Originally posted by Cirrus
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Reply to: Tory rebels cave
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Previously on "Tory rebels cave"
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Heavy Drinking Affects Your Brain
Originally posted by Mordac View PostIgnoring Switzerland (not an EU member, so unaffected) for the moment, that makes 3 countries who will be shafted - sorry, lose massively - by the new EU tax rules. How many vetoes are we looking at, do you think?
Your signature doesn't reveal your professional specialism but I'm betting random number generators.
No idea why
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostI think you'll find that the Netherlands, Ireland and Switzerland are bigger players than Luxembourg in helping large corporations in paying little or no tax...
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostI bet Luxembourg is delighted that their largest source of tax income (corp tax from Amazon etc.) is about to be shut down, so if they don't veto the ATAD, we know there's something dodgy going on.
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Originally posted by Cirrus View PostMordac, keep up will you! We've done this before.
1) The rules are made by the 27 countries. The EU merely coordinate, promulgate and police. The 27 countries are are all elected.
2) You won't get to elect who makes the rule. You can have a local ballot paper (a bit like the local MEP ballot paper) but it doesn't determine who gets to make the rules* and even if it did it wouldn't give you any particular say in what rules are made.
* where I live they probably don't bother to count the votes. The Tories always get in with 107%. Of course they don't actually get much more than 99% but the figure is inflated because they love to see the gullible populace believe any old nonsense they chuck their way. Hook, line and sinker.
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Originally posted by Paddy View PostWhat rules would these be?
Would it be the EU rule that electrical goods must have a three year guarantee? The UK decided to opt out of that one.
Would it be the EU abolishing mobile phone roaming charges? Well that's why Vodafone was pro-Brexit.
You can quote all the little technical rules you like, my issue is with the big rules which won't ever change. You won't convince me that the EU doesn't simply exist for the benefit of a select few, and thanks to a whole bunch of smoke and mirrors, the gullible populace think they can't possibly exist without it.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostHave some respect for the ex-Army Sergeant
Come on PosterBhoy, give us some more target practice!
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Originally posted by AtW View PostHave some respect for the ex-Army Sergeant who setup whole of India's mobile network before buggering off back to Blighty on Tornado with a bowl of spaghetti.
Thank Goodness he saved India from imminent Soviet invasion.
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Originally posted by Cirrus View PostPosterBhoy, Narnia doesn't exist! How can you have heard they take a pretty cavalier approach to things when the place does not exist???
Thank Goodness he saved India from imminent Soviet invasion.
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Do you ever actually connect to reality?
Originally posted by shaunbhoy View PostYes. I've heard they take a pretty cavalier approach to things in Narnia.
How can you have heard they take a pretty cavalier approach to things when the place does not exist???
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostExcept we know exactly what the outcome will be. We finally get to elect those who make the rules. Unlike now, when those who make the rules don't even have to bother themselves with the inconveniences of the electorate...
Would it be the EU rule that electrical goods must have a three year guarantee? The UK decided to opt out of that one.
Would it be the EU abolishing mobile phone roaming charges? Well that's why Vodafone was pro-Brexit.
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The argument that Britain will make its own rules is academic. All newspapers now reporting that the UK will stay in the EU customs union until as such time that a new incredibly complicated trade deal has been agreed.
This means the UK won't have left the EU by the next general election, thus allowing Labour a landslide, which will obviously mean the UK will officially become a vassal state of the EU.
Freedom from the EU is simply a "Narnia" fairy tale.
The key difference between being a vassal state and a member is that elected UK politicians will no longer be able to veto any unpalatable rules.
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostExcept we know exactly what the outcome will be. We finally get to elect those who make the rules. Unlike now, when those who make the rules don't even have to bother themselves with the inconveniences of the electorate...
1) The rules are made by the 27 countries. The EU merely coordinate, promulgate and police. The 27 countries are are all elected.
2) You won't get to elect who makes the rule. You can have a local ballot paper (a bit like the local MEP ballot paper) but it doesn't determine who gets to make the rules* and even if it did it wouldn't give you any particular say in what rules are made.
* where I live they probably don't bother to count the votes. The Tories always get in with 107%. Of course they don't actually get much more than 99% but the figure is inflated because they love to see the gullible populace believe any old nonsense they chuck their way. Hook, line and sinker.
Leave a comment:
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