Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Will Rubbish prove the 'Tipping Point ' for the EU in Britain?

Even the BBC, read here, and its flagship current affairs radio propaganda programme the Today show has come clean over where the problems over Britain's garbage problems truly emanate. This morning on their news broadcasts they have been quiveringly reporting that the country could face fines of up to 180 million pounds a year from the EU, (probably more if the pound falls as a result of a decade of similar incompetence in the economics field). AND added in a more detailed report, sounding even more astounded, that some recyclable items can only be treated in Germany. Well surprise, surprise! Amazing stuff for the majority of the population, however, who may have swallowed the BBC, successive Governments and most of the media's misleading line that we have lost no sovereignty and the various successors to the Common Market were nothing more than harmless market arrangements designed to reward various rejects and misfits from Britain's otherwise honourable political system. Well phooey, if the EU Reform Treaty debate to be announced at the State Opening of Parliament next week, cunningly timed to axe two PMQs, is to be given the amount of parliamentary time being rumoured, then at least the background facts will be slowly leaking out to Britain's betrayed and gullible public who I trust will not flinch from properly advising their MPs of their individual election promises regarding the referendum on the Treaty. The Independent, linked from here, today carries Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's assertion that the constitution remains intact: "The proposed institutional reforms, the only ones which mattered to the drafting convention, are all to be found in the Treaty of Lisbon. They have merely been ordered differently and split up between previous treaties."

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