Glyn Ford, the former Labour MEP for the South West of England and now lobbyist for uber-schmoozy lobbyists in Brussels G+ has come out in favour of selling arms to China. I cannot see from the 2010 list of clients where this comes from but that was 11 months ago.
He suggests that they might be a little naughty at times, but you know they are all right reallty. And he has been banging their drunm quite loudly recently, see here,
Tell that to the Falun Gong, tell that to An wei Wei, tell that to the Tibetan people.
I hope they are stuffing your vile jaws with Yuan Mr Ford, and I hope you choke on them.
Home » Archives for November 2011
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Former Labour MEP demands that we sell arms to China
Ambitions writ large
My friend and your Herman Van Rompuy has been letting his ambition show again. This time to a collection of the EU diplomatic corps in Brussels,
Firstly, as regards economic convergence, we need to examine for instance whether to go beyond the so-called "sixpack" in terms of further macroeconomic surveillance, and how to strengthen the Euro Plus Pact.Make no bones about it, this is the way that the EU is thinking. Common Tax, common debt, more financial regulation and common social policies.
Secondly, in terms of fiscal discipline, should we go further in terms of the automaticity of the sanctions provided for under the Excessive Deficit Procedure? Should we provide, in extreme cases, for further sanctions (such as a suspension of voting rights or structural funds) or power for a central authority to intervene in national budgetary procedures?
Thirdly and finally, in terms of economic union, is there a need for harmonisation in certain areas such as taxation or even some social fields? Should there be a form ofmutualisation of public debt? What further regulations are needed for the financial sector?
All this in order to achieve something with the language that takes Banker jargon to a new level,
"We have come a long way from the empty or de-credibilised tool-box I discovered when I took office two years ago"
Errr, a de-credibilised tool box?
Tin Foil Hat Alert : Masons meet EU Presidents
This event is taking place today
Amusingly the press release to go with it rather fails to mention the Masonic aspect of the whole affair.
Today Commission President José Manuel Barroso received leading representatives of philosophical and non-confessional organisations at the headquarters of the European Commission in Brussels for a meeting which he co-chaired together with Jerzy Buzek, President of the European Parliament, and Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council. Participants discussed the promotion of rights and liberties in Europe's neighbourhood and in the European Union itself.You would be none the wiser reading this now would you?
However out of 16 invitees 10 are Lodge bosses, alongs side the Humanist association.
But reading this one might be a little concerned that the Freemasons are now in it.
The representatives of philosophical and non-confessional organisations welcomed the EU’s engagement to promote and protect democratic rights and liberties inside the European Union and beyond. They expressed their readiness to work side by side with the European institutions to promote democracy, pluralism, the rule of law, human rights and social justice which are indispensable in democratic societies.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Annonymity in the Press
A letter appears today in the Wirral Globe attacking the UKIP MEP Paul Nuttal,
I SEE Euro MP Paul Nuttall was once again incensed to write in to complain about new proposed anti-smoking legislation.We can go through the arguements as to this correspondent's point (I think they are sort of accepting that the science of the BMA is dicey here, cripes even the BMA have admitted it). About the meaning of freedom and responsibility and the limits of the state.
It is particularly interesting to see him criticise scientific evidence, something that the UKIP party he's a member of has little regard for and often cherry picks published papers to suit its own agenda.
He objects to the statistic that second-hand smoke in the enclosed environment of a car exposes to passengers to 23 times more toxins than a smokey bar.
If we were to suppose that it were merely only ten times more toxic, I struggle to see how he could possibly find objection in policies designed to protect the vulnerable.
It is a fact that second-hand smoke is very harmful to those exposed to it, particularly children.
It is a morally reprehensible view that a smoker's "right" to smoke supersedes the right of others to breath clean air.
But that isn't my point of highlighting the story. It is this,
Name and address supplied.Eh, an anonymous attack letter in the local press?
What on earth is that about?
So I phoned the Globe and asked them what their policy was, and they told me that anybody writing to them on any subject can request annonymity.
Which is just strange.
I wonder what this correspondent feared? That Paul would rock up round to their house and blow smoke through their letter box?
Maybe the ECB should rethink that
Noticed by Annie Lowrey the economic policy reporter for the New York Times is this rather delightful competion on the ECB webpage.
Participate in the “Euro Run competition France 2011”;It appears to me that the markets are doing just that.
Monday, November 28, 2011
The gushing ingenu
Herman Van Rompuy is off to the White House. All terribly big stuff, no doubt to see if he can persuade Obama to ban Ratings agencies or to get the Fed to come up with some cash.
But his press officer Dana is having a fit of the Pooterish flutters
@Dana_CouncilAww bless.
Nice! The @WhiteHouse retweeted Pres. Van Rompuy @euhvr. #USEUSummit on Twitter :) http://pic.twitter.com/3uJDus2y
Eurotrail: Losing the plot
I have just received an invite to an event, normal stuff on the internal mail. Of course it includes the normal cocktails at 6.30.
The event is called
THE EUROTRAIL – RE-THINKING REALITIESIt self describes thusly,
The EuroTrail - Re-thinking Realities is an ongoing project of critical reflections and action-oriented proposals about Europe’s contemporary society and public culture, related to global transitionsEh?
So I went and had a look, and I am not much wiser.
So I probe a little deeper
During the EU-presidency trio in 2010-2011 of Spain, Belgium and Hungary, a common project has been developed to explore, in a multidisciplinary and open reflection, the emergence of Europe in a context of globalization, deterritorialization and complex cultural dynamics. Indeed, the reflection about contemporary Europe should rise above the level of issues such as identity, ethnic conflicts, the nation-state, religious tolerance and essentialist cultural values. The complexity of today’s society calls for a new input in academic, political and public thought, in order to deal with the countless less or more unpredictable events and interactions which take place in today's local and global social world. The current reality asks for a focus on interactions in multiple contexts and networks.God it sounds like a psuedo Marxist seminar run by a student group.
Designing for bears
Really odd tweet from the European Commission this morning,
The video is here.
Weird for a number of reasons. It is insufferably twee. It is hardly what you should expect from the official twitter feed of the European Commission.
Look chaps, you are the twitter voice of a vast impersonal apparat. So keeping to bland fact based stuff is the right thing. This doesn't make you cute and human, it is inappropriate. Individual Commissioners and others within the system, yes go ahead, show your human side, but not this feed.
And then there is the content. The pay off line is this,
"Audience is feared and respected".The problem is that we all know that you, the Commission neither fear nor respect your audience, the peoples of Europe. You hold them in disdain and contempt.
Oh no we can't
I missed this last week, but this is how the European parliament advertised the big set piece debate on European Government.
And here is the text that accompanies the image
Herman Van Rompuy
"Deepening economic union by mutualising public debt"
In his view, there are three main courses of action on the road to economic governance in the EU: strengthening economic convergence, improving fiscal discipline and deepening economic union.
And some of the methods being envisaged to carry out these actions are hard-hitting: suspension of structural funds to enforce fiscal discipline or deepening economic union by mutualising public debt between Eurozone members.
“We need fiscal discipline and economic integration focused on growth,” Van Rompuy explained, “not just to punish the sinners but also to link our policies, to demonstrate that we share a common destiny.”
And what about the issue of sovereignty in all this?
The President of the European Council tackled that question head-on: “We need to acknowledge that this means a sharing of sovereignty for all members of the eurozone.”
Deepening Economic Union by ensuring that everybody is broke.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Did he really mean that?
I ask, because from my reading Cameron is admitting that he should be holding a referendum.
Why do you refuse to give the British people a referendum on the EU, despite your earlier cast-iron guarantee?So far so predictable. The answer, however is odd.
"I made a policy of having a referendum on the Lisbon treaty, and if the Lisbon treaty had been still extant at the time of government, we would have had a referendum on the Lisbon treaty. I don't believe Britain should leave the European Union, but I do believe there are powers we can retrieve from Europe to have a better balance."Ignoring the statement of the absurd Tory policy of wishng that the EU would hand back its powers. No it is the comment,
if the Lisbon treaty had been still extant at the time of government, we would have had a referendum on the Lisbon treaty.Errr... it is still extant.
So can we have our referendum please?
Friday, November 25, 2011
PA begins to notice UKIP
Pretty blunt stuff on last night's results last night,
TORIES BATTERED BY LIBDEMS AND UKIP
Tories crashed to a humiliating defeat in the latest council by-elections, being forced from first to third place in a south east England stronghold.
Liberal Democrat Alex Slater gained on a huge swing at Hazlemere South, Wycombe District, Buckinghamshire.
There was also a shock showing by Ukip which came from nowhere to take more than a third of the votes.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
What is Liz Truss wasting our time for
I can hardly believe this, next Wednesday in the House of Commons our pointless representatives will be debating, and I kid you not,
4:30 pm - 5:00 pm: Elizabeth Truss - Government policy on the use of calculators in schoolsThis is wrong in conception, completion and just about everything.
What on earth is the silly woman on about. There should not be, must not be a Government policy on the use of calculators in schools.
It is none of the Government's business.
Ideally rules should be set by the teacher in the class. End of story.
(I suppose the exam board could make a rule for those taking its exams about calculator use - but that is the extent of it)
In what state regulated universe can it be possible that anybody thinks that the state has a role at such a micro level.
Go away. We don't want you sticking your piggy little noses into every bit of people's buisness.
Is it any wonder that the people of Europe hold Eurocrats in contempt
This self serving rubbish is what gets up people's noses.
Letter to the College from the Commission Staff.
Subject: The new Staff Regulations
We, the co-workers of the European Commission, are deeply worried by the risk of reducing the dynamic of the European cooperation.
In the current crisis, European countries cannot weaken their main policy and operational tool to design effective countermeasures. The European Union is the only obvious credible force because it is the only structure which can bring solutions at the same scale than the problems faced. If each country is logically preoccupied by the future of its own citizens, no Member States would be sincerely ready to go and fight alone this global battle.
In order to ensure the best possible defence, the European Union needs powerful institutions, capable of competing with the other actors challenging our socio-economic standards. In this context, we can accept to show our concrete solidarity, even if this is insignificant economically, in order to send a positive political message, but we refuse to change the working conditions of the institutions personnel in a way that would jeopardise their strength and quality of action. The quality of the human resources, which is directly related to the attractiveness of the working conditions, is essential for building a powerful and proactive Europe, capable of resisting the continuous attack of its model.
We therefore fully support the resolution adopted on 9 November by the Interinstitutional General Assembly of the personnel gathered by the Common Front of Unions and invite the College to reach a compromise with the Common Front, with a view to presenting to the legislator an agreed balanced and fair regulation, safeguarding the independence and highest quality of the European Public Function.
Or in other words, we want more pay and better perks because we the Trade Unions of the most coddled public sector workers in the Western World are the only bulwark against barbarianism - or the great unwashed public who should just shut up and pay more taxes.
What is interesting is I have had a number of requests from people within the Eurocrat world asking me to publicise this letter.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Pearson probes, HMG wriggles over the FTT
Lord Sassoon has given what looks like a pretty robust answer to UKIP peer, Lord Pearson's, question on the Financial Transaction Tax,
The Commission has put forward a proposal to introduce a financial transaction tax under Article 113 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Proposals put forward under Article 113 require unanimity in the Council of Ministers, giving the UK Government a veto over any such proposal. The Government oppose a European financial transaction tax.But hold on a moment. What has the Government committed itself to. At first reading it looks like they will veto the FTT proposal, and if so there would be much breathing out in relief in the City.
In addition, the Commission has put forward a proposal under Article 311 to use revenues from its proposed financial transaction tax to part-fund the EU budget. Article 311 also requires unanimity in the Council of Ministers, giving the UK Government a veto over any such proposal. The Government oppose any new taxes to fund the EU budget.
But have they? I don't think so. Take a look again at what they say, and you can see that it is no such guarantee.
Essentially Lord Sasoon has said,
"We oppose the tax, we have a veto".or in other words,
"I want to go to Brighton, I have a car".That the Minister would like to go to Brighton, and that he has a car is of no importance, what we want to know is if he will use his car to go to Brighton.
By not specifying his use of a car to take him to Brighton, when it would be very easy to do given he is possesion of a fine pair of wheels, one must suspect that the Government has no intention of using it. What is more, from the way that they have behaved in the past, one must come to the conclusion that they might well to go to Littlehampton instead if their continental friemnds persuade them to.
'Icebergs forrard purser?', 'Full steam ahead'
Remember this?
At times one almost has to feel pity for EU Commissioners. They are like salesmen for tape cassettes after the invention of the CD.
They have a product which everybody knows, is used to and in the past loved, but mow their are better options, more reliable and not nearly as liable to snarl up.
However ther job makes them say things they must know, when infront of their bathroom mirror are ridiculous. Their product is slowly dieing, the market is shrivelling, but they habve signed the contract and must keep on going out their trying to sell it to a world that has cottoned on that they are the past, and nothing, but nothing will ever bring the glory days back.
So it is with Commissioner Štefan Füle. He is quoted as saying,
the further expansion of the EU is a solution to the current “systematic” crisis in the EUHe went on with his theme,
There are even politicians who have not had problems drawing lines between the current problems and expansion. That’s nonsense. Expansion is not part of the problem but a solution,”He just doesn't get it. Those countries that want to join the EU do it for a number of reasons, not least the massive transfer of monies to them, which their taxpayers will not have to fund, and the ability to export large numbers of workers into places that have higher wages and thus reduce the cost to their own states of welfare provisions. Not something that the current populations of the EU are that happy about.
Of course this attitude of believing the impossible might stem from his personal hinterland,
Füle, 49, studied at the Charles University and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, where many of the top functionaries of the Soviet Union’s European satellite states were educated. He was a member of Communist Party of Czechoslovakia from 1982 to 1989.Communists were always good at believing in impossible things.
Monday, November 21, 2011
Orthography, foreign places names and affectation
One of those minor niggles that gets to my curmudgeonly heart is the fashion amongst our chattering classes to ditch tradition British/Englsih names for foriegn places with by nodding to local authenticity. It is all part of a self-destructive and tendancy, and seems to me silly. Not only that we seem to be the only country that engages in this sort of 'lowlier than thou' behaviour.
What I didn't know is that this aspect of the British cringe has been going on for years and years, indeed for well over a century.
I recently had the good fortune to find a rather fine 1907/10 edition of "With Clive in India" by G.A. Henty. And a splendid read it is,
However it is his evisceration of the affectation of changing orthography that really struck me as relevant now, and obviously then,
A word as to the orthography of the names and places. An entirely new method of spelling Indian words has lately been invented by the Indian authorities. This is no doubt more correct than the rough-and-ready orthography of the early traders, and I have therefore adopted it for all little-known places. But there are Indian names which have become household words in England, and should never be changed; and as it would be considered a gross piece of pedantry and affectation on the part of a tourist on the Continent, who should, on his return, say he had been to Genova, Firenze, and Wien, instead of Genoa, Florence, and Vienna; it is, I consider, an even worse offence to transform Arcot, Cawnpoor, and Lucknow, into Arkat, Kahnpur, and Laknao. I have tried, therefore, so far as possible, to give the names of well-known personages and places in the spelling familiar to Englishmen, while the new orthography has been elsewhere adopted.Quite right too. The idea that the Florentines would London anything other than Londra is absurd, and rightly so.
A lso pleasantly surprising in that Henty, after rightly singing Robert Clive's military prowess over his destruction of French interests on the sub-continent, then lets rip at Clive for his financial and moral behaviour,
The history of these intrigues is the most unpleasant feature in the life of Clive... The squadron was to have two million and a half rupees, and the same amount was to be paid for the army. Presents amounting to six millions of rupees were to be distributed between Clive, Major Kilpatrick, the governor, and the members of the council. Clive's share of these enormous sums amounted to two million, eighty thousand rupees. In those days, a rupee was worth half a crown. Never did an English officer make such a bargain for himself.Hardly blind hagiography
But even this is not the most dishonorable feature of the transaction. Omichund had, for some time, been kept in the dark as to what was going forward; but, obtaining information through his agents, he questioned Mr. Watts concerning it. The latter then informed him of the whole state of affairs, and Omichund, whose services to the English had been immense, naturally demanded a share of the plunder.
Whether or not he threatened to divulge the plot to the nabob, unless his demands were satisfied, is doubtful. At any rate, it was considered prudent to pacify him, and he was accordingly told that he should receive the sum he named. Clive, and the members of the council, however, although willing to gratify their own extortionate greed, at the expense of Meer Jaffier, determined to rob Omichund of his share. In order to do this, two copies of the treaty with Meer Jaffier were drawn up, on different coloured papers. They were exactly alike, except that, in one, the amount to be given to Omichund was entirely omitted. This was the real treaty. The other was intended to be destroyed, after being shown to a friend of Omichund, in order to convince the latter that all was straight and honorable.
All the English authorities placed their signatures to the real treaty, but Admiral Watson indignantly refused to have anything to do with the fictitious one; or to be a party, in any way, to the deceit practised on Omichund. In order to get out of the difficulty, Clive himself forged Admiral Watson's signature to the fictitious treaty.
A more disgraceful transaction was never entered into, by a body of English gentlemen... that Clive, the gallant and dashing commander, should have stooped to it, is sad, indeed.
It may be said that, to the end of his life, Clive defended his conduct in this transaction, under the excuse that Omichund was a scoundrel. The Indian was not, indeed, an estimable character. Openly, he was the friend and confidant of the nabob while, all the time, he was engaged in bribing and corrupting his officers, and in plotting with his enemies. This, however, in no way alters the facts that he rendered inestimable service to the English; and that the men who deceived and cheated him were, to the full, as greedy and grasping as himself; without, in the case of the governor and his council, having rendered any service whatever to the cause....
Nevertheless, the whole of the circumstances which followed the signature of the treaty, the manner in which the unhappy youth was alternately cajoled and bullied to his ruin, the loathsome treachery in which those around him engaged, with the connivance of the English; and, lastly, the murder in cold blood, which Meer Jaffier, our creature, was allowed to perpetrate; rendered the whole transaction one of the blackest in the annals of English history.Strong stuff.
Friday, November 18, 2011
Barroso congratulates Germany for Geography.
Ever heard of the Golden Victoria Award - me neither, though it sounds something to do with the breakfast cereal industry.
Anyhow it appears that Donald Tusk is this year's recipient of most sycophantic European. And Jose took time away from his busy schedule of dreaming up new ways to ensure that the people's of Europe have no say in the Governance of their countries to send a video congratulations.
The text is extraodinary,
Dear Donald, I congratulate you to be the European of the Year, ladies and gentlemen, I also want to congratulate Germany for having the new Poland as its neighbour country. Thank you very much.Another recipient was that nice chap Henry Kissenger.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Very, very important people
Just been sent this link. And I can tell you know I am humbled by its appearance in my inbox,
briefings from the Senior European ExpertsOh I love that THE.
And what wisdom we get from THE Experts
Many Commonwealth countries are small and 94 per cent of population of the Commonwealth is in Africa or Asia; it is unrealistic to imagine that the other Commonwealth countries would have the capacity to trade with the UK at the level on which our economy depends.Tiddly little countries like India...
And actually there is a growing intra-Commonwealth free trade movement, but one wouldn't expect the Senior Experts to know this.
So who are these experts?
This lot of Guilty Men
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
A very long spoon
Lord Myners, the former labour City Minister was on rip-roaring form last night, talking about the EU's impact on city regulation. It is quite apparent that he doesn't rate it. Particularly as it tries to shoot the canary in the mineshaft, by making life hard for the Credit Ratings agencies. First he points out that the ratings Agencies are in the peleton, not out in front,
I disagree with paragraph 22 of the committee's report, which says that credit rating agencies play a role in determining the cost to governments of borrowing. They simply do not. The realistic situation of the borrowing nation's capacity to pay determines the price it pays for credit. The thermometer does not trigger the fever. The credit rating agencies measure the likelihood of repayment. They certainly do not have any impact on the cost of credit. Again, at the risk of giving even more credit to the noble Baroness, Lady Noakes, she was absolutely right in pointing to the case of France where the credit rating agencies may say one thing about the rating of that country but the pricing of its debt in the markets says something rather different in terms of differentiation between France and Germany, the quality of covenant and the capacity to honour debt obligations.He then shows deep suspicion of the EU's atempts to take control,
The reality is that credit rating agencies are a lagging indicator rather than a leading one. They tend to verify the market's judgment rather than to lead it.
The implementation of the credit rating agency directive will be in the hands of the European Securities and Markets Authority-ESMA. This has only recently been established but is an important agency because it will exercise direct regulatory authority. I hope the Minister will correct me if I am wrong here, but I believe that ESMA has the power to overrule national regulatory agencies. In other words, the FSA is subordinate to ESMA and could not, if it wished to, introduce higher standards. ESMA has been clear that it intends to ensure that its rules are enforced uniformly across the EU and in so doing will limit the ability of individual countries to require additional measures. Mr Steven Maijoor, the chair of ESMA, was quoted in the Financial Times recently as saying that,But is the words that relate to the EU Commisioner in charge, Michel Barnier, that really raise eyebrows,
"we are moving toward common supervisory standards".
The regulations will not be based on the UK's "comply or explain". They will be enforced on all national regulatory agencies by ESMA. I would welcome an assurance from the Minister that he will stand up for self-determination of regulation in the UK and not allow us to be steamrollered by ESMA or any other part of the European regulatory architecture.
We saw some very flawed thinking from the European Commission on credit rating agencies-that there should be a government sponsored CRA, the banning of the publication of ratings, and the pre-approval of methodology, which implies again some process by which these become nationally recognised outcomes rather than the opinions of rather average people.
I worry very much about Mr Barnier. I met Mr Barnier when he was a Minister. He came to see us at the Treasury. He came down the corridor and I was watching him. I am a great fan of art and I was rather impressed that he stopped to look at every painting. I thought this is a man with whom I share a common interest-until I realised he was actually looking at his reflection in the glass on every painting, and adjusting his hair or his toupee. This to me is a man whom we should treat with a very long spoon. I hope the Minister will take due care in working with Mr Barnier because we have been forewarned that this man intends to seek even more powers than those he announced today. He said he wants to return to the issue of censoring rating agencies. I sincerely hope that the Government and the Opposition would have no part in endorsing such an activity.Ouch.
Typical Tory Cant on EU Financial Rules
Yesterday there was a vote in the European Parliament about the banning of 'short selling'. It is a daft idea, the wrong target and the wrong instrument but three you have it, it is the European Parliament we are talking aboutr remember.
Anyhow read the Tory party press release on the subject. They obviously think it is daft, and Syed Kamall their spokesman (who is a damn fine chap),
"This is a short-sighted ban driven by politics rather than sound economics. By banning uncovered CDS we will only encourage the creation of new, more complex and opaque, financial products.So pretty firm opposition wouldn't you say. The sort of thing that will allow their friends in the City to think that they are well defended by the blue corner.
"These proposals failed to tackle the elephant in the room, which is that those who issue CDS must have the capital to back up their obligations.
"At a time of sensitivity in sovereign debt markets, our fiddling could seriously undermine national governments' abilities to raise money by selling bonds. Investors will simply look to other markets where they still have the ability to fully hedge their investments."
Well that is fine, until you see how the Tories voted. Only Hannan, Helmer and DCB voted against with UKIP, the rest abstained along with the Lib Dems, Labour of course voted in favour. Here is the abstention list,
How can anybody in the Square Mile trust this shower?
ALDE: Bearder, Bowles, Davies, Hall, Ludford, McMillan-Scott, Newton-Dunn, Wallis, Watson
ECR: Ashworth, Atkins, Bradbourn, Callanan, Chichester, Elles, Ford, Fox, Girling, Harbour, Kamall, Karim, Kirkhope, McClarkin, Nicholson, Stevenson, Sturdy, Swinburne, Tannock, Van Orden, Yannakoudakis
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Van Rompuy's Delusions revealed in grammar
Our president, the not so quiet 'assasin of Nations' that bag of charisma and foresight Herman Van Rompuy reveals all just by his use of tense in his speech today.
The various instances of complete lack of self awareness, both on his own part and on that of the institution he leads are legion. (Go and read the speech here if you want, if you have a clue about economics, please ensure that you are away from any co-workers, definately not safe for work. The sound of your hollow laughter might disturb digital networks).
I highlight merely this,
So the Euro Plus Pact has been made consistent with, and builds upon, existing instruments like the EU 2020 Strategy, the European Semester, Integrated Guidelines, the Stability andGrowth Pact and the new macroeconomic surveillance framework.Leave aside the plethora of failing institutions/strategies/projects/roadmaps/six packs and what have you and look at that last sentance.
All these policies -- from the new Stability and Growth Pact to the Euro Plus Pact -- will work in the same direction: pushing Member States towards these reforms. Lagging countries - big or small - will be spotted by the markets and can be hit by sanctions. The time of complacencies is over. We learned these lessons, the hard way. The crisis was arough teacher.
Notice that it is in the past tense.
The crisis was a rough teacherYes, that's right. Was!!! He, the Haiku-weilding mountebank thinks that the crisis is over. Finished. The lessons have been learnt.
'Phew' he seems to be saying 'that was tough but it is all right now'.
What he doesn't realise (OK he knows full well but wants to lie to us) is that what we have had so far is merely Grendel.
The monster's mother hasn't even arrived at Herot yet, but when she does, Van R and his cohorts will fain find a Beowulf.
Why the Greeks are unhappy
I recieved this from one of the Greek MEP's explaining why Greece is unhappy at the austerity package.
You might think it is partial, but it goes some way to illustrate the depth of feeling Greece about what many see as a German inspired take over of their country,
German indebtedness to Greece from the 2nd World War
I would like to inform you on the Greek financial demands from Germany, as an aftermath to what happened during the 2nd World War.
In April 1941, Germany attacked and occupied Greece. During the German occupation, the conquerors executed the residents of 89 Greek cities and villages. In addition to that, they burnt more than 1800 villages and settlements.
During the war Greece lost 13% of her population. That was not only in the war fields but also due to the famine and the atrocities as well as the plundering of their troops.
On the parallel Germany forced the vicarious Greek government to give a loan of 3,5 billion dollars and they signed the relative contract. After the end of war, the Conference of Paris adjudicated the amount of 7,1 billion dollars to Greece as war reparations. Germany did not pay neither the reparations nor the loan that was owes to Greece.
Italy paid back to Greece a part of the total amount of the loan that was forcefully agreed during the occupation. Italy and Bulgaria paid back war reparations to Greece.
While Germany paid war reparations to Poland (1956) and Yugoslavia (1971), Greece had to demand the paying off of the forced loan on 1945, 1946, 1947, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1974, 1987 and 1995. Nevertheless, Germany denies paying off what owes to my country as an obligation that arise from the "occupation loan" and the war reparations. At 1964, the German Chancellor Erhard promised paying the off the loan after the unification of Germany, which was realized in 1990.
The following is an indication of the actual value of the German reparations towards Greece: Taking as indicative the average rate of the USA bonds between 1944 till 2010, that is about 6%, the actual value of the "occupation loan" is up to 163,8 billion dollars and that of war recuperations is estimated in 332 billion dollars. On the 2nd of July 2011, the French economist and advisor of the French government Jacques Delpla declared that the German indebtedness to Greece because of all that happened during the 2nd World War is up to 575 billion dollars (Les Echos, Saturday, July 2, 2011). The German historian Dr. Albrecht Ritschl advised Germany to follow a more moderate policy during the euro crisis of 2008-2011, because she might have to face justified demands for war recuperations of the 2nd World War (Der Siegel, June 21, 2011, guardian. co.uk).
It has to be mentioned that Germany has profited to the tune of 9 billion euro from the euro zone crisis over the past few years, while the German bonds yields close to zero since the European sovereign debt crisis began some two years ago. Berlin's two-year bond yields currently stand at just 0.3 percent and its 10-year bonds at 1.7 percent. Six-month papers - usually giving the lowest return to investors - stand at just 0.08 percent, down from 0.3 percent just one month ago.
According to Carsten Brzeski a senior economist with the ING bank in Belgium, "Interestingly, this is already more than the recently announced [German] tax relief of around €8 billion for 2013 and 2014. It almost looks as if the Greeks financed the little German tax reform," he added (Valentina Pop, "Germany estimated to have 9 bn euro profit out of crisis", www.euobserver.com).
The old statement of Mussolini is indicative: "Germans have even stolen from Greeks their shoelaces"
I would like to thank you for your attention and to ask for your help and your understanding so to demand what is rightful for my country.
Memories are short, andthe hurt is near the surface.
The Government's phoney war on Europe.
The Government's phoney war on Europe.
Dave says he's a sceptic, Nick says he isn't, and the British public are being gulled into thinking that there are real differences between the two parties' positions.
With UKIP slowly rising in the polls, and last night's figures from YouGov suggesting that UKIP is now hitting 5% in every electoral area in Great Britain, the Prime Minister is trying to position himself as a great defender of Britain against the ravages of the European Union. In order to help this sleight of hand it appears that Nick Clegg is joining in the deception, by sketching out an idea that their is a gulf between the two members of the coalition.
Dave says,
"But we sceptics have a vital point. We should look sceptically at grand
plans and utopian visions. We've a right to ask what the European Union should and shouldn't do - and change it accordingly."
And Nick says
"Clearly the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats, and David
Cameron and myself, think differently on European issues... I don't think anyone is talking about unilateral repatriation of powers. It's not possible, and Europe doesn't work like that."
Oddly of course it is Nick that is half right here. Nobody is (seriously) talking about repatriation of powers. Cameron is trying to talk to his own membership such is his fear of us in UKIP and our simple and popular position on Britain's relationship with the European Union.
Here are ten good reasons why Cameron's claim to be a Eurosceptic are false
1 He reneged on Cast Iron Guarantee to hold EU treaty referendum
He argues of course that it was only cast iron in the sense that if somebody else did it then his promise was meaningless. He knows that is not how it was going to be taken, indeed he deliberately muddied the waters. he also we must remember said that he wouldn't let things rest there if the Lisbon Treaty was passed. Well weirdly he has been true to his word.
2 Changed Tory Fisheries policy, No longer calls for repatriation of territorial waters.
His first act on becoming leader of the Conservative Party was to drop a longstanding policy to repatriate British coastal waters and opt out of the Common Fisheries Policy. He had been told that to do so would be incompatible with our membership of the EU. The policy had to go.
3. Supported EU regulation of the City
Conservative MEPs in the European Parliament have consistently voted for the creation of three EU super regulators, leaving the command and control of the City of London in the hands of Eurocrats who are not sympathetic to British systems and ways of doing business. It is estimated that the impact on the City will be devastating as companies and jobs flee the onslaught of EU regulation.
4. Supports entry of Turkey to the EU -encouraging mass immigration
How can he claim to be interested in controlling our borders and of reigning in the ambitions of the European Union when he is Europe's biggest cheerleader for brin g ing Turkey into the EU. Time and time again he has championed Turkish entry, despite the wildly different economic status of Turkey. Good friends yes, part of the EU no.
5. Supported creation of EU External Action Service.
And encouraged the usurpation by the unelected Cathy Ashton of British diplomatic and Foreign policy positions, not least the grant to the EU, and Ashton in particular of speaking rights at the UN, the preserve of nation states.
6. Failure to reduce EU budget / allows increase despite promises.
He promised to the House of Commons he would either reduce the EU's annual budget, or the least block it. Then came back from Brussels claiming that a 2.6% increase was a victory. If so he was triumphing in a victory for the EU against Britain.
7. Supports the creation of Eurozone core which would leave the UK in a permanent minority position.
For centuries the core of British Foreign policy has been to ensure that no European continental power has the ability to dominate Europe. Cameron and George Osborne are now demanding just that. Overturning the wisdom of Pitt, Palmerston, Gladstone, Lloyd George, Churchill et al. How can this be in the national interest? After all it will create a permanent majority in the Council of Ministers which means that Britain will always be outvoted on any subject in future.
8. Prepared to have 40 billion pounds UK money go via the IMF to the Eurozone Bailout
Despite the promises and evasions, it is now clear that the promise not be involved in any Eurozone bailout is a fabrication. By doubling our contribution to the IMF emergency fund, Britain has made itself increasingly liable to being involved in the Euro bailouts.
9. Rolled over to Agency Worker directive and other EU laws which harm UK business and jobs.
These directives alone, which he has accepted are set to cost the British economy billions and put hundreds of thousands of jobs at risk. To then claim that he is fighting against regulations is ridiculous.
10. Forced Three line whip on EU referendum debate in the Commons.
If Cameron wanted a strong negotiating position in the European Union, then he could just offer that referendum. Without it our continental friends will just igno r e him. By punishing those in the Parliament who defended the wishes of their constituents, in order to pander to the wishes of the Eurocrats - and looking at what has happened in Greece since the Commons vote, this is no idle threat he shows where his true loyalty lies.
Of course Cameron's attempts to paint himself a 'sceptic' are in vain. Just as the markets react to the latest move from Brussels to prop up their dreams so do the people of Britain see through his evasions. A year ago a final plan to save the Euro would have a weeks grace in the markets, this week the imposition of technocratic Prime Ministers in Greece and Italy forced a dip in Bond spreads that lasted less than 24hrs. So it is with Mr Cameron's protestations about his Eurosceptic credentials.
The markets see through the failures of the Eurozone. The people see through the failures of Cameron to defend the countries interests
Face it Dave. Nobody believes you any more.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Salvaj Kareer in jaw dropping moment
It is generally accepted that man of principle Sajjad Karim the former Lib Dem MEP joined the Tories due to a great love.
A love for his own seat. It was obvious that the Lib Dems were going to tank in the 2009 elections, so, with the Tories on the up, and the Tories selection rules in place it became a no brainer for him to jump ship. By joining the Tories as a sitting MEP it meant that he leapfrogged up to an unassaibalble position on the Tory list. After all he had only recently been selected as number 2 on the Lib Dem list - a unwinable slot. For that he earned the sobriquet Salvaj Kareer.
So imagine my surprise when I read this in today's Guardian,
The power of the cabal will be broken when we learn to trust the citizen and involve them in the decision-making process. We must debate directly electing commissioners and make the council transparent. And first to go must be the closed list system for electing MEPs.He is so het up about the democratic defeciet that he must have supported calls for an EU referendeum, mustn't he?
On second thoughts maybe he didn"t as his approving tweet here makes clear
@SHKMEP Sajjad H Karim MEP
William Hague urges Tory MPs not to vote for a referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union, saying it... fb.me/Gf2d2feE
It went up how much?!!
According to the FT the EU hasd just revealed some frankly startling figues on debt,
Yes you read that right, up 88%!The European Union’s executive body said sovereign debt levels in the eurozone would increase next year by more than previously thought, reaching 90.4 per cent of overall gross domestic product, up 88 per cent this year.
Behr with a sore head
In the Staggers yesterday, cheif leader writer of the Observer and lead political writer at the Staggers, Rapheal Behr writes a sort of political obitury of Nick Clegg. He describes him in glowing referential tones, almost a tragic hagiography, and entirely out of keeping with the New Statesman's cultural heritage,
Cleggism, by contrast, channels the cosmopolitan, polyglot, liberal borderlessness that the European elite see as the marker of civilisation. The Liberal Democrat leader once wanted to represent a new kind of politics but he looks more like an ambassador from some ancien régime, a lonely tribune from the 20th-century European Union: patrician, collegiate, moderate, boring, benign, seeking consensus, with more than a whiff of elitism -These mostly positive traits are contrasted with the panto-villany of Farage and UKIP,
Many Tories are focusing instead on the threat posed by Ukip in the European Parliament elections in 2014. Cameron's handling of the euro crisis, insufficiently bellicose for grass-roots activists, has provoked a rash of defections to Nigel Farage's anti-EU shires junta. In the 2009 European election, Ukip came second. It could top the poll next time. That doesn't translate into a big general election challenge, because the party's voters dwell mostly in safe Tory seats, but it is another force pulling politics away from EU engagement.It's remarkable, and one can almost smell the fear.Of course Mr Behr is a teeniest bit skewed in his vision of UKIP. this 'Shires-Junta' as he describes it is polling 9% in London and in the Euros back in 2009 it won cities like Hull, and towns like Hartlepool, not the most bucolic of places. My guess, and a charitable one at that is it is ignorance rather than malfeasance on the part of Behr, but you never know.
The Lib Dems, proud of their own conversion from protest vehicle to mature party of government, thoroughly despise Ukip and find the thought of equivalence sickening. One normally even-tempered minister recently described Farage's wrecking delegation in the European Parliament to me as "unpatriotic, Neanderthal wankers". The feeling is mutual.
Farage has had enough television and radio exposure to test whether he can win mass affection as a national figure. He can't. That doesn't mean Farageism lacks resonance. The creed is about more than the EU. It expresses a deep neurosis about borders and identity and the corruption of nationhood by a faceless other. The cultural potency of that force is on show in the hysterical response to the scandal around Theresa May's bungled experiment with relaxed passport controls.
The glorious dysfunctionality of the article is that he claims that Farage is unable to win affection as a national figure, but admits that it is Farage rather than his pin up Clegg who is winning the arguement. For if Clegg is
"wholly at odds with the spirit of the times",as he says, and he is counterpointing him with Farage then by default I would guess that it is Farage who is with the zeitgeist.
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
The impotent rage of an aging tribune
Sir Michael White, resident sage at the Guardian has today opened his mouth to roar, only to show to the world the fetid, decaying teeth of an Ottoman vizier. He has lost the arguement, the barbarians are at the gates, and so, rather than show the subtlty of his youth he resiles into impotent rage,
In placating their own Eurosceptic backbenchers and party activists – not to mention the dark, sullen group of angry voters who vote Ukip, BNP or not at all – they have marginalised Britain in Europe in all sorts of ways in order to play to the gallery.Has the eldery roue ever met a UKIP voter, angry we may be, but dark and sullen? Not adjectives that really fit the norm.
What is so sad is that Sir Michael recognises the horrors being ladelled upon the people of Europe,
there's a democratic deficit in much of the current turmoil. The eurozone's leaders – a shadowy, half-elected caucus that Larry calls the Frankfurt Group – have, in effect, sacked the prime minister of Greece, and now Italy's too.There is none so sad than old and sad.
Portugal's and Ireland's governments have already fallen to election defeat, and Spain's is poised to be voted out too. That's always an important distinction: better the voters do it than Angela Merkel and Sarko.
JIm Updated: or The Cost of the EU
You know—or at least you ought to know,
For I have often told you so—
That Countries never are allowed
To leave their Treaties in a Crowd;
For fear of finding something worse.
Friday, November 4, 2011
Bit puzzling for the fellow
Wondering how to persuade enthusiastic young UKIPers to join the only party capable of turning this country around#conservatives
Of course the problem he faces isn't trying to get Ukipers to join the Tories, it is stopping the flow of young Tory activists from voting for and joining UKIP.
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
The most idiotic thing
Stuart Wheeler is one of today's PA quotes of the day with this,
"the most idiotic statement made by any politician was David Cameron's that we were not going to discuss Europe in this Parliament. I'll remind them that Norway and Switzerland are the two most prosperous countries in Europe, and the only two which aren't EU members"From his speech at the Oxford Union last night.
UKIP's poll rise is real, significant and sustainable
As this graph from Anthony Wells of YouGov shows since the general election the steady growth of UKIP is one of the most intersting developements in British politics.
This is of course in part because of the growth of the European Union in people's conciousness, but as Wells points out has many other causes.
The bottom line is that this isn't some flash in the pan, but somethng that isn't going away.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Greek military sackings highten fears
In an extraordinary developement the heads of all three of Greece's armed services have been sacked and replaced with figures seen to be more sympathetic with George Papendreou's regime.
Like the anouncement of the referendum yesterday this seems to have been done with the utmost of speed and secrecy.General Ioannis Giagkos, chief of the Greek National Defence General Staff, to be replaced by Lieutenant General Michalis Kostarakos Lieutenant General Fragkos Fragkoulis, chief of the Greek Army General Staff, to be replaced by lieutenant general Konstantinos Zazias Lieutenant General Vasilios Klokozas, chief of the Greek Air Force, to be replaced by air marshal Antonis Tsantirakis Vice-Admiral Dimitrios Elefsiniotis, chief of the Greek Navy General Staff, to be replaced by Rear-Admiral Kosmas Christidis
The opposition are furious and point out, not without reason that with a vote of confidence to be passed next week this is a rather precipitous act.
“Under no circumstances will these changes be accepted, at a time when the government is collapsing and has not even secured a vote of confidence,”Is it just me or has the tyemperature round here just dropped a couple of degrees?
Best excuse yet on not voting for a Referendum
John Hayes MP, Minister of State at the BIS has come up with what must be the best excuse yet as to why he clung to his job on the slippery pole rather than support the motion for an EU referendum this week. Writing in his local paper the Lincolnshire Free Press he said,
For me this motion simply wasn’t Euro sceptic enough
Absolutely nothing to do with your job then was it John, nothing at all.
Redundent plastic Eurosceptic. Hypocrite and slug
BBC promotes Stuart Wheeler
According to this story
Mr Hamilton has now topped a ballot for elections to the party's NEC - whose members include MEPs, local officials and the party's Treasury Sir Stuart Wheeler, the former Tory donor.It appears that the BBC think that Mr Wheeler deserves a knighthood. Now of course I agree, but I am surprised the BBC feel that way. That Mr Wheeler is UKIP's Treasury, nice thought but nothing so grand, merely the Treasurer.