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Please consider this
humorous video of Margaret Thatcher's last House of Commons Speech on
November 22, 1990. What Thatcher said then about the Euro, European politics,
socialism and wealth creation makes as much sense today as it did then, when
she made fools of the opposition in Parliament to much laughter from the
conservatives.

Here is a link if the video does not play: Thatcher's Last Stand Against
Socialism
The video is quite funny, please play it.
The complete Transcript of Thatcher's Last
Stand is well worth a read as well. Here are some
pertinent snips on Eurozone, not all of which is in the above video.
Mr. Alan Beith (Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Will the Prime Minister tell us whether she intends to continue her personal
fight against a single currency and an independent central bank when she
leaves office?
Mr. Dennis Skinner (Bolsover)
No. She is going to be the [central bank] governor. [Laughter.]
The Prime Minister
What a good idea. I had not thought of that. But if I were, there would be no
European central bank accountable to no one, least of all national
Parliaments. The point of that kind of Europe with a central bank is no
democracy, taking powers away from every single Parliament, and having a
single currency, a monetary policy and interest rates which take all
political power away from us.
As my right hon. Friend the Member for Blaby (Mr. Lawson ) said in his first speech after the proposal for a
single currency was made, a single currency is
about the politics of Europe, it is about a federal Europe by the back door.
So I shall consider the proposal of the hon. Member for Bolsover (Mr.
Skinner). Now where were we? I am enjoying this.
Mr. Michael Carttiss (Great Yarmouth)
Cancel it. You can wipe the floor with these people.
The Prime Minister
Yes, indeed—I was talking about Europe and the socialist ideal
of Europe. Not for us the corporatism, socialism and central control. We
leave those to the Opposition. Ours is a larger vision of a Community whose
member states co-operate with one another more and more closely to the
benefit of all.
Are we then to be censured for standing up for a free and open Britain in a
free and open Europe? No. Our policies are in tune with the deepest instincts
of the British people. We shall win the censure motion, so we shall not be
censured for what is thoroughly right.
What Thatcher said
about the Euro being a "back door" mechanism for transformation of
Europe into a socialist nanny state was stunningly correct.
Hopefully, prime minister David Cameron will see the light and stand to to the EU and its attempt to extort another £25bn
from the UK. For details, please see EU Leaders Endlessly Play
"Ring-Around-the-Rosie"; Finance Ministers Seek IMF Funding Deal;
EU demands £25bn lifeline from the UK.
Indeed, rules have gotten so crazy in regards to agricultural policy and other
rules, that Cameron should put exiting the EU to a popular vote.
UK Should Exit the EU
Why should UK citizens pay through the nose for inane trade regulations
especially on agricultural goods?
The UK needs to send a statement that it has had enough. If France wants
protectionist agricultural policies then France, not the UK should suffer the
consequences.
Those who do not know what I am talking about can find a nice example in UK facing £20m garlic
tax bill
The
UK Government has received a European Commission ultimatum to hand over
£20 million within two months or face legal action. The wrangle is over
the fact that import tariffs on frozen garlic from outside the EU are lower
than the rates for fresh garlic. And, according to the Commission, UK
authorities carelessly levied the lower rate applicable to frozen garlic on
imports of the fresh product from China, in breach of EU customs rules.
A Commission statement explained: "Between 2005 and 2006, the UK customs
authorities allowed imports of fresh garlic from the People's Republic of
China under wrong authorising documents. They have
erroneously stated that the goods imported were frozen garlic for which
significantly lower import duties apply.
Why Put Up With This?
The EU has inane agricultural policies, inane trade policies and tariffs, and
absurd rules on labeling bottled water, for example EU Bans Claim "Drinking
Water Can Prevent Dehydration".
Previously, EU officials banned the selling of overly bent bananas and curved
cucumbers but backed off after international ridicule.
Expect more such stupidity if a European Nanny-Zone forms.
What does the UK get for these endless regulations other than higher prices
and direct subsidies to French farmers?
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