted and read, from Dr Mica Panic (Fellow, Selwyn College Cambridge and Vice Chairman, UN Committee for development Policy. George Monbiot is the author of Captive State: The corporate takeover of Britain. He is also honorary Professor at the Department of Politics in Keele.

Bevan Brittan LLP. Works of Sir Peter Gershon. Works of Professor Allyson Pollock in Chair of Health and Policy and Health Services Research at UCL and Director of R & D at UCL Hospitals NHS Trust. Work of Michael Burnett, Lecturer-EIPA Maastricht. Government Research Papers on PFI

COM(2004) 327 (30.4.2004)


Filed under : Would we not be Better off Out
By Ken
On August 28, 2006
At 7:50 am
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EU Maritime Policy

Why did the British need the EU Constitution to explain where the Falkland Islands stood as regards THEIR overseas territories. Did ‘todays’ people not understand why we went to war, or so many of our young people lost their lives in so doing?

Perhaps this re-inforces my reasoning re the EU’s Green Consultation Paper COM (2006) 275 7.6.2006 “Towards a\ future Maritime Policy for the Union: A European Vision for the Oceans and Seas”. I hope many people respond to this Green Paper this may be the nearest thing they get to a referendum. If we do not win this argument with the British Government or the EU, the eU will control all our seas and oceans and everything in those waters, from every grip of sand