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Blog Archive
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2012
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April
(29)
- We're moving home
- They keep on charging
- I have not forgotten
- Après le Dellers
- Cameron gets tough
- One of those days
- An all-time low
- This tells us precisely what?
- Why the cover-up?
- Water thieves
- Not only Greece
- An invite to the discussion?
- A dignified end
- We're not asking
- Thieves out to play
- Looters still at large
- A constitutional democracy
- Happy days
- Holding on to Boris
- Big European Brother
- A real veto
- We're sick of the lot of you
- A non-event
- Dismally led
- The burdenless burden
- The end of the Muppet show?
- A complete coincidence?
- Out to play
- Skulking in the shadows
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►
March
(109)
- Framing the argument
- Clever old Sun
- A jolly good thing?
- Muddying the waters
- The not-so-free market
- A real rebellion
- By-bye election
- We've been busy
- Nuke plans scrapped
- Hold the front page
- The illusion of choice
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- Dying the death
- The trivia rolls on
- Muddling through is awfully jolly
- Making a mockery of themselves
- The elephant in the letter box
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- A huge political mistake
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April
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2007
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November
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- Multiplication is vexation
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- Closing the curtains
- They are still alive
- Mugabe going, Brown not going, Senegal to mediate
- Underfunded?
- As ye sow, so shall ye reap
- At last!
- Four legs good, two legs better
- The "terror" of it all
- Is he listening to himself?
- Brief news from the Anglosphere
- The European Arrrest Warrant is being used in an u...
- Tribalism to the fore
- A humourless post
- Lebanon again
- Why is it humiliating?
- About that referendum
- Of fools and angels
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- Is he winning?
- Twittering at the margins
- Playing with fire
- Those courageous artists
- Take a referendum, any referendum
- The authors of our own misfortunes
- Getting to the heart of the matter (not)
- By the way!
- Forward the Anglosphere (again)
- Hungary again
- Another trivial story
- Unfinished business
- And your point is?
- A "true myth" is born
- Doom doesn't sell
- Are they sane?
- "One election does not democracy make"
- Madness stalks the land
- Somebody likes us!
- The end is nigh!
- Ship without a rudder?
- One ring to rule them all ...
- Meet the real boss
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- Europe can't deliver
- Creative tension?
- Yahoo tries to settle
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- Good government or self-government
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- Preserving the grand projet
- Who guards the guardians?
- A Letter from Limburg
- Daniel Hannan is shocked!
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- The tipless iceberg
- It goes on…
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- Court of Auditors Report
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- The regulatory nightmare continues
- Deferring the day of reckoning
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November
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Showing posts with label former Communist states. Show all posts
Showing posts with label former Communist states. Show all posts
Oxford+Union[i-Oxford+Union]One’s first reaction to the recent tale of the Oxford Union meeting, their invited guests, David Irving and Nick Griffin plus the inevitable uproar was a weary shrug of shoulders – another clever-dick story. As time went on, the story took on a more interesting character, especially if one links it to a couple of other reports, not much noted by the British MSM, one of a set of events in Russia at the end of October and the other a report about Ukraine that appeared, though not in the British press, a few days ago.
A longish piece with some very gruesome pictures posted on Umbrella Blog 3
georgia-area[i-georgia-area]This lunchtime I listened to Gia Jandieri, the Vice-President of the Georgian free-market think-tank, the New Economic School. He was addressing a good-sized audience (for a lunch-time discussion) at the International Policy Network (IPN).
The talk and most of the discussion afterwards was about Georgia’s internal developments, the reforms and the need to find alternative sources of energy and alternative markets to Russia. More of that in another posting.
Towards the end somebody asked Mr Jandieri when he thought Georgia would join the European Union, something I had not realized was on the cards, anyway. His reply was instructive.
Quite cynically, he said, I hope never. The government wants it, in his view, but a free-market think-tank like his does not. They have been watching the palaver with other applicant countries and want none of it.
What they would like is free trading agreements with the EU and its member states and ability to travel easily back and forth. As somebody in the audience pointed out, they want the good bits but not the bad ones. Mr Jandieri cheerfully agreed and nobody faulted him.
This is not the first time I heard similar sentiments from people that come from supposedly aspirant countries. Joel Anand Samy and Natasha Srdoc of the Croatian Adriatic Institute for Public Policy were similarly sceptical about the EU and its possible good influence.
They, too, had noticed that the European Union is not precisely the free-market, liberal entity they would like their countries to become. Furthermore, the EU refuses to live up to its own supposed principles and does not support those who advocate real reforms in the former Communist states.
According to Oleg Manaev of the Independent Institute of Socio-Economic & Political Studies in Belarus, whom I actually interviewed on behalf of EUReferendum (still to be written up), expressed the view that about a third of his country’s population was supportive of western-style democracy and free market reforms. These people, in his opinion, were disenchanted with the European Union and its members for all sorts of reasons, not least their lukewarm attitude to the war on terror and were looking more and more to the United States as the real leader of the West.
In practical terms that means very little at the moment. But one cannot help asking a question: do these people know something large proportions of the British public and establishment do not?
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