Tuesday, 27 November 2012













Katyia28 November 2012 1:13AM



Activists from other parties confirm that Ukip support has surged in the town ? where tensions were already inflamed by racially charged sexual assault scandals, and hostility to EU migration is high

oh you mean this – - -

http://rotherhampolitics.wordpress.com/category/child-sexual-abuse/


Ukip has already been bolstered by rising opposition to the EU (polls now regularly show a majority wanting to pull out) and wider disaffection with the political establishment

polls showing people wanting to pull out is not the same as them wanting a referendum – - -


He described the eurozone response to the crisis so far as ?depressing?.

?The frustrating thing about all of this ? if always our reaction to every problem is ‘too little too late, not quite enough,? then we are going to have a long period of uncertainty and fragility within the eurozone,? he said

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/eureferendum/9327984/The-people-dont-want-a-referendum-on-Europe-insists-No-10.html

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Katyia28 November 2012 1:54AM



in particular have been at the sharp end of migrant labour exploitation, expect Cameron’s new strategist Lynton Crosby ? whose anti-Muslim ranting was recently exposed ? to find ways to play the ethnic card

oh you have to dredge that up do you – - – how does that tie in with any sort of pact – - – I’m not really sure what UKIP are really about with this race thing to be honest – - – to say that we are not a multicultural society is not really putting it very well I mean I can understand a passion for individual and original creativity and the emotions one has for ones home land – - – just that multiculturalism is part of what Britain is about – - – and where is UKIPs definition of Britishness apart from saying what we are not – - -

also I don’t always take to heart so much peoples rants as what their policies are – - – rants can even be affectionate homie things at times – - – insider jokes even – - -

I mean some of this anxiety is about protecting your back door – - – obviously someone with a capitalist global business mentality isn’t really any more concerned about that than a property developer – - – but those that have real feeling and passion for the country might feel that the ownership of the lock is unquestionable – - – I mean just think what could happen if you really left the door unlocked at night – - -

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Katyia28 November 2012 2:35AM


you know I mean their nationalism thing strikes me like you know when you’re in a hurry struggling to think of a name for the band – - – or a title for you song – - – or a topic for your geography essay even – - – and you just make something up that sounds good – - – a bit like Camerons marriage ethic – - – well it comes over exciting to him that way as long as the good stuff rolls in – - -





There the anti-migrant hard right was already well established before the crash

UKIP defining migrants – - – but do migrants defend UKIP – - – I would go for an individuality stance rather than a nationalist one these days – - – unless you can define what that is – - -


The employment rights and financial speculation tax plans that get the British chauvinistic press in such a lather are the kind of things people in Britain mostly like about the EU

um chauvinist towards what – - -


The neoliberal model of deregulation and privatisation that has failed across the western world is built into the structure of the EU by treaty

there you see I don’t understand how you can be truly nationalistic without being into deregulation – - – and the EU has only achieved that in certain areas – - -

http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1095054.html


In that context, the political elite’s terror of allowing people in Britain to vote on the relationship with Europe is an unacceptable absurdity

no it isn’t people are free also to say that they don’t want a referendum – - – as many have done – - – I mean would you have a referendum on whether trafficking children was wrong – - -


Ed Miliband has, meanwhile, ruled out a “referendum now”, fearing the issue could divide and dominate a future Labour government. But not only is a commitment to give people a say on the country’s central constitutional arrangments right in itself ? if, as seems likely, Cameron is driven to support some kind of referendum, it would give Labour the chance to seize the democratic initiative from the Tories

and funnily enough nobody seems to want a referendum foisterered on them except UKIP – - – and you just wonder what they see in it – - -

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