The Thousand Year E. U.
This is ment to show
the concerns and annoyances caused by the rulers of our country in giving away
the things we lent to them. Parliament is a debating chamber and has no power
except that which we give it, giving away sovereignty is short sighted, vain and
illegal without the agreement of the people.
This shows how safe the hands
are that are grabbing our sceptre.
Euro Laws Cut Low Pay
Wages
The Working Time Regulations
came into force on the 1st October this year reducing the earning power of the
lowest paid workers by about 8%. The repossessions and evictions should start to
bite about Yule, a happy Christmass present from Brussels
How can the Tyrants
do this? Easy, force the most needy to take holidays as time off instead of as
extra money to top their poor wages.
Brussels Tyrants see see holidays as
time to go and enjoy themselves, trips to far off places, fine wine, good food.
They know that they can afford to do these things. The lower orders can also do
similar, if less adventurous things if they save up for a while. The low paid
can not save though, a weeks wages is already spoken for to pay a weeks bills. A
"holiday" can be paid for if you draw 2 weeks pay and only take one week off.
Your bills are then covered and you have enough money to take the children out
for a day. That is now verboten ( forbidden as they say).
Funnies
Eurocrats forced to retake exams
By Stephen Castle in
Brussels
AN examination taken by up to 30,000 would-be Eurocrats, including several
thousand Britons, will have to be repeated because of widespread cheating and
confusion.
The decision, which is a severe embarrassment to the European Commission,
follows revelations that candidates conferred in examination halls, made calls
on mobile phones from lavatories and were leaked questions in advance.
Announcing the cancellation of the exam yesterday, the Commission estimated
that the cost of staging the open competition sat at 38 centres throughout the
continent, including north London and Edinburgh, amounted to 1.2 million ecus
(about £900,000).
An investigation discovered that papers had been leaked in Italy, and
confirmed reports of other problems at test centres including those at Heysel in
Brussels and in Rome.
"The same people will have to start all over again," said the Commission's
spokeswoman yesterday, "or at least those who aren't disgusted with the whole
process."
The Belgian media said applicants in Brussels had visited the lavatory en
masse during the examinations, exchanged knowledge and used mobile phones to
ring out for answers.
Near-anarchy in Rome was caused by the failure of the examiners to provide
enough papers. Candidates, some of whom had seen their test papers, conferred
freely while more were photocopied. Candidates in Milan were sent to the wrong
address.
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