Two from my Facebook today
1 The problem with the Chancellor asking me to believe him today is that 
many of his previous forecasts have been woefully wrong (vide the amount
 of borrowing) so I am left scratching my head (and that is before a 
wider history of the Treasury e.g. their views on ERM). However if I 
follow some convoluted speak, he is saying that in 2030 each household 
might be £4,300 p.a. worse off (not against their income today but 
against what it might otherwise be (inflation vectored in? and what 
otherwise might it be in toto?)).  This is hardly telling stuff and it 
is certainly very biased. How much do you value your independence and 
the democracy of saying our Parliament ought to be our supreme governor 
(under our constitutional monarch of course)? Words, words, Wordsworth. 
2 The EU debate figures don't really seem to me to run conclusively either
 way. So why are so many of the big boys like the IMF, the French 
Economics Minister Macron, Obama, leaning on us so heavily? It has been 
suggested on my wall (scroll down) that all sorts of shennagins will 
take place to turn back our No vote if we head there. I don't know about
 that, I would prefer evidence rather than assertion. But it does occur 
to me that the sense of desperation by the stay campaign and
 from these big voices comes down to this? Is Europe sanguinely 
confident it will prosper without us? Is it going to be unphased at our 
departure? Perhaps the issue these big boys and elites are not keen on 
facing is whether our departure exposes the Emperor's new clothes of 
Europe. It exposes the EU as the fundamentally undemocratic operation it
 assuredly is, it reveals the weakness in its finances, its 
fundamentally uncompetitive nature. Germany basically carrying the rest.
 In other words a No from Great Britain really would precipitate a wider
 European crisis in "the project". Perhaps it is this prospect (more 
than whether Britain would really be worse or better off which seems 
very difficult to call) which is the absolute driver in propelling the 
remain camp to utter its strident warnings and to seek to involve the 
American President in our affairs. At some point on this logic, (and 
following the last Referendum Precedent) our Monarch may be discretely 
called upon to utter some words. What they are and whether they are 
issued will be so telling. If She refuses to say anything, I might 
conclude She thinks the British Commonwealth is worth more to the United
 Kingdom than the Europundits reckon.
Monday, 18 April 2016
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