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Fiscal Treaty: Alternative reason to vote NO

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  • 13-05-2012 11:16am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 4,554 ✭✭✭


    A significant portion of people are going to vote No, not for any of the reasons outlined already, rather, to cut off the funds to Ireland so that we cut the deficit immediately. A sharp shock as opposed to death by a thousand cuts. There is still a woeful amount of money being wasted by the establishment as you are well aware.

    Why do we need a national consumer agency in the worst recession since the 30's, If you are not offering value you are out of business

    Limerick regeneration: 140m spent already and not a housing unit built. 140m would go along way to refitting and upgrading the existing houses (providing much needed stimulus for the area) These regeneration areas have much greater green areas than what was built during the bubble. Use our criminal laws to deal with the known criminals that roam these areas.

    Taxes are still too low, people are in trouble because of the debt they incurred not because there salaries are too low, Salaries are too high in most areas. Compare internationally

    Let property prices crash and stop using taxpayers money to try and delay the inevitable. Houses are for shelter, one of the first in Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Lower house prices aid competitiveness and will offset the debt we are passing on to the generations to come who will have to pay for it.

    These are just some, You will be aware of many more.........

    Would it be such a disaster if we had to cut the deficit overnight, It would put us in a far better bargaining position against our "masters" who, lets face it, have displayed little understanding of the problem.

    Before I get lambasted as being a far right, well heeled developer/banker or such likes. I work in the private sector in a predominantly exporting company earning well below the average industrial wage.

    My vested interest is my children and their future in this country, if there is to be one.


«1

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,857 ✭✭✭professore


    Turkeys won't vote for Christmas. Politicians and senior civil servants know that the bailout money is paying their huge salaries. The huge tax hikes necessary to close the gap, especially corporation taxes, are going to kill whats left of the economy since lets face it, cutting costs headcount and numbers in the public sector is not going to happen.

    Watch the "anti austerity" brigade in Greece come to a deal soon for the same reasons.

    The only way out is to leave the euro and devalue our currency by half, achieving the same thing overnight.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,117 ✭✭✭shanered


    But its never going to happen quietly even though its what we HAVE to do....
    Pity really...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,461 ✭✭✭liammur


    Villa05 wrote: »
    A significant portion of people are going to vote No, not for any of the reasons outlined already, rather, to cut off the funds to Ireland so that we cut the deficit immediately. A sharp shock as opposed to death by a thousand cuts. There is still a woeful amount of money being wasted by the establishment as you are well aware.

    Why do we need a national consumer agency in the worst recession since the 30's, If you are not offering value you are out of business

    Limerick regeneration: 140m spent already and not a housing unit built. 140m would go along way to refitting and upgrading the existing houses (providing much needed stimulus for the area) These regeneration areas have much greater green areas than what was built during the bubble. Use our criminal laws to deal with the scum that roam these areas.

    Taxes are still too low, people are in trouble because of the debt they incurred not because there salaries are too low, Salaries are too high in most areas. Compare internationally

    Let property prices crash and stop using taxpayers money to try and delay the inevitable. Houses are for shelter, one of the first in Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Lower house prices aid competitiveness and will offset the debt we are passing on to the generations to come who will have to pay for it.

    These are just some, You will be aware of many more.........

    Would it be such a disaster if we had to cut the deficit overnight, It would put us in a far better bargaining position against our "masters" who, lets face it, have displayed little understanding of the problem.

    Before I get lambasted as being a far right, well heeled developer/banker or such likes. I work in the private sector in a predominantly exporting company earning well below the average industrial wage.

    My vested interest is my children and their future in this country, if there is to be one.

    We love to complain, we love to ring joe duffy and blame enda for everything whilst at the same time going out and voting Yes. The Irish people you see are never wrong.

    Couldn't agree more re your Limerick regeneration project.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46 junk_seller


    Villa05 wrote: »
    A significant portion of people are going to vote No, not for any of the reasons outlined already, rather, to cut off the funds to Ireland so that we cut the deficit immediately. A sharp shock as opposed to death by a thousand cuts. There is still a woeful amount of money being wasted by the establishment as you are well aware.

    Why do we need a national consumer agency in the worst recession since the 30's, If you are not offering value you are out of business

    Limerick regeneration: 140m spent already and not a housing unit built. 140m would go along way to refitting and upgrading the existing houses (providing much needed stimulus for the area) These regeneration areas have much greater green areas than what was built during the bubble. Use our criminal laws to deal with the known criminals that roam these areas.

    Taxes are still too low, people are in trouble because of the debt they incurred not because there salaries are too low, Salaries are too high in most areas. Compare internationally

    Let property prices crash and stop using taxpayers money to try and delay the inevitable. Houses are for shelter, one of the first in Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Lower house prices aid competitiveness and will offset the debt we are passing on to the generations to come who will have to pay for it.

    These are just some, You will be aware of many more.........

    Would it be such a disaster if we had to cut the deficit overnight, It would put us in a far better bargaining position against our "masters" who, lets face it, have displayed little understanding of the problem.

    Before I get lambasted as being a far right, well heeled developer/banker or such likes. I work in the private sector in a predominantly exporting company earning well below the average industrial wage.

    My vested interest is my children and their future in this country, if there is to be one.


    im not disagreeing with you but which party are calling for a NO vote for the reasons you are , with the exception of perhaps declan ganley , all of the NO side are opposed to this treaty because they believe it will reinforce austerity


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,965 ✭✭✭laoch na mona


    austerity hasn't worked in Greece OP makes good points about housing prices


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  • Registered Users Posts: 17,849 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    there are several billion left in low hanging fruit, that could be cut! Now we all know the politicians dont want to get their hands dirty and lose potential votes, in fairness holding onto power, is all it is ever about!

    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/sick-leave-in-civil-service-falls-by-68pc-when-pay-is-cut-3104659.html

    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/bid-for-greater-scrutiny-of-councils-spending-blocked-3105328.html

    why arent all politicians expenses vouched?
    We love to complain, we love to ring joe duffy and blame enda for everything whilst at the same time going out and voting Yes. The Irish people you see are never wrong.

    Nail on the head.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,554 ✭✭✭Villa05


    im not disagreeing with you but which party are calling for a NO vote for the reasons you are , with the exception of perhaps declan ganley , all of the NO side are opposed to this treaty because they believe it will reinforce austerity

    What was the last problem a political party resolved satisfactorily?....
    LARGE NUMBERS of those who retired from the public service are being taken back by Government departments,
    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2012/0514/1224316064769.html
    Get my drift


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,554 ✭✭✭Villa05


    austerity hasn't worked in Greece

    Greek economy is very different to Ireland. Their debt is all due to Gov spending, a significant portion of ours is as a result of the continuing bailout of zombie banks. This, we are led to believe is on the direction of the ECB

    By cutting our deficit immediately, we are putting ourselves in the driving seat at negotiations and can use this to share the bailout costs as opposed to dumping it all on Irish generations to come


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 210 ✭✭SMASH THE UNIONS


    Excellent OP. I have been wrestling with my inner demons on whether to vote No, as to do so would mean aligning myself with Rich Boy Barrett, Joe Stalin Higgins and the rest of the rag tag socialist outcasts. However, the prospect of incompetent civil servants' wages being slashed over night is too tantalising to turn down. More costly loan money from Europe will only be used to fund the luxurious lifestyles of the elites while the rest of us pick up the tab with our taxes. A No vote will force the government to cut out all wastage and make them reconsider the bloated welfare state and entitlement culture they fostered during the.boom years.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,117 ✭✭✭shanered


    A no vote would be a kick up d arse for the establishment, and god knows we need one now more than ever!


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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,980 ✭✭✭meglome


    Villa05 wrote: »
    By cutting our deficit immediately, we are putting ourselves in the driving seat at negotiations and can use this to share the bailout costs as opposed to dumping it all on Irish generations to come

    Huh?!?! you might need to spell this magic thinking out for me.
    Excellent OP. I have been wrestling with my inner demons on whether to vote No, as to do so would mean aligning myself with Rich Boy Barrett, Joe Stalin Higgins and the rest of the rag tag socialist outcasts. However, the prospect of incompetent civil servants' wages being slashed over night is too tantalising to turn down. More costly loan money from Europe will only be used to fund the luxurious lifestyles of the elites while the rest of us pick up the tab with our taxes. A No vote will force the government to cut out all wastage and make them reconsider the bloated welfare state and entitlement culture they fostered during the.boom years.

    Your assumption is that the wages would actually be slashed. What's actually more likely is we would borrow from the markets or the ECB or the IMF but under worse conditions. So we'd be worse off.
    shanered wrote: »
    A no vote would be a kick up d arse for the establishment, and god knows we need one now more than ever!

    Gosh thank god we're all completely detached from 'the establishment' otherwise we'd all suffer. Oh wait...


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,305 ✭✭✭Zamboni


    Villa05 wrote: »
    A significant portion of people are going to vote No, not for any of the reasons outlined already, rather, to cut off the funds to Ireland so that we cut the deficit immediately. A sharp shock as opposed to death by a thousand cuts. There is still a woeful amount of money being wasted by the establishment as you are well aware.

    Why do we need a national consumer agency in the worst recession since the 30's, If you are not offering value you are out of business

    Limerick regeneration: 140m spent already and not a housing unit built. 140m would go along way to refitting and upgrading the existing houses (providing much needed stimulus for the area) These regeneration areas have much greater green areas than what was built during the bubble. Use our criminal laws to deal with the known criminals that roam these areas.

    Taxes are still too low, people are in trouble because of the debt they incurred not because there salaries are too low, Salaries are too high in most areas. Compare internationally

    Let property prices crash and stop using taxpayers money to try and delay the inevitable. Houses are for shelter, one of the first in Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Lower house prices aid competitiveness and will offset the debt we are passing on to the generations to come who will have to pay for it.

    These are just some, You will be aware of many more.........

    Would it be such a disaster if we had to cut the deficit overnight, It would put us in a far better bargaining position against our "masters" who, lets face it, have displayed little understanding of the problem.

    Before I get lambasted as being a far right, well heeled developer/banker or such likes. I work in the private sector in a predominantly exporting company earning well below the average industrial wage.

    My vested interest is my children and their future in this country, if there is to be one.

    I agree.
    As I said elsewhere a No Vote is about a chance to force fiscal resonsibility upon the government.
    It's not about political persuasion, it's about balancing the books. And more debt is never the answer.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,585 ✭✭✭golfball37


    Excellent OP- Its my reason for voting NO also. Borrowing money to overpay politicians is bordering on criminal imo.

    Icelands grandchildren will not be tied to ridiculous austerity in perpetuity unlike our own. A clean break with a few years of hardship is the only patriotic thing we can do in the name of future generations.

    I can't imagine someone understanding why we tied oursleves to this in 100 years time to pay Brian Cowan & Michael Fingletons pension.

    I'd like my own grandchildren [please god] to be proud of me and not class me as a lackey.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,980 ✭✭✭meglome


    Zamboni wrote: »
    I agree.
    As I said elsewhere a No Vote is about a chance to force fiscal resonsibility upon the government.
    It's not about political persuasion, it's about balancing the books. And more debt is never the answer.

    I think many of us would like far more fiscal responsibility in this country but I've yet to see a believable argument that a no vote will actually achieve that.
    golfball37 wrote: »
    Excellent OP- Its my reason for voting NO also. Borrowing money to overpay politicians is bordering on criminal imo.

    How much of the 14 billion deficit this year is going to pay politicians? 10 million? 20 million?
    golfball37 wrote: »
    Icelands grandchildren will not be tied to ridiculous austerity in perpetuity unlike our own. A clean break with a few years of hardship is the only patriotic thing we can do in the name of future generations.

    I can't imagine someone understanding why we tied oursleves to this in 100 years time to pay Brian Cowan & Michael Fingletons pension.

    I'd like my own grandchildren [please god] to be proud of me and not class me as a lackey.

    For the love of jebus can we stop comparing a country that wasn't in the same position as Ireland to Ireland.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,797 ✭✭✭KyussBishop


    Does it not seem extraordinarily obvious that 'a few years of hardship' will have a huge knock-on effect on the overall economy, exacerbating the economic problems, and putting us under even bigger hardship than we are under now?

    I mean think about it, if you put in huge cuts across the board, what is that going to do?

    Higher taxes/reduction in wages (public or private) = reduction in disposable income = reduction of demand for private business = economic slowdown and business's shutting down = job losses = increased demand on social welfare + people defaulting on debts = a negative feedback loop of greater economic slowdown.


    It seems increasingly obvious that if austerity works at all, it has a low margin before it starts doing more harm than good, so massively increasing austerity for a short time would just decimate the economy.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,305 ✭✭✭Zamboni


    meglome wrote: »
    I think many of us would like far more fiscal responsibility in this country but I've yet to see a believable argument that a no vote will actually achieve that.

    A Yes Vote certainly won't bring fiscal responsibility. A No Vote might.
    When nobody else will lend to you you don't have any choice but to sharply reduce expenditure.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,585 ✭✭✭golfball37


    The only difference between Iceland & Ireland is 1 letter- Who said that?

    Amazing how the "it'll make no difference to our deficit" line is always trotted out as a defence of not cutting politicians pay and perks.

    Taking the pensions of Mahon named crooks will save lives of people on trolleys or waiting lists, now that may be populist rubbish to you but its also true.

    It would have the added bonus of making more of the poeple follow the government's lead in this crisis also, if you don't see a massive disconnect between the people and the governmet because of lack of reform than your very myopic, imo.

    if the govt want to stop SF's rise in the polls all they have to do is make the tough decisons they promised in Feb 11 wrt political reform. Until they do anything they tell us will not be taken seriously, the latest being this treaty.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    Zamboni wrote: »
    A Yes Vote certainly won't bring fiscal responsibility. A No Vote might.
    When nobody else will lend to you you don't have any choice but to sharply reduce expenditure.
    ..or sharply increase income through taxes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,305 ✭✭✭Zamboni


    seamus wrote: »
    ..or sharply increase income through taxes.

    And I will put my money where my mouth is and pay them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,007 ✭✭✭Mance Rayder


    golfball37 wrote: »
    Excellent OP- Its my reason for voting NO also. Borrowing money to overpay politicians is bordering on criminal imo.

    Icelands grandchildren will not be tied to ridiculous austerity in perpetuity unlike our own. A clean break with a few years of hardship is the only patriotic thing we can do in the name of future generations.

    I can't imagine someone understanding why we tied oursleves to this in 100 years time to pay Brian Cowan & Michael Fingletons pension.

    I'd like my own grandchildren [please god] to be proud of me and not class me as a lackey.


    Iceland cannot be compared to Ireland. the population of Iceland is just 319,575. Their problem is a lot smaller then ours.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,980 ✭✭✭meglome


    Zamboni wrote: »
    A Yes Vote certainly won't bring fiscal responsibility. A No Vote might.
    When nobody else will lend to you you don't have any choice but to sharply reduce expenditure.

    The problem is they will lend to us, just not at very nice terms. Then the government will plod ahead and we'll be worse off. Very few people really believe no one will give us money.


  • Registered Users Posts: 23,283 ✭✭✭✭Scofflaw


    Villa05 wrote: »
    A significant portion of people are going to vote No, not for any of the reasons outlined already, rather, to cut off the funds to Ireland so that we cut the deficit immediately. A sharp shock as opposed to death by a thousand cuts. There is still a woeful amount of money being wasted by the establishment as you are well aware.

    Why do we need a national consumer agency in the worst recession since the 30's, If you are not offering value you are out of business

    Limerick regeneration: 140m spent already and not a housing unit built. 140m would go along way to refitting and upgrading the existing houses (providing much needed stimulus for the area) These regeneration areas have much greater green areas than what was built during the bubble. Use our criminal laws to deal with the known criminals that roam these areas.

    Taxes are still too low, people are in trouble because of the debt they incurred not because there salaries are too low, Salaries are too high in most areas. Compare internationally

    Let property prices crash and stop using taxpayers money to try and delay the inevitable. Houses are for shelter, one of the first in Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Lower house prices aid competitiveness and will offset the debt we are passing on to the generations to come who will have to pay for it.

    These are just some, You will be aware of many more.........

    Would it be such a disaster if we had to cut the deficit overnight, It would put us in a far better bargaining position against our "masters" who, lets face it, have displayed little understanding of the problem.

    Before I get lambasted as being a far right, well heeled developer/banker or such likes. I work in the private sector in a predominantly exporting company earning well below the average industrial wage.

    My vested interest is my children and their future in this country, if there is to be one.

    Then, personally, I would suggest a rethink of your analysis. The SF/ULA/Union claim that "austerity isn't working" may be both silly and startlingly irrelevant to the Treaty (or, if relevant, having exactly the opposite effect to their claim), but it's not based on fiction.

    Austerity - that is, cutting the budget deficit - does have a negative effect on the economy. If the government is borrowing €15bn - thereby racking up public debt - it is also channeling that money first and foremost into the Irish domestic economy through spending, public sector wages, and social transfers. The €15bn it borrows, then, is a direct €15bn stimulus to the Irish domestic economy.

    Removing that stimulus all at once results in a sharp contraction of GNP - that is, in more business closures, as businesses lose government contracts or the spending of PS wages or welfare cheques. That, in turn, means more job losses and a fall in tax take. Even assuming a straight 1:1 correspondence between the fiscal deficit and the resulting stimulus, you're looking at a roughly 10% fall in GNP. That's a bigger fall than we experienced as a result of the collapse of the construction sector.

    What that means should be obvious - a new deficit. The new deficit should be smaller than the old deficit, but without further deficit cutting, it will not be stable - the effects of the original sharp contraction will knock on for a while, as businesses reliant on contracts or wages from the first round of failures go out of business in turn, and the domestic economy continues to contract. So the deficit will need to be balanced again, and then again.

    The deficit is, in fact, a moving target. It's not something you can just balance as if it were a household budget and then that's that - instead, when you cut government borrowing and spending, you're cutting into the economy that supports state spending, and which state spending supports.

    The "balance the budget" mantra makes exactly the mistake the anti-austerity mob like to accuse the government of making, and which the government is not in fact making - state budgets are not the same as household budgets. Come to that, even household budgets aren't without their effects on the wider economy - part of our problem at the moment is exactly that households are doing the same as the government, cutting their deficits and trying to reduce their debt.

    I agree with the intention of balancing the State's budget, but it can't be done all at one go - not because there isn't the will to do it, or any of the other reasons usually trotted out, but because it simply cannot be done.

    Both the anti-austerity position and the balance-the-budget-immediately positions are unrealistic. Both want things that cannot be done - the former cannot happen because we are already borrowing as much stimulus as we can, and there just isn't any further money for extra stimulus, the latter because sharper deficit cuts lead to sharper economic contractions lead to renewed deficits, not balance. The current gradual reduction path is the way between Scylla and Charybdis.

    cordially,
    Scofflaw


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,305 ✭✭✭Zamboni


    meglome wrote: »
    The problem is they will lend to us, just not at very nice terms. Then the government will plod ahead and we'll be worse off. Very few people really believe no one will give us money.

    If the govt start hitting up loan sharks I will personally set up the Taxpayers Party for the next GE and fight them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,797 ✭✭✭KyussBishop


    I'm still at the early stages of reading up and understanding of Ireland's position economically right now, and some parts of this article make good points (not specifically about Ireland) regarding what courses of action do/don't work:
    http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/05/michael-hudson-paul-krugmans-economic-blinders.html

    It seems like the primary thing that needs to be done for Ireland, is a debt writedown to reduce the burden.
    I don't think this has been done yet for Ireland, so what is the situation here and what would need to happen for this to become viable?

    Also, how would the Fiscal Treaty affect the potential for this in the future? (if at all)


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    Zamboni wrote: »
    If the govt start hitting up loan sharks I will personally set up the Taxpayers Party for the next GE and fight them.

    Which is all very well but it doesn't alter that if in the meantime, the government remains free to borrow should it find a willing lender.

    If they have take out a loan at 5%+ interest outside the ESM while having been prevented from borrowing from the ESM at 3%, the tax-payer will still be on the hook for that higher interest loan when you win your overall majority.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,849 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    Taking the pensions of Mahon named crooks will save lives of people on trolleys or waiting lists, now that may be populist rubbish to you but its also true.

    from today's indo...
    HSE Cuts funding for life-saving heart patient programme

    By Caroline Crawford
    Monday May 14 2012
    4 Comments
    AN INNOVATIVE programme that has cut the mortality rate in heart patients by two-thirds is having its funding cut, a GPs' conference heard yesterday.

    Findings from the Heartwatch initiative, which were recently published in the 'American Heart Journal', revealed that patients who participated in the programme had a much better chance of living.

    It also resulted in a significant drop in the rate of hospitalisation among patients with established heart disease.

    Set up in 2002, Heartwatch was expected to be rolled out nationally by 2009. However, despite its positive outcomes only 20pc of GP practices around the country are involved in the programme to date.

    It is a GP scheme focusing on secondary prevention for patients who have suffered a serious heart issue or from significant cardiovascular disease (CVD).

    It was set up in partnership with the Department of Health and Children, the health boards, the ICGP and the Irish Heart Foundation.

    The initiative is now under further threat after funding to a number of practices in the Mid-West was pulled by the HSE, according to Prof Andrew Murphy of NUI Galway.

    Prof Murphy told the Irish College of General Practitioners Conference in Galway that the initiative was "being gradually dismantled" by policymakers.

    Insisting he did not accept that funding for the chronic disease programme was not available, he added: "Ireland's current approach to chronic cardiovascular disease management is uncoordinated, chaotic and inchoate."

    The study involved 35 GP practices with 1,600 cardiovascular patients, 15pc of whom participated in Heartwatch.

    After five years, 5pc of the study patients in Heartwatch practices had died compared with almost 15pc in the non-Heartwatch practices.

    - Caroline Crawford

    Irish Independent


  • Registered Users Posts: 166 ✭✭fianna saor


    vote no, tell the bondholders to fvck themselves, say goodbye to the euro and bring back the punt, and be the rulers of our own destiny good bad or indifferent


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,675 ✭✭✭beeftotheheels


    vote no, tell the bondholders to fvck themselves, say goodbye to the euro and bring back the punt, and be the rulers of our own destiny good bad or indifferent
    Huh?

    1. The bondholders have already pretty much been paid and replaced with official sector debt to our sovereign which we cannot default on without leaving the EU.

    2. The six-pack already means that we have to follow the rules laid out in the treaty so we no longer "rule" our own destiny and voting No to the TCSG will not alter that, and

    3. All a no vote does is makes the "bad" more likely than the good or indifferent.

    Watch Greece - and how desperate they are to avoid a Grexit at the moment because they've done the math and realized that there's no good, only bad and ugly.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,540 ✭✭✭swampgas


    vote no, tell the bondholders to fvck themselves, say goodbye to the euro and bring back the punt, and be the rulers of our own destiny good bad or indifferent

    Rulers of our own destiny? What kind of drivel is that? Why not close the borders while you're at it, we can go back to subsistence farming and poverty.

    Heaven forbid a small island stuck in the Atlantic with few natural resources should actually take advantage of EU membership. Yeah, let's throw away all the advances Ireland has made in the last 40 years and go back to something DeValera might have dreamt up on a bad day.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 166 ✭✭fianna saor


    Huh?

    1. The bondholders have already pretty much been paid and replaced with official sector debt to our sovereign which we cannot default on without leaving the EU.

    2. The six-pack already means that we have to follow the rules laid out in the treaty so we no longer "rule" our own destiny and voting No to the TCSG will not alter that, and

    3. All a no vote does is makes the "bad" more likely than the good or indifferent.

    Watch Greece - and how desperate they are to avoid a Grexit at the moment because they've done the math and realized that there's no good, only bad and ugly.
    swampgas wrote: »
    Rulers of our own destiny? What kind of drivel is that? Why not close the borders while you're at it, we can go back to subsistence farming and poverty.

    Heaven forbid a small island stuck in the Atlantic with few natural resources should actually take advantage of EU membership. Yeah, let's throw away all the advances Ireland has made in the last 40 years and go back to something DeValera might have dreamt up on a bad day.

    now your talking, leave the eu and put a clamp on immigration


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