I'll admit I know very little about this (never stopped you before sez you ..) but was joining the Euro of itself the issue or was it bad lending? I know we couldnt mess with interest rates to regulate the economy, but didnt it unlock long term low interest rates which benefited us greatly until we bet the lot on property. So if not in the Euro we could have jacked up interest rates, but in the Euro we could have extricated our heads from where there shouldn't have been and stopped the mania.
A mistake for Ireland. We would have better weathered the credit crisis otherwise and would be in a much better position to manage Brexit.The idea has taken hold that the Euro was a mistake. This is nonsense.
I've always viewed Nigel as a straight talker, he was on fire this morning in the EU Parliament https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlN9o3g-yuABoris J and Nigel F must be delighted.
He's an ignorant racist buffoon with enough PR training to just about disguise himself as an ignorant intolerant buffoon.A mistake for Ireland. We would have better weathered the credit crisis otherwise and would be in a much better position to manage Brexit.I've always viewed Nigel as a straight talker, he was on fire this morning in the EU Parliament https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlN9o3g-yuA
He's a bit Marmite for sure . . his detractors often play the man and not the ball, good line though. Methinks the reaction to Brexit is entirely OTT . . but time will tell.He's an ignorant racist buffoon with enough PR training to just about disguise himself as an ignorant intolerant buffoon.
We would have better weathered the credit crisis (if we had not joined the Euro) otherwise and would be in a much better position to manage Brexit.
There can be no doubt that Ireland's financial crisis, which in proportionate terms is possibly the worst ever, would have been much less pronounced under sterling.
Certainly whatever percentage of racist xenophobes actually voted will have voted Leave. I suspect that numbers of such people are smaller than the Remainers care to believe.Not everyone who votes for Brexit is a racist xenophobe but every racist xenophobe voted for Brexit.
They did kind of put it to the vote; France and Holland rejected the European Constitution and Ireland rejected two treaties. The reality is that, for better or worse, the majority of voters in the EU do not support the path towards further integration which we are on.Certainly whatever percentage of racist xenophobes actually voted will have voted Leave. I suspect that numbers of such people are smaller than the Remainers care to believe.
The difference between the UK and say France, the Netherlands, Hungary and a few others is that the UK had the audacity to put it to a vote. Perhaps the EU should clearly state that we are in a process of European unification and integration (Merkel said Brexit was a watershed for the process of European unification and integration) and put it to a vote in the other 27 EU states so that those peoples who want to be part of a United States of Europe can drive on.
I'm not sure......
Besides immigration, a growing anti-globalization sentiment contributed in part to Brexit.
How could that be construed as racism? Someone voting out because they are fed up about the level of immigration into their country and the obvious (if very petty) visualisation of itHi Sophrosyne,
I accept the points you make.
What I'm really trying to understand is what constitutes racism in this whole context so what I'm looking for is whether people believe the views expressed by Daddyman's contact were racist or not (and ideally with a why/why not!)
That the EU Constitution was enacted regardless by way of Lisbon Treaty, and that those driving the EU unification project don't care what the peoples of Europe want, should make even the most ardent Europhile uneasy.They did kind of put it to the vote; France and Holland rejected the European Constitution and Ireland rejected two treaties. The reality is that, for better or worse, the majority of voters in the EU do not support the path towards further integration which we are on.
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