Tuesday, 18 March 2014

What could be England's Last Wake up Call

When Margaret Thatcher was ousted by Europhiles for defending the United Kingdom against the introduction of EU regional policies proposed in the Maastricht Treaty, (subsequently signed by her successor) the signal was given to the EU that the United Kingdom was going to be a willing partner in sharing and relinquishing power to them, and accepted the possibility it could lead to the destabilisation of the nation state. Britain in Margaret Thatcher lost its last true British patriot.
Successive British governments and parliaments in their rush for Europe have corrupted the British identity with these regional policies, so much so that you could actually say they have encouraged it to the extent that Scotland and Wales now appear to want no more part of it. Given the power to look after their own domestic affairs with national parliament’s and doing so successively is it very surprising that they keep coming back for more power, and one of them, Scotland, now wants the option in a referendum to breakaway and decide its own future.
England has been kept in the dark since 1998 from the reality of adopting these EU regional policies and it is only now when the end of the United Kingdom could be in sight that the English are beginning to wake up. When in 1998 New Labour introduced these EU regional policies they did so by using our national boundaries and a process called asymmetrical devolution which denied England its rightful recognition, and it gave all other UK constituent nations except England a parliament. For the first time in 300 years the separate nations of the UK were given the power to discriminate against each other, and England without a parliament was not and is still not able to fight back. We have seen the results of discrimination manifest themselves in the differing costs of student fees, access to prescription drugs, care for the elderly etc, etc, each time the cost being to the disadvantage of the English tax payer. It also made it impossible anymore for British political party’s to put out a manifesto that would apply across the whole of the UK, and although they try to make it appear so by calling one British they can’t mask their separate manifestos for Scotland and Wales. How long can the United Kingdom survive in its present form anyway when certain parts get better benefits than others, and English rights to those benefits are denied by British MP’s, over 100 of  whom are from Scotland and Wales whose countries it is that get them. We must not forget either why the British have to deny England its political existence, it’s so that they can use it as a cash cow to bolster their own identity at home and abroad, and how hypocritical then that they are spending billions of pounds of our money doing it while at the same time they have continued to sign over their identity to Europe. If the British had any intention of saving the last of their empire they would have been talking to all of the UK nations about federalism before and after signing Maastricht and at least before any Scottish referendum that could signal the end of it. The importance of England gaining a parliament to protect itself and its assets in the circumstances can not be over stressed; if Scotland becomes independent the British Empire will be over. (FACT) If the British after want to retain their now defunct UK identity and power over England by denying us a parliament they will have to make us in England take on all of Scotland’s UK debts, which could put a debt of between £20,000 and £30,000 on the head of every English tax payer.
It will be a sad and costly day for us all if Scotland brings the United Kingdom to an end, and let us remember the FACT that the separate kingdoms were those of England and Scotland which became one in 1707 and that Wales and Ireland played no part in it. (Wales had been part of England since 1536)
Most of all let us not forget that none of this could have come about if the New Labour Blair government had not repealed all of the Treason Acts from 1770 onwards from British Law.

                                                                                                                           STANO

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