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UKIP motif... it's a bit krap innit?

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    UKIP motif... it's a bit krap innit?

    Seems a bit lurid & 1980's & why have a £ symbol incorporated

    How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

    #2
    they can't use the crown (Crown Copyright) or union jack (BNP) so its the next most recognisable symbol.

    The Purple covers Royalty.

    so technically it seems quite clever.
    Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

    Comment


      #3


      Its those yellow and purple colours. They seem to be everywhere.

      Comment


        #4
        Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

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          #5
          Nigel Farage introduces Mark Reckless at the UKIP Conference

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzR5kmJn2IY

          NO. 2!

          We're gonna win,
          We're gonna win
          We're gonna win

          etc
          etc
          Last edited by Flashman; 27 September 2014, 15:23.

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            #6
            Ohhh another one jumps ship


            Conservative MP Mark Reckless has announced that he is joining UKIP.
            How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

            Comment


              #7
              Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

              Comment


                #8
                Still better than throwing away a vote on one of the three stooges or their respective parties, I think. Honestly, all those rather charged adjectives and nouns could just as well apply to voters of the Tories, Labour or the Lib-dems.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Zero Liability View Post
                  Still better than throwing away a vote on one of the three stooges or their respective parties, I think. Honestly, all those rather charged adjectives and nouns could just as well apply to voters of the Tories, Labour or the Lib-dems.
                  Why not the Green Party then:

                  The Green Party favours a referendum on the EU because they are opposed to the extremely undemocratic way the EU is currently structured, as well as the unsustainable neoclassical economic ideology that the EU actively promotes. The Green party would prefer to see the EU reformed from within to make it more democratic and more accountable. They would also like to ditch the ideological obsession with the neoclassical economic orthodoxy and the ridiculous single currency experiment.

                  The Green party is committed to a referendum of the EU, but they have not decided which side of the debate they would side with. They want the referendum because they believe that the debate would trigger reform of the EU, however if major reforms are not forthcoming, it seems highly likely that the Greens would campaign for an EU exit, since the structures and objectives of the EU as currently constituted are fundamentally incompatible with the core Green values of democracy and sustainability.
                  Here is a quote from the Green MP Caroline Lucas:

                  "I support a referendum on our membership of the EU because I am pro-democracy."
                  Here are some quotes from the Green party policy document on the EU which confirm that they have correctly identified the major problems with the way the EU is structured.

                  The current structure of the EU:

                  "The Green Party is opposed to the objectives, structure and policies of the EU as currently constituted."

                  The anti-democratic European Commission:

                  " The Green Party believes that the excessive influence of the Commission and its associated bodies compared to the Council and Parliament is both undemocratic and unaccountable."

                  The anti-democratic European Central Bank:

                  "[The Eurozone] is run by the European Central Bank (ECB), a collection of bankers appointed by Council subject to no effective democratic control, but able to override the democratic decisions made by member countries."

                  The lack of democracy and citizen participation:

                  "A major weakness of the present European Union is the lack of mechanisms to ensure that the powers and structures of the EU have the consent of the citizens of member countries."

                  The economically illiterate single currency experiment:

                  "The Green Party is opposed to EMU and the single currency. We believe it undermines local and regional economies."

                  "The Green Party is opposed to the UK joining the Eurozone. We are committed to a referendum on any such decision and will join the campaign for a 'No' vote in any such referendum."

                  Just like UKIP, they participate in EU elections and try to change the EU from within (unlike the Ukip):

                  "Whilst the Green Party is opposed to the objectives, structure and policies of the EU as currently constituted, as long as the U.K. remains a member of the EU the Green Party will stand in elections to the European Parliament and elected Green MEPs will work for fundamental reform of the EU from within."
                  Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    In case you haven't noticed, I'm not much of a leftist, unlike the Greens. I'm not a great believer in democracy or any of the mainstream parties, however the Eurosceptic, pro market faction of the Tories appeals to me, thus why I favour UKIP. It provides them with much needed competition, to thaw out of their state of utter lethargy.

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