Thursday, September 13, 2012

The EU is the nightmare that just keeps growing

I don't know what's more puke-inducing: (1) hearing Barroso stating that the EU must be turned into a "federation of nation states" in which member countries will surrender more sovereignty to Brussels whilst moving towards full integration; or (2) seeing Barroso's fat, ugly face plastered in numerous DT threads. OMG what a horrible day for the EU!!!.....So how much more crap can the EU citizenry take? ... How many more rights and privileges will be transferred over to Barroso and the other Brussels Eurocrats before the citizens finally revolt? ... How many more hundreds of billions of tax dollars will the Eurocrats waste in their delusional, warped quest towards an ideal Euro-federation? ... How many new bailout funds will be developed? ... How many more ESMs will emerge? ... How many more Draghi speeches promising UNLIMITED FUNDING for the PIIGS will transpire? ... How many more summits between Merkel and the Latin Desperadoes will be required to keep this disaster afloat? ..... The EU is the nightmare that just keeps growing.
 Mircea Halaciuga, Esq.
004.0724.58.1078
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4 comments:

bnr said...

This scares the s**t out of me. Imagine our armed forces being told what to do by the EU, or our fiscal policy changed to fit in with Bulgaria, everything we own handed over to be commanded by people who are not household names in their own living rooms.

I watched about an hour of the debate earlier on and it swung from bashing British traditions to bashing the British wholesale. If this happens, we'll be marginalised and cultures across Europe will be homogenised.

At no point have I ever felt 'European'. Europe is a geographical area, not a cultural or political union.

jiji said...

My license plate doesn't carry their flag. What signifies the governments commitment to them would be the large cheque they receive from us.

Anonymous said...

I had stated
that Mao will laugh Thursday, 13 September 2012Dutch voters handed
pro-European parties a sweeping election victory, shunning the radical fringes
and dispelling concerns that euro sceptics could gain sway in a core euro zone
country. Preliminary results early on Thursday morning gave caretaker Prime
Minister Mark Rutte's centre-right Liberals 41 seats in the 150-member lower
house, a slender two-seat lead over the centre-left Labour Party on 39 seats,
with over 80 percent of votes counted. With only about 100,000 votes
difference, neither party claimed victory, but analysts said the Liberals
appeared to have won. The hard-left Socialists, who oppose austerity and euro
zone bailouts, finished a distant third and gained no ground, while the
far-right anti-immigration Freedom Party of Geert Wilders, who campaigned to
leave the euro and the European Union, slumped and was set to lose about a
third of its seats. The two radical parties had dominated early stages of the
campaign, raising the prospect of a massive protest vote that might paralyse
government and make Dutch support for further euro zone bailouts impossible. The
unexpectedly clear result removed a potential obstacle to efforts to stabilise
Europe's single currency after Germany's constitutional court gave the green
light for the euro zone's permanent bailout fund to go ahead. However, the
Netherlands is likely to remain an awkward, to ugh-talking
member of the single currency area, strongly resisting transfers to euro zone
debtors, even if the two main parties end up forming a coalition. I thank you Firozali
A.Mulla DBA

Anonymous said...

The mainstream German media seem to be taking a “we’ve done our bit for Europe” line over this. Bildzeitung yesterday had the curious subtitle, “Europe breathes out with relief,” not making it clear whether Germany was meant to be included in that ‘Europe.’ But German newspaper comment sites (FAZ, Welt and Bild) are overwhelmingly negative. “Who asked us?” “Now they’ve got our credit card,” said two posters, summing up general feelings. Another pinpointed the real problem facing EU skeptics in Germany as in the UK: while one million people marched against nuclear power, only 1,000 turned out for a march against ESM.