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Tuesday, 11 December 2007

More on the EU Treaty and Gordon Brown

It would appear that Gordon Brown read this and may have decided to sign the Treaty after all; maybe...

"Prime Minister Gordon Brown will miss the official signing of the EU treaty, but will travel to Lisbon and sign it later, Downing Street has said....He will miss the official signing event but will join EU heads of government at lunch and will sign the treaty later."

So he won't be at the official signing which will be the one filmed and broadcast but will sign it in private (as though he were committing a dirty deed to be ashamed of) later. Truly Gordon Brown is a man of immense courage .


The Euro-Elite are getting everything into place, now we hear that "The Danish Prime Minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, has decided against a referendum on the EU Reform Treaty, leaving it for ratification by MPs.
He told reporters that the treaty was good for Denmark."

If he is so sure it is good for Denmark then why would the Danes vote against it?


The EU is profoundly anti-democratic; the public can no longer be trusted to vote the "correct" way in referenda, so there will be no more referenda. If we dare to support non EU-supportive political parties in the future then they will not be allowed to stand as they are do not support the EU ideal. The EU will soon become the true heir to the Third Reich and the Soviet Union, a controlling authoritarian government that will demand total obedience from the public. You think I may be exaggerating?

Here is a little piece from earlier this year from Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg's premier and the then leader of the bloc of 13 single currency members.

"Mr Juncker said he supported public debate on the treaty - except in Britain.

"I am astonished at those who are afraid of the people: one can always explain that what is in the interest of Europe is in the interests of our countries," he told Belgian newspaper Le Soir.

"Britain is different. Of course there will be transfers of sovereignty. But would I be intelligent to draw the attention of public opinion to this fact?""

There you go, if it might draw a negative reaction then it would be best not to let the British know about it, we mustn't risk the project failing after all. How about Mr Juncker's remark that "Of course there will be transfers of sovereignty", what do you say to that Mr Brown?

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