Sunday 13 December 2015

How England Pays Eastern Europe to Remain in the EU

We Pay Them to Come Here
Every day, Britain pays around 58 million pounds to the EU, and only about one third of this money comes back to the UK.
Most of it goes to Eastern European member states.
 
Similarly, other Western countries are also paying enormous sums of money to Eastern European states in order that they remain part of the European Union.
 
Adding to this, Western countries are obliged to allow anyone from Eastern Europe to move to the West and find work as well as claim benefits. Britain is the most generous country in the European Union when it comes to offering jobs and benefits to anyone from other countries.
 
The enormous difference in average wages between the West and the East means that freedom of movement within the EU is largely one sided, namely from East to West.
England is particularly hard hit by this one way situation, as most Eastern Europeans moving to Britain flock over to England.
 
Stop Paying Tributes to Eastern Europe
If England were to stop paying tributes to Eastern Europe, close the borders to cheap labour and also close down the free-for-all benefits system for all and sundry from the East, and if all Britain did the same, many other Western countries would follow suit.
It is a certainty that not one country in the East of Europe would remain a member of the EU.
 
There would be millions of vacant jobs in England for the millions of unemployed local people, our social services would be able to function better, the enormous pressure on housing would fall with a consequent drop in house prices and rent, and there would be more money to go round for the English people.
In short, we would not be handing over our money and our Country in order to maintain Eastern Europe.
 
People living in the East of Europe would learn to live in their own very fertile lands, build houses when they need them, and work in their own factories.
Rather than their governments whinging and demanding that we have to support them, they would learn to support themselves, and it would be about time if they did so.
 
Our English House and Garden
If an Englishman has a mansion, a green lawn and five colourful orchards, surely he doesn't have to go running every day to his neighbour's house demanding access to his bathroom and kitchen, and claiming the right to pitch a tent on his neighbour's lawn and have the sole exclusive rights to enter his orchards!
 
However, our English house and garden appear to be fair game for Eastern Europe, and on top of that we have to pay tens of millions of pounds every day to these countries.

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