CheeseRemind us, what do the UK and Switzerland have in common?
End of the Euro
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Perhaps unwittingly, you have hit upon the reason why the french have been so narky lately. They are jealous of our cheese industry. We now make more artisan cheeses than they do. Their miffedness knows no bounds.maudibe wrote:CheeseRemind us, what do the UK and Switzerland have in common?
"Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the obedience of fools". Douglas Bader.
- Potemkin Villager
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Excellent rail systems?maudibe wrote:CheeseRemind us, what do the UK and Switzerland have in common?
Cameroon has shown all the skills of a petulant drama queen leading
a party with more than it's fair share of little England rabid raving loonies.
One really worrying thought is how he would react if put in a tight
pressured corner where possible deployment of England's, oops sorry the UK's, nuclear weapons was being considered.
.
Overconfidence, not just expert overconfidence but general overconfidence,
is one of the most common illusions we experience. Stan Robinson
is one of the most common illusions we experience. Stan Robinson
- woodpecker
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Cheese-eating surrender monkeys no more?eatyourveg wrote:Perhaps unwittingly, you have hit upon the reason why the french have been so narky lately. They are jealous of our cheese industry. We now make more artisan cheeses than they do. Their miffedness knows no bounds.maudibe wrote:CheeseRemind us, what do the UK and Switzerland have in common?
Well, he [we] can't launch them without US approval anyway so I wouldn't worry to much about it, or at least Cameron's role in it.Roger Adair wrote:One really worrying thought is how he would react if put in a tight pressured corner where possible deployment of England's, oops sorry the UK's, nuclear weapons was being considered.
- Potemkin Villager
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Thanks Chris that has cheered me up no end! Not that I am suggestingclv101 wrote:Well, he [we] can't launch them without US approval anyway so I wouldn't worry to much about it, or at least Cameron's role in it.Roger Adair wrote:One really worrying thought is how he would react if put in a tight pressured corner where possible deployment of England's, oops sorry the UK's, nuclear weapons was being considered.
he is nursing any atavistic urge to nuke those dreadfull French and Germans.
Overconfidence, not just expert overconfidence but general overconfidence,
is one of the most common illusions we experience. Stan Robinson
is one of the most common illusions we experience. Stan Robinson
- UndercoverElephant
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It is indeed a very different kettle of fish. The fifty states of the US have far more in common with each other, culturally and historically, than the 27 of the EU. Remember that not so long ago even Turkey was trying to join. Can you seriously imagine being part of the same nation as Turkey? I know I can't.snow hope wrote:America makes it work with 50 states, so it is possible, but I know that is a different kettle of fish.....UndercoverElephant wrote: It doesn't work as a 27-state organisation.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
- biffvernon
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They're putting women on the Vanguard subs next year. Anything might happen.clv101 wrote:Well, he [we] can't launch them without US approval anyway so I wouldn't worry to much about it, or at least Cameron's role in it.Roger Adair wrote:One really worrying thought is how he would react if put in a tight pressured corner where possible deployment of England's, oops sorry the UK's, nuclear weapons was being considered.
[/coat]
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- Lord Beria3
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina ... y-law.html
Forget the Cameron/European spat, this is the serious business here.
This is a stunning and chilling statement. What does the Pentagon know that we don't thanks to their listening on the private conversations/documents of the European banking and political elite?You could call it Hooverism written into EU treaty law, though that traduces Hoover. The harsher truth is that it replicates the "500 deflation decrees" of Pierre Laval, later shot by a Free French firing squad.
It is happening just as Europe’s banks slash their books to meet the EU’s core Tier I capital ratios of 9pc. The Basel-based Financial Stability Board - the collective voice of the world’s monetary authorities - fears the banks could inflict a €2.4 trillion crunch over "coming months", just as Euroland crashes back into recession. It is hard to imagine a more reckless recipe for social disorder than to combine these shocks at once.
Europe’s mishandling of its affairs is now grave enough to alarm the Pentagon, presumably well-briefed by the DIA, NSA, and ECHELON network of electronic eaves-dropping.
"We are extraordinarily concerned by the health and viability of the euro because in some ways we’re exposed literally to contracts but also because of the potential of civil unrest and break-up of the union,’’ said General Martin Dempsey, chair of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Forget the Cameron/European spat, this is the serious business here.
Peace always has been and always will be an intermittent flash of light in a dark history of warfare, violence, and destruction
If you're not at the table, you are on the menu
Can't remember who said that in the last couple of days of commentary, but it seems like a strong idea to me. London's financial standing as a point of exchange in Europe (for whatever such things will be worth in coming times) is at risk here, isn't it?
Can't remember who said that in the last couple of days of commentary, but it seems like a strong idea to me. London's financial standing as a point of exchange in Europe (for whatever such things will be worth in coming times) is at risk here, isn't it?
The purpose of the EU is was and always will be the creation of a United States of Europe, or a Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.snow hope wrote:The EU was all about creating the conditions under which war could not occur again I thought?
It was never a free trade arewa, it was a customs union.
Snow
Americans states have far more independance from the federal government than EU nations have from brussels.America makes it work with 50 states, so it is possible, but I know that is a different kettle of fish.....
America is Switzerland writ large, EUrope is not....
America also has massive, permanant fiscal transfers. 10% of US GDP is money taken from rich states and goven to poor ones, is the UK going to abolish the NHS and give the money to Greece, forever?
All
What have we achieved by "being at the table" for the last 50 years?
Why can Australia manage trade with China without political union?
Why dont you argue South Africa and Zimbabwe should be merging?
The purpose of the EU is ever closer union.
We can either accept nthat purpose and follow through, or we can not and leave, we cannot change it, nor should we try.
I'm a realist, not a hippie
- UndercoverElephant
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Some great headlines on the BBC at the moment.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16135247
But more on-topic:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16133286
Divide and conquer....?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16135247
No shit, Sherlock!RBS woes caused by poor decisions, says FSA
But more on-topic:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16133286
Well, this is interesting. We have a Tory prime minister who has just done something his own party were desperate for him to do, but which has apparently put the fear of God into Big Business. That doesn't normally happen, and I think it makes clear a growing conflict between the "national interest" (where this refers to the interests of the rich, tory-voting upper classes) and the interests of multinational big business. The Tories want to repatriate power from Brussels, but in doing so they now find themselves on the other side of a major disagreement with the evil megacorporations.Big business deeply troubled by Cameron's veto
Divide and conquer....?
Last edited by UndercoverElephant on 12 Dec 2011, 12:39, edited 1 time in total.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)