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sable

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    harthill
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    shooting wreck fishing

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  1. sable

    Solar Panels

    IF IT is a a pound a week ime saving good
  2. i used to do soundproofing pm me tell me what you need to proof
  3. sable

    nigel farange

    out is the only answer
  4. sable

    nigel farange

    IT was forty years ago today that the British people voted to stay in the European Economic Community. In 1975 the public were told they were voting for a Common Market - some of you may have even voted in that very referendum. I myself was only eleven at the time so wasn't old enough to vote, but I remember the debate going on at the time. Whether you are one of those who voted or not, one thing we can all agree on is that the label on that political tin was wrong. Dressed up as being about trade and only trade, those who voted Yes in that particular referendum would never have envisaged the undemocratic monstrosity that the EU has grown into. To think now that a vote for the EEC back in the 1970's ended up equating to having a majority of our laws made in Brussels and our borders opened unconditionally to virtually an entire continent is frankly beyond belief. But it happened and that's why we find ourselves where we are now. With another referendum on the horizon, we need to ensure that a similar false argument isn't allowed to win the day. Just as the great and the good in 1975 assured the British people that the vote was only about trade, this time Cameron, backed up by big business and the Labour Party, will seek to push the idea that he has negotiated some sort of marvellous deal. That our future lies inside the EU and that Britain couldn't survive outside of it. Well, I believe in Britain. I believe in our country, our people and our future. A positive, global, outward-looking Britain is what we can become once more outside of the EU, doing our own trade deals and reviving neglected relationships inside the Commonwealth. It isn't good enough to settle for crumbs off the table from Brussels. Our country's future generations deserve far better than that. And I have a feeling that unlike in the '75 referendum where virtually the entire business class supported the campaign to stay in, we will see business figures come out and support a vision of Britain outside the EU. A Britain where we don't have to put up with the straight jacket of over-regulation and can negotiate trade deals on an exciting, global scale. The 1975 referendum shows what happens if we allow our future to be dictated to us by the same tired old establishment who have got us into the mess we're in now. But you know what? I have a feeling that the public now are far less deferential to establishment politicians. Whilst back in 1975 many genuinely felt that politicians, whatever side they were on, were generally acting in the interest of the country. Do the public feel that way about the Tory and Labour leadership now? I'm not sure they do now. This is a really important moment in our history. This is the modern day Battle of Britain. By learning the lessons of that referendum many years ago, we can win, extract our country from EU-control and bring about a truly historic moment in our nation's history that in another forty years time, the British people can look back on and be extremely proud of.
  5. are you for real if so think of my grand children you are one very stupid person
  6. nigel lives on and he cannot quit come on ukip
  7. what about parents before having kids how far do you go
  8. thats youre problem you have no idea
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