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Nigel Johnson
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Comments by "Nigel Johnson" (@nigeljohnson9820) on "Brexit: What would a 'no deal' mean?" video.
A no deal is the being of the end for the EU.
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@boereherp8705 I suggest you Google "the disintegration of the EU" there are a number of learning papers on the subject why recognise European institutions. The EU is facing a popular uprising and a banking crisis. Eurocrats are taking legal action against member states, such as Poland. The EU is at risk of a migrant and financial crisis with Turkey and brushed away the Greek financial problems without solving them. Yes the EU is at real risk of break up.
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@boereherp8705 is that like the EU propaganda that you read. I am very happy with the way things are going, the UK is going to be free of the EU. The EU will have lost its cash cow.
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@playthegame7445 I assume you are talking about the EU. But then a number of EU states have already had a taste of EU austerity.
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@playthegame7445 oh your joking of course, after all it was the EU that presided over the Greece crisis, the Irish crisis, and the developing Italian crises. There are more in the eurocratic pipeline. I understand the Greek bailout was really to rescue the insolvent German banks.
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@playthegame7445 there will be a difficult transition period, which is to be expected as the EU parasite is removed from UK life. After that, the future of the UK will be dependent on how the government reorganises the UK economy. If they do what is necessary, the future for the UK is far brighter than that of those who remain bound to the EU.
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@playthegame7445 I really think you need to check your GDP figures. You are out by a factor of 10 in the wrong direction. With regard to Italy, I assume it can look forward to the same kind of help that Greece received. In the Greek case the bailouts were designed to rescue insolvent French and German banks. With friends like that Italy does not need any enemies.
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@playthegame7445 you are using the per capita figure. This just shows how inefficient the UK has become under EU influence, with huge migration of low paid, unproductive individuals. That is one of the reasons the UK must leave the EU, it has become a nation of consumers, with an unproductive service industry designed to sell imported products to each other. The EU will be doing the UK a favour by applying tariffs to products imported from the EU. The only way forward for the UK is to become as self sufficient as possible. Producing as much as possible of its needs. That means using locally grown produce, rather than importing from the eu, particularly Ireland. The EU is welcome to the banks as they are one of the reasons that UK industry declined. The government did not think diversity of production was need, so we have a few super rich very over paid individuals who produce nothing of any real worth. Future UK government's must retain control of UK infrastructure and retain UK control of UK technology and means of production. None of this will be possible within the EU.
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@playthegame7445 the UK economy,measured by GDP is 10 times the size of Ireland. The fate of the EU is sealed by its ideological embrace of the euro and the associated super state. In fact the euro forces the EU to move to a federal system of central government. This is the big weakness as the population of most member states will resist federalisation, as will some of the governments of the member states. As the eurocrats become ever more authoritarian to force what is required for the euro to exist, they will adopt more draconian powers. This will alienate the EU population who will vote for ever more anti EU local governments. The risk is that if the brexit route out is closed, violent revolution will be the only way member states will be able to regain their freedom. This is how big undemocratic power blocks/ empires usually come to an end. The alternative is that external factors such as global warming put pressure on the EU for resources. The eurocrats use this to manufacture an existential threat to keep the people inorder, maintaining the monoculture needed to suppress regional differences andlling ever increasing austerity. Sooner or later the EU confronts one of the other power blocks and war between them breaks out. The lack of resolve and coherence of the EU member states will ensure that the EU loses any such conflict as regional differences and enemnaties reemerge.
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