muso wrote on Nov 2
nd, 2013 at 12:39pm:
Lord Herbert wrote on Nov 2
nd, 2013 at 10:33am:
The UK is still operating politically as a puppet of the UN's International Socialist agenda.
The anti-Campbell Newman mentalities are still in the driver's seat over there.
you mean anti Margaret Thatcher?
The most appalling fact is that Margaret Thatcher's conservative party was infested with Leftwingers who battled her attempts to keep Britain a sovereign state.
Rats in the silo. Sleepers, and moles, and 5th columnists for the International Socialist. Firing squad material.
To Thatcher's everlasting shame, she signed the ...
Quote:But despite all her battles over Europe, Mrs Thatcher did also sign the Single European Act, which created the single European market - one of the biggest acts of European integration.
In her 1993 book, The Downing Street Years, she defended the decision, saying: "Advantages will indeed flow from that achievement well into the future."
By 2002, however, she had changed her mind, believing signing up to the single market had been a terrible error.
It was a no-brainer. OF COURSE Britain was going to suffer a loss of sovereignty to the Commos of the European Union.
Quote:Yet Margaret Thatcher had not always been so vehemently opposed to European-wide initiatives.
In 1975, for instance, she played a key role in campaigning for the UK to remain in the European Community.
Stupid bitch!! The ordinary man in the street knew that union with Continental Europe was going to be to the detriment of the British people.
But then she realised what a fool she had been to sign all those papers that made Britain a servant to hostile foreigners sitting in the European parliament.
Quote:In 1988 there came the controversial "Bruges speech".
'No. No. No.'
"We have not successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a European level, with a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels," Mrs Thatcher declared.
It delighted the right of her party but horrified those more well-inclined towards Europe.
(The 5th columnist Lefty rats in her party).
Quote:The then president of the European Commission, Jacques Delors, had called for the European Parliament to be the democratic body of the community, the commission to be the executive and the Council of Ministers to be the senate.
"No. No. No," Thatcher famously told the Commons on 30 October 1990.
Quote:As her successor, John Major, fought Tory rebels over the Maastricht treaty, her disdain for increasing EU integration burned as brightly as ever
Quote:Later that year she made her feelings known about former chancellor Ken Clarke's bid for the Conservative leadership, saying he would lead the party to "disaster".
"He seems to view with blithe unconcern the erosion of Britain's sovereignty in Europe," she said, adding that his leadership would put Europe "at the forefront of politics".
Quote:She called for a "fundamental re-negotiation" of Britain's links with the EU, stopping short of calling for withdrawal but nevertheless suggesting that the UK should pull out of common agricultural, fisheries, foreign and defence policies.
"Most of the problems the world has faced have come from mainland Europe," she wrote. "And the solutions from outside it."
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