Just in case anyone has forgotten what Gordon Brown ratified at a dinner, namely the Lisbon Treaty, the following should give an insight into what Theresa The Appeaser is doing her level best to hang onto with her latest botch-up.
This will not happen overnight. The EU works slowly using the Salami Principle of very thin slices that nobody notices until one day the salami has completely gone.
The list below is the EU’s Wish List of what they will want if the UK stays in the EU. The Lisbon Enabling ACT is the magic wand to grant them those wishes. If we have the No Deal option to leave then none will apply. If we have Deal of any sort the EU will keep control of some or many functions in the list below and the UK will remain subject to them. Much of this information was given to me by Nigel Spearing. 26 years Labour MP for Newham, 18 years a member of the House of Commons Select Committee on Europe, 8 years chairman. I had several meetings with Nigel at the House of Commons. Although no longer an MP his longevity gave him an open pass to anywhere in the Commons, even the records rooms downstairs. This info is considered by many extremist pro EU persons as nothing more than a conspiracy theory. It is up to the reader who to believe. Spearing wanted to publicise the details of the Lisbon Treaty. He was ordered not to by a very senior Civil Servant who said ‘that is information the public does not need to know’.
It is important to understand that the Lisbon Treaty is an Enabling Act. Virtually a clone of Hitler’s 1933 Enabling Act. That is with any of the clauses in it they can be changed, added to, or deleted by unknown bureaucrats at any time without the knowledge of any elected person. The EU uses what is known as the Salami principle – take very thin slices at a time so it’s loss is not noticed but eventually they gain the whole salami.
So whatever the Lisbon Treaty says now it can be altered to include what is wanted in the future. This is the estimated EU’s Wish List for the future. They will not be implemented immediately in one go but a bit at a time. Continue reading →