Comments on The Lisbon Treaty

Like minerals and vegetables, we're all resources, now.
"Why councils should ban the Daily Mail" ???
Is it competition to porn sites, or what?

Oh well, it's a small world after all. The UK is like the People's State of Ohio in the US. Congradulations.
And, condolences.



Posted by cjf at October 27, 2009 07:08 PM

I have been on and posted a bit.

Comments are currently unmoderated by them, a slip-up which they will no doubt correct fairly soon.


Posted by David Davis_libertarian Alliance at October 27, 2009 08:37 PM

Thanks - of course I'll sign.


Posted by jameshigham at October 27, 2009 09:32 PM

Is it just me, or is the Czech Republic being run by the good guys at the moment? I read a speech by the Czech PM and it was excellent -- reminded me a lot of some very good politicians we had here in NZ briefly 20 - 25 years ago.

On another subject, I am so going to go to this.


Posted by Bruce Hoult at October 27, 2009 11:51 PM

Bruce, what about your current PM - already disappointing?


Posted by Alisa at October 28, 2009 01:00 AM

I'm pretty much equally disappointed in all politicians who think that their KPI is the number of new laws they can pass rather than the number of old ones they can repeal. On balance, however, I do think that National under Key are a little better than Labour under Clark.

The really sad thing is how many poison pills Labour left us in their last year.


Posted by Bruce Hoult at October 28, 2009 01:40 AM

Hey, there's no need to worry about the Lisbon Treat! Apparently, the Copenhagen Treaty will be a surrogate world government with powers to redistribute wealth from guilty western nations to innocent non-western nations, without you needing to do anything! The Lisbon wish-list has already been superceded! So will be democratic governments- and you know how annoying they are!


Posted by Nuke Gray at October 28, 2009 05:04 AM

One of the poison pills being the big budget deficit.

It looks "small" compared to Britain and the United States, but that is because Britain and the United States are already bankrupt (the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England are buying up the debt with money they create out of nothing).

Actually New Zealand has serious problems - they are just masked by the habit of people of camparing New Zealand to nations where the situation is hopeless (such as Britain and the United States).


Posted by Paul Marks at October 28, 2009 03:33 PM

Yes the draft treaty of Copenhagen contains the word "government" as in creating a world government to tax and regulate.

The final treaty will (most likely) remove the word "government" whilst keeping the tax and regulation world government powers.

However, that does not mean that the Lisbon treaty is not evil and should not be opposed.

For example, the Economist (which once OPPOSED the E.U. Constitution - treaty of Lisbon) said two weeks ago that the Lisbon Treaty was a "defeat" for Euro superstatists and that only people who were "blinded by hatred" could possibly think otherwise.

Given the present state of the Economist (pro TARP bailouts, pro trillion Dollar "Stimulus" spending, Comrade Barack Obama as "The Renewal of America" and so on) that should tell anyone all they need to know about the Lisbon Treaty - and why it is totally evil and most be opposed to the last breath.

The Economist is useful (which is why I bang on about it). For example it was from the John M. (editor of the Economist) that I first heard about the demented plan to give vast sums of taxpayers money to China and India (insanely they already get some taxpayers money) in return for vague promises to "limit greenhouse gasses".

John M. of the Economist thought it was a wonderful idea - and was pushing it on the BBC's "Any Questions" radio show about a year ago.

Of course this does not mean that I would ever give these evil folk any money by buying the Economist, or have their disgusting magazine in the house - but it is useful to know that they think (as they are the voice of the collectivist establishment - as is their sister publication the Financial Times).


Posted by Paul Marks at November 2, 2009 12:48 PM
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