Wrong-Direction
Well-known member
- Mar 10, 2013
- 13,636
Cameron has never said that he doesn't want Turkey to join the EU. If they meet the criteria then it could be considered. However a country has to adopt and enforce all the current EU rules before it can be admitted to the bloc and in 10 years Turkey managed to adopt just one of the 35 policy areas in 'science a research', in most other areas it hasn't even made a start. So for the Brexit campaign to claim that Turkey is imminently about to join the EU is pure fantasy on the same level as the £350 million a day Garbage that they have been peddling. There is also the issue of the unresolved territorial dispute with Cyprus so yes there is a chance that in the distant future Turkey may join the EU but that is so far off its hardly worth worrying about.
If we vote leave Cameron should be ousted. he cannot be trusted to execute the job
'Flooding the jobs market'? Funny thing is the Brexit side is painting a picture of all these immigrants sitting on their arses claiming benefits!
I worked for a nationwide cleaning and security company, it employed around 7000 people on near to national minimum wage, funny thing is it was almost exclusively migrants calling up asking for work. There were always jobs available but the English born people on benefits didn't seem to be interested!
Unbelievable. It's a survey by Ipsos mori - an independent polling company not the newspaper's opinions. Your reaction is hilarious as you would obviously rather believe what the Sun tells you then the findings of a survey by a reputable research company, whose entire reputation is based on being independent and objective as possible. Unfortunately it's idiots like you who are preventing people from being properly informed about the debate.
You are using the word imminently, but nobody else has.
The real issue here is deceit. For David Cameron to say that on the one hand there is no prospect of Turkey joining the EU, and "don't think about it", and on the other hand say that he is going to work to try to make it happen, "I will remain [Turkey's] strongest possible advocate for EU membership." is deceitful. There's no way around it.
If he had any honor or decency he would be honest about his position and defend it. Instead he is trying to mislead people.
He says it's not going to happen, it's not on the cards. On the other hand, as you concede, one day, it will happen. When people say Turkey will join the EU, they are not lying, you are just moving the goal posts. & Yes it is precisely like the 350M issue. It's not going to happen (yet) is the same kind of deciet as 350M is not true (ly sent).
Those weren't my words, they are the words of economist Ha-Joon Chang.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ha-Joon_Chang
What! Those are adjectives I'd use to describe any tory government!
Nevertheless, the facts and logic must be as unsettling for you as they're chilling for me.
...the core EU values of Human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights would be better for everyone..no??!
Eh? It's the findings of a survey by Ipsos Mori, not a journalist's opinions. Yet more ignorance. Perhaps you'd prefer to believe the Daily Express?
He is a Marxist economist(whatever that is) and a fringe Kook.He uses the kind of logiic more common among anti-vaxxers.
Currently a Reader in the Political Economy of Development at the University of Cambridge, Chang is the author of several widely discussed policy books, most notably Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective (2002).[4][5][6] Chang was ranked by Prospect magazine as one of the top 20 World Thinkers in 2013.[7]
He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, as well as to Oxfam[8] and various United Nations agencies.[9] He is also a fellow at the Center for Economic and Policy Research[10] in Washington, D.C. In addition, Chang serves on the advisory board of Academics Stand Against Poverty (ASAP).
The number of foreign-born people of working age in the UK increased from 2.9 million in 1993 to 6.6 million in 2014.
Compared to the early 2000s, the presence of foreign-born workers has grown fastest in relatively low-skilled sectors and occupations. The increase in the share of foreign-born workers was fastest among process operatives (e.g. transport drivers, food, drink and tobacco process operators), up from 8.5% in 2002 to 32.0% in 2014.
http://www.migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/briefings/migrants-uk-labour-market-overview
Flooding the jobs market.
I don't think the Brexit side are claiming they are sitting on their arses they are saying the rate of immigration is too high and unsustainable for numerous valid reasons.
Funnily enough it's Cameron who seems to think migrants come for the benefits which is why he negotiated a minor change for new EU migrants ability to claim and has suggested this is likely to help lower the numbers. Which it isn't.
& actually, I don't agree with his economics. But I quoted him not on his economics, but rather on his view about economists. He is considered an "expert". & just like he, in his own humility points out, that actually means very little when it comes to economics.
He's hardly a fringe kook.
What?
Those are British values, and that includes democracy, which is certainly not an EU value.
Hes a marxist, what do you think his opinions on economists working in the City, banks Government etc are going to be like? Yes he is a fringe Kook, writing in the Guardian.
My point was in response to your claim that 'those on the 'lowest rungs' including low/semi workers and the unemployed experience first hand the joys of being exposed to mass immigration flooding the jobs market' like migration is somehow a threat to unemployed people in Britain getting a job. However In my experience this just doesn't add up, fact is there are plenty of jobs out there for the British born unemployed but they simply don't want to do them, they would rather stay unemployed and on Benefits.
Until there is a sea change in attitudes to work the percentage of foreign workers in low skilled sectors will continue to go up as largely speaking migrants are the only people willing to take these types of jobs.