Cookie Notice

WE LOVE THE NATIONS OF EUROPE
However, this blog is a US service and this site uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and analyze traffic. Your IP address and user-agent are shared with Google along with performance and security metrics to ensure quality of service, generate usage statistics, and to detect and address abuse.

Saturday, 23 June 2018

Globalist granny-grabber mouths off

Globalist granny-grabber Emmanuel Macron mouthed-off in Brittany yesterday, according to France 24;
"I'm saying to you in the gravest terms: Many hate it (the EU) but they have hated it for a long time, and now you see them (nationalists) rise, like leprosy, all around Europe, in countries where we thought that they would never reappear."
Proving yet again that the little Kermit is deeply deluded.

Hating the EU doesn't make anyone a nationalist; all right thinking people should loathe and resent a body so hubristic, so territorially ambitious, so hungry for power, so anti-democratic and so dismissive and scornful of the people it aspires to rule that it allows folk like our gerontophile Kermit to flourish. Hating the EU is normal - those of whom to be suspicious are the hysterics, carpet-chewers and effete womblies such as PTSD Adonis or 'Howler' Grayling who support the vile federasts.

We're close to the Veneto here, so Macron must forgive me for toasting today's anniversary of Britain's historic vote in Prosecco straight from the Vigneron, in crates of bare, unlabelled brown bottles with crown caps, in complete defiance of every EU diktat you can imagine. 

Cheers!

 

13 comments:

rapscallion said...

Hate is too close an emotion to love for my liking. Hate the Eu, er, NO, I loathe it, I despise it, I wouldn't piss on it if it were on fire; if anything I'd be throwing petrol on it. I abhor the way it tramples on the freedoms of millions of good people, how it thinks its a good idea to import millions of barbarians into a culture that is far, far superior to their own. The EU has no redeeming features.

Set up ostensibly to prevent war, it seems intent on causing another one. It is because I love Europe and all its achievements that I detest the EU,

Today I am holding a party. The reasons are twofold, the first is to celebrate my birthday (tomorrow), and secondly, but more importantly to celebrate that historic vote to leave the accursed EU.

Today is our Independence Day.

DeeDee99 said...

Love Europe; loathe the EU.

Still, at least the silly Kermit acknowledges the degree of animosity there is in Europe towards the bullying, dictatorial EU.

John in Cheshire said...

Maybe I haven't looked hard enough but I don't know how their fanatical devotion to the EU personally benefits the likes of Messrs Adonis, Grayling, Miller, Clegg, Clarke and the rest. I know some of them have EU pensions and such but that doesn't seem to explain their excessive prosecution of the Remain agenda. There must be some other force which is driving them down their extremist path.

Pat said...

Leprosy spreading? More like cancer in recession.

Anonymous said...

I'm not celebrating until we're actually out. Half out's no good.

Don Cox

Raedwald said...

Ah, understood, Don - but the vote itself was to me such an historic aberration, such a blow to the complacency of the establishment, that I and many others will celebrate it as a stand-alone event.

Stephen J said...

It's "Independence Day" in Penge too, we have just taken charge of the grandson, so that my Brexit obsessed kids can have a PArty.

All welcome.

Whatever we fear, we won't know how far out we get until the same party next year, but it's a start anyway.

James Higham said...

What's ruining it for us pundits is that Soy Boy is giving such good value, there's barely time to devote our attention to "granny-grabber".

Bill Quango MP said...

Tough day on the media today.
So far 3 hours on the second referendum march. Only a side mention of the pro-Brexit march.

The battle continues.

1776 is the celebration. year for the Yanks.
1783 was the final signing and their escape from the British Empire.

We have some way to go.

Anonymous said...

EU set up to stop war? Mmmm maybe, but also, secretly, to create a superstate run by Germany. It was initially a combined France/Germany effort but I suspect as always the Germans intended to stick it to the French when they ceased to be useful. To arrogant disdainful Germany, France is the lickspittle useful idiot always clinging to German coattails.

Penseivat said...

Just look at the tenets of the Frankfurt School and see how many of those have been enshrined into eu law or actively supported by eu society, all funded by servile states and countries.

anon 2 said...

Anon @ 15:30 --- Yes, "secretly, to create a superstate run by Germany." What the bastards couldn't achieve by force, they've done by 'infiltration' and 'subversion'. Both the latter concepts are favorites of the "Frankfurt School" mentioned by pen seive (00:18), btw; they think they've been absolutely brilliant. And they don't even give any (dis)credit to their mates the Fabians.

Their latter-day definition of 'brilliance,' of course, has bequeathed -urther trouble for our sorting. Both Fabians and Frankfurters moled their way in through 'education' - and the sorry state of that idea+institutions must be seen to be believed.

John Vasc said...

On 23rd June, St John's Eve, throughout Europe in ancient times (and even today in some countries e.g. Greece) fires were lit in the streets, and the people danced around them or leapt over them to purge the locality from evil, as described extensively in Sir James Frazer's anthropological masterpiece: The Golden Bough. In Norrland (Sweden) 'bonfires are lit at a crossroads' and toadstools are cast into the fire 'in order to counteract the power of the Trolls and other evil spirits'.

Which is pretty much what we did, on 23rd June 2016. We came to a crossroads, lit a fire, danced around it communally, and threw into it the tyranny and hypocrisy of Brussels.
We shall need to keep on doing it - at least annually - until all the Trolls get the message that they are surplus to requirements.

If St John's Eve (is not the super-evident date for a public holiday in England, what is?