View Single Post
Old 11-15-2018, 10:53 AM  
thommy
Confirmed User
 
thommy's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Switzerland / Germany / Thailand
Posts: 5,469
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul Markham View Post
I will admit that Germany has been a massive problem in the past. Starting 2 World Wars, murdering countless millions and causing huge devastation. Having the USSR and now Russia on the borders of Europe did more to prevent war than the EU.
1. get yourself informed WHO had started the 1st WW. in the meantime you can read the truth even in britain.

https://www.theweek.co.uk/59782/how-...orld-war-start

2. in the time of WW 2 germany was a monarchy and not a republic where people could decide anything. we fucked our king out - you still live in that era.

Quote:
Yes the UK has a problem with non-EU migrants. Maybe now the Government will get it and start controlling who comes in and who is kept out. Polish plumbers and nurses will get visas.
and they came with the EU ?????

NOOOOT AT AAAAAALLLLL !
this is a homemade problem and have nothing to do with the EU.
this is the late bill for imperialism.

Quote:
I live in a country a net receiver of EU funds and has no plans to leave, thankfully.
actually not even that - but does the following fit into your small brain ?

Although European integration has brought the Eastern states a more productive economy and jobs, most of the profits have been transferred to the West. While inequality within these countries remains low, a colonial-like relationship with the foreign upper class is emerging. The sum far exceeds the state transfers from the EU budget, as data from Piketty's new PhD student Filip Novokmet show.

Looking at the years 2010 to 2016, Poland sent 4.7 percent of its economic output as capital income to the West - and at the same time received only 2.7 percent net from the EU budget.


The ratio for Slovakia is 4.2 to 2.2.

The balance is even less favourable for Hungary (outflows of 7.2 per cent of gross domestic product against inflows of 4 per cent) and the Czech Republic (7.6 per cent to 1.9 per cent).

sorry paul - but facts are not really your strong side.
__________________
Open for handpicked publishers and advertisers:
www.trafficfabrik.com
thommy is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote