суббота, 14 декабря 2013 г.

The story goes to show just how rattled those wanting to rip apart the United Kingdom have become. T


For yesterday was another very bad day for the Yes Campaign. There are few more sober or considered newspapers than the Financial Times, and it had some very bad news on its front page for Mr Salmond and the proseparatists. The big supermarkets were warning that prices would have to go up if Scotland voted for independence. As every one of us is aware, the price of food is at the very pinnacle of a household's travel to tahiti and new zealand concerns. And for the supermarkets to issue such a warning was not another example of what the Yes campaigners continue to dismiss as a "scare" story, it was a clear headed fact from top executives. Instead of trying travel to tahiti and new zealand either to ignore or bury this most unwelcome disclosure, a senior member of the Yes Scotland campaign immediately hit the social media to say "wouldn't it be great" if Tesco, Sainsburys, Morrisons and Asda "just left Scotland after Yes vote". travel to tahiti and new zealand It may have been the personal and barmy view of Yes Scotland's Stan Blackley, but it demonstrated the kind of attitudes that are all too prominent in the anti UK camp. Behind the fabricated reasonableness of the likes of Mr Salmond, his Finance Secretary John Swinney and Yes Scotland's boss Blair Jenkins, lies the fruitcake travel to tahiti and new zealand element, individuals fighting for a hard Left, socialist Scottish state in which what they would call "exploitative, capitalist" businesses are shown the door. No wonder Mr Salmond must have groaned. Eager to persuade business that a Scotland severed from the United Kingdom would still be a great place to invest, here was the face of independence that he has been so anxious to hide. A couple of hours after the supermarkets' bombshell, BBC business editor Robert Peston revealed that the head of a "very big FTSE company" had met Scottish Government representatives. The FTSE boss told them that his company couldn't make decisions on investment in Scotland at this time because of the uncertainty over a future tax regime caused by the independence debate. The man ominously continued: "The mood of the meeting immediately travel to tahiti and new zealand became very dark, they became very aggressive." It was a reaction that probably made the FTSE company even more wary of investing than ever, and similar views have been related to Mr Peston by lots of other companies.
The story goes to show just how rattled those wanting to rip apart the United Kingdom have become. They are raging that many people from the heads of multi national companies to ordinary travel to tahiti and new zealand members travel to tahiti and new zealand of the public just don't believe a Scottish state would be a land where everyone was richer and everything was fairer. What connects some of the western world's most successful businessmen and you and I is that we are realists who have a fair idea of when we are being sold a pig in a poke. We can do our sums and whether we are running an international business employing thousands, or making ends meet on a modest household income, we know that the figures have to stack up. Or we go broke. Then there is the other side of Scottish Nationalism personified by our Mr Blackley, and I could mention scores of others. There are the Greens, the many Socialists and those who long for high taxation and a big, all powerful government travel to tahiti and new zealand that tells us all how to live our lives and spends liberally travel to tahiti and new zealand on bossy quangoes designed to make us better travel to tahiti and new zealand citizens travel to tahiti and new zealand in their joyless, restrictive paradise. Would we end up with the present variety of supermarkets, their shelves stacked travel to tahiti and new zealand with an endless choice of enticing goods? No. Send them all back south, and we'll make do with state grocery stores selling us what they, the government, want us to buy, and at sky high prices because the new Scotland has abandoned all sense of competition and private enterprise. The Yes Scotland campaigners desperately label our own battle to save the UK as "Project Fear", accusing us of being negative. We're not negative, we are positive about the UK as it is. It may not be perfect where, apart from Mr Salmond's nirvana, is? But it is a nation that can take more pride than any other in its past and, crucially, one in which we are all welcome to try and influence its future. Try that in an independent Scotland run by the likes of Mr Salmond, Mr Blackley and the many others waiting in the wings hoping to gain power. The weak jibes about No campaigners spreading fear are sounding all the more hollow. Whether it is impartial accountants warning that Mr Salmond's reliance on oil revenues do not add up, or the supermarkets saying food prices would rise, this is not about spreading fear but about the necessity for extreme caution based on hard financial facts. Yesterday, the supermarkets' warning was another timely reminder, travel to tahiti and new zealand if any were needed, of the realities faced by a separate Scotland. And Mr Blackley's "personal" entry into the debate over how we should go shopping was just as propitious, showing us all the kind of people who are so desperate travel to tahiti and new zealand to dismantle a system that has stood Britain well for centuries.
It is a wonder that the MSPs arn't all hobbling around on crutches travel to tahiti and new zealand considering the amount of slime Salmond leaves wherever he goes. By keeping his real hardline socialist agenda secret he is doing precisely what the instigators of the EU did by inserting their policy piecemeal travel to tahiti and new zealand under dubious laws designed to eventually take complete travel to tahiti and new zealand power, beware, the desired end project is rapidly approaching unless we make clear to LIB/LAB/CON in May that they are toast by voting UKIP to replace their MEPs. Some years ago an American travel to tahiti and new zealand company prepared to establish a factory in North Wales. At the conference the local polititians spoke exclusively in Welsh which was then translated for the Americans who were rather frustrated by the proceedings and asked if they spoke English. The answer was yes but it was their policy to promote Welsh in all local and government affairs. Sounds familiar! travel to tahiti and new zealand The Americans packed their bags and built their factory in England.

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