I've never said otherwise. You're not confusing me with whichphilosophy, are you?
I was talking to whichphilosophy who was making that argument, stating that the UK could easily provide enough housing for 2 million immigrants a decade if it desired to. You decided you didn't like a word I used and proceeded to engage. Don't act surprised that I therefore respond to you as if you were making the same argument.
No, but not making reference to these genuine issues when you are considering a position does mean you're ignoring them, intentionally or otherwise.
No, it doesn't. Not making reference to various issues (your insistence on inserting the word 'genuine' there every time you talk about them strikes me as interesting) means nothing more than that I'm not making reference to them during the course of a conversation. Not mentioning something and ignoring something are two different things. That said, just because you think something is a "genuine" issue; as opposed to just a regular issue and feel slighted that I'm not referencing them enough, doesn't inspire in me the notion that I should consider such issue with the same gravitas you apparently do.
No, you're insisting on a conspiracy.
Repeating a false claim does little to justify it.
These issues did not merge from some invisible cauldron of political machination.
Which I did not claim nor insinuate.
hey were proposed by Eurosceptic members of Cameron's party, they were discussed widely, the issue has been boiling on for several years, and was finally forced on Cameron. For the actual motive to be to do with creating pressure for negotiations, as you suggested,
Except that I suggested no such thing; I suggested that it was *part* of the motivation; and I have seen no convincing argument to the contrary.
would require the cooperation and collusion of Cameron and his close allies with his political opponents and those with longstanding opposition to the policies he's enacted.
So, it somehow becomes a conspiracy theory because I think that in addition to being politically pressured into it, he might *also* seek to use it to strengthen his negotiating position? How the fuck does that work? Why does he need to collude with his political opponents, who want a referendum, in order to also want to strengthen his negotiating position? Where's the conspiracy here exactly? Do you imagine my argument is that the whole thing is just smoke and mirror and Cameron has masterfully convinced his allies and opponents to just play along with a fake referendum? I honestly don't understand what you're thinking here.
You're accusing him of stage managing a revolt in his own party to impress European politicians. Since he can't actually do that himself without a lot of help, you're suggesting a conspiracy to do the same.
There you go again, drawing conclusions about my position despite me explicitly telling you those conclusions are wrong. It seems you've misinterpreted what I've said earlier, and are now incapable of altering that. I've accused him of no such thing.
No, I'm saying something that you agree with, but haven't said.
That's odd, because in the post you were responding to I explicitly mentioned the problem inherent in human political systems, a problem you re-iterate above. The other matters you mentioned are details which I am not particularly inclined to agree or disagree with.
Britian has asked for financial and CAP reform. You've talked a lot about whining children seeking special treatment, and trying to put pressure on the rest of the EU, but as a straight question: Does Britain have a point? Is there a genuine need for reform here?
It's hard to really know since it seems as if Britain doensn't even know what reforms it wants, other than that it wants reforms. Let's take a look at the list of things Cameron has said he wants to see reformed, shall we? I'll take them point by point.
- Powers flowing from Brussels, not always to it. - In principle there's agreement here; nothing wrong with decentralized EU governance. However, this is hopelessly vague and seems little more than a populist soundbite. What powers specifically? And why this insistence on referring to these powers as "always" flowing *to* Brussels when this isn't the case to begin with?
- National parliaments able to work together to block unwanted European legislation. - Sure, agree. To a point. But this is essentially already true, so it seems like another statement for public consumption and not any sort of specific reform.
- Businesses liberated from red tape and benefiting from the strength of the EU's own market to open up greater free trade with North America and Asia. - I'd have to see the specific red tape to be eliminated. Unregulated business is not something we should aspire to; though specific regulations may do more harm than good.
- UK police forces and justice systems able to protect British citizens, unencumbered by unnecessary interference from the European institutions, including the European court of human rights. - This is flat-out insane, and something UK citizens should be deeply concerned by.
- Free movement to take up work, not free benefits. - Another populist statement; there is little evidence that this is actually a problem to begin with; even if there's a popular perception of immigrants along these lines. EU-migrants have been shown to be a net benefit to the UK economy, the number of them that soak up free benefits are a percentage too small to be represent anything other than a cheap way to score votes with certain demographics. Furthermore, reforms on this issue are likely to result in unacceptable restrictions for the free flow of people that is seen as one of the pillars of the EU.
- Support for the continued enlargement of the EU to new members but with new mechanisms in place to prevent vast migrations across the continent. - See above.
- Ensuring Britain is no longer subject to the concept of "ever closer union", enshrined in the treaty signed by every EU country. - Another populist appeal. It's hard to take the UK seriously when it's getting worked up over a semantic issue regarding a bit of poetic treaty language. This is also the sort of demand for special snowflake status that I was talking about (and which you seem to be offended by).
This is the list of reforms which Cameron has publicized and with which I'm familiar. They are either too vague for me to outright agree with or too absurd. If you have some specific proposed reforms though, I'd be willing to consider them.
No, but it does mean you deny or refrain from acknowledging Y. And it is a means for blocking any discussion of Y.
I don't think you understand what you're saying here. No, it does not mean one *denies* Y. It does mean you refrain from acknowledging Y, but that is not a means of blocking any discussion of Y: if people want to discuss Y they are free to do so, but me not starting such a discussion (or engaging in it) is not akin to blocking it.
It does imply that Y is not an actual problem. That's what 'merely a political issue' means.
No, it doesn't. The fact that something is caused or perpetuated by nothing more than politics doesn't mean that that something isn't a problem. It means it doesn't *have* to be a problem.
Unless you're subscribing to the idea that unemployed people don't really want jobs, then yes, that's exactly what is says. Unemployed people are, by definition, the people looking for work.
Is there something magical about care for the elderly that means only immigrants want to do it?
You're assuming that you can somehow 1) force the people in charge to add more workers to properly take care of everyone, 2) increase the wages to a high enough level that enough people will actually take the undesirable jobs that have now been added in sufficient numbers, 3) That these changes in the care industry are economically sustainable, which may be true or might not be true. And 4) that these wage/workforce changes will not adversely impact other sectors of the economy; which again may or may not be the case.
The 'system' is made up of individuals. Of which many companies have been quite happily recognising that productivity isn't just monetary for many years. I've seen the issue raised and implemented in favourable terms in financial institutions, steelworks, call centres, IT firms, engineering firms, and so on. Even in the military. Business is fine with it.
Anecdotal evidence is questionable. Sure, there are companies which do appear to think along less profit-driven lines; how much of that is just for PR purposes as opposed to being genuine is up for grabs. And there are many companies still, perhaps even the majority, that are less inclined to think along such lines.
Perhaps it would help if you could say what these problems are, and why they're so intractable?
Aging demographics + Increasing and inevitable automatization; the latter paradoxically being both part of the cause and the likely solution for these sorts of issues; there's just the problem of bridging the gap between now and technology maturing to a sufficiently advanced point; which is where the immigrants come in.