MEP Daniel Hannan (interview)

Started by CrackSmokeRepublican, February 16, 2010, 12:46:39 AM

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CrackSmokeRepublican

What's up with this guy? Is he for real or going with cloaked agenda?
--The CSR

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QuoteHate is a strong word. I don't personally hate Jews, I just detest their behavior, especially the hardline neoconservative factions in Israel and the U.S.A. that have completely taken over our foreign policy and military policy. And of course I'm a Christian. Who said otherwise?

    The Dean on March 18, 2009 at 3:28 PM

He's also fond of blaming the US for World War II.

    England may have started WWII, but Woodrow Wilson's liberal intervention in WWI set the seed for the rise of Hitler and the second WW. If any one country is to blame, it's the US. Hitler was inevitable because of what we did in the 1910s.

    The Dean on April 17, 2009 at 2:53 PM

Now why don't you grow a pair and do a little research yourself if you're hanging on my every word?

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MEP Daniel Hannan (interview)

KingWorld News

http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldn ... 3A2010.mp3

Daniel is favored by many to be the next Prime Minister of Great Britain. He has become famous globally for his many speeches, particularly one where he addressed current Prime Minister Gordon Browne as "the devalued Prime Minister of a devalued government." Daniel Hannan is a writer and journalist, and has been Conservative MEP for South East England since 1999. He speaks French and Spanish and loves Europe, but believes that the EU is making its constituent nations poorer, less democratic and less free. In this interview Daniel discusses the shortcomings of Gordon Browne, supra-nationalism, fate and hope for a free Europe, the fact that people are wiser than their leaders, referrendum vote, how socialist governments end, the immediate and tangible impact on quality of life as a result of bailouts, revolution and more.

Follow Daniel Hannan's Daily Blog for the Telegraph.co.uk CLICK HERE  

MEP Daniel Hannan
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Biography from europarl.europa.eu

Daniel Hannan - Member of European Parliament (MEP)


Daniel HANNAN

European Conservatives and Reformists

Member

United Kingdom

 

http://www.hannan.co.uk


Member

Committee on Legal Affairs [See]

Delegation to the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly


Substitute

Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety [See]

Delegation for relations with the countries of the Andean Community [See]

Delegation to the Euro-Latin American Parliamentary Assembly


Curriculum vitae

MA (Modern History), Oxford University (1992). Director, European Research Group (1994-1999). Leader writer, The Daily Telegraph (1996- ). Columnist, The Sunday Telegraph (since 1999). Special adviser to Michael Howard MP (1997-1998).

Vice-Chairman, Conservative Students (1992-1993). Chairman, Conservative Graduates (1994-1999). Member, Executive Committee, European Young Conservatives (1995).

Member of the European Parliament (since 1999).


Parliamentary activities

Questions [See]

Speeches in plenary [See]



Declaration of financial interests (45 Kb) :


Parlement européen

Bât. Willy Brandt

05M089

60, rue Wiertz / Wiertzstraat 60

B-1047 Bruxelles/Brussel

Tel. : +32 (0)2 28 45137

Fax : +32 (0)2 28 49137


Parlement européen

Bât. Louise Weiss

T11050

1, avenue du Président Robert Schuman

CS 91024

F-67070 Strasbourg Cedex

Tel. : +33 (0)3 88 1 75137

Fax : +33 (0)3 88 1 79137

Postal address :  European Parliament  Rue Wiertz  WIB 05M089  B-1047  Brussels



Biography from wikipedia.com

Daniel John Hannan - Member of the European Parliament (MEP)

Daniel John Hannan (born 1 September 1971[1]) is a British politician and Member of the European Parliament, representing South East England for the Conservative Party.

In the Parliament, he previously sat with the Non-Inscrits, having been expelled from the European People's Party–European Democrats group in 2008. Recently the Conservatives and other anti-federalist parties formed a new eurosceptic group, with which he now sits. Hannan is a eurosceptic and is strongly critical of European integration. He currently serves on the Committee on Fisheries and the Delegation for Relations with Afghanistan.[1]

Hannan is also a journalist, writing leaders and a blog for the The Daily Telegraph. He has also published several books arguing for radical democratic reform.

Hannan made national news headlines in August 2009 by criticising the National Health Service on the Fox News Channel in the United States.[2] Amongst other comments, Hannan stated on US TV that he "wouldn't wish" the NHS "on anyone". The comments sparked criticism and controversy from some quarters in the UK.[3]

Early life

Hannan was born of Anglo-Irish parents living on their farm near Lima, Peru (the centre of one of Peru's largest and most modern poultry businesses;[4] the family estate also included a cotton plantation in Santa Cruz, Bolivia).[5] After spending his childhood in Peru, he was educated at Marlborough College and Oriel College, Oxford, where he studied Modern History.[6] He speaks French and Spanish.[7]


Early political career

Daniel was President of the Oxford University Conservative Association in 1992, also serving as national vice-chairman of Conservative Students from 1992-3, and then chairman of Conservative Graduates from 1994.[8] He had earlier established the Oxford Campaign for an Independent Britain, and on 12 September 1992 led a members' protest at a European financial summit held in Bath, which was widely televised and, he has since light-heartedly claimed, led to the withdrawal of the Pound Sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism a few days later.[9] Through the CIB he became involved with the Bruges Group, and after he graduated he became, in 1994, director of a Eurosceptic political think-tank, the European Research Group. In 1996 he was hired by the Daily Telegraph as a leader-writer,[8] and has since contributed to The Spectator and many other newspapers and magazines around the world. In 1997 he became an adviser and speechwriter to Michael Howard, then Shadow Foreign Secretary,[10] and in 1998 he was given a place on the Conservative candidates' list for the following year's European Parliament election. He later became a speechwriter for party leader William Hague. In 1999 he stood down from his posts at the European Research Group and Conservative Graduates.[8]


Member of the European Parliament

Daniel Hannan was first elected to the European Parliament in 1999, and was re-elected at the top of his party's list for the South East England constituency in 2004. In April 2008, Daniel Hannan was elected to the top position of the Conservative list for the 2009 European elections in the constituency of South East England, and in June 2009 he was re-elected to the European Parliament.[11]

A year after his first election, Hannan courted controversy when he appeared to be using the Conservative Party's central office as headquarters for a campaign to persuade Danish voters to block the introduction of the European Single Currency; however, he was able to show that the campaign was actually being run from his Westminster flat.[12]


Opposition to the ICTY

Hannan has campaigned in the European Parliament for an end to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia,[13] describing it as "a disgusting travesty," and has praised the work of John Laughland, a supporter of Slobodan Milošević who "chronicles, in pitiless detail, how the judges crashed through a series of legal norms and conventions in their increasingly frantic attempts to secure a conviction", though Hannan has taken what he claims to be "the more conventional view that Milosevic was a calculating Commie who unleashed a series of calamities". Hannan claimed in 2007 a system where international law was used to regulate domestic matters would "create the opportunity for a dictatorship far worse than Milosevic's", because the courts could try democratic leaders, even though they themselves had no democratic mandate.[14]


Campaign against the Lisbon Treaty

He opposed ratification of the Lisbon Treaty in the European Parliament, and was one of several MEPs who took part in a demonstration in the chamber after Parliament voted to endorse the Treaty. He has continued to speak against the Treaty, and in the manner of Cato the Elder's famous call, Carthago delenda est, he ended every speech, whatever its subject, with a call for the Lisbon Treaty to be put to a referendum: "Pactio Olisipiensis censenda est".[15][16]


YouTube hit

On 24 March 2009, after Gordon Brown had given a short speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg in advance of the G20 London summit, Hannan followed up by delivering a 3-minute speech criticising in very strong terms the response by Gordon Brown to the global financial crisis.[20] He finished the speech:

"

You cannot spend your way out of a recession or borrow your way out of debt. And when you repeat, in that wooden and perfunctory way, that our situation is better than others', that we are well placed to weather the storm, I have to tell you, you sound like a Brezhnev-era apparatchik giving the party line. You know, and we know, and you know that we know that it's nonsense. Everyone knows that Britain is worse off than any other country as we go into these hard times. The IMF has said so. The European Commission has said so. The markets have said so, which is why our currency has devalued by thirty percent. And soon, the voters too will get their chance to say so. They can see what the markets have already seen: that you are the devalued Prime Minister of a devalued government.[21]

"

The final phrase, "the devalued Prime Minister of a devalued government", was a quote from a speech by Labour Party leader John Smith criticising then-Prime Minister John Major in 1992.[22]

A video clip of the speech went viral on YouTube that evening,[23][24] attracting more than 630,000 views in 24 hours.[20][25] It became the 'most viewed today' YouTube video worldwide two consecutive days.[25] Hannan was invited to appear on several shows on American cable news channels, including Fox News and MSNBC: he appeared on television program Hannity via video link at 9pm EST on the same day,[26] and on the Glenn Beck Program the following day.[27][28] He also appeared on Your World with Neil Cavuto, where he stated he would have voted for Ron Paul in the 2008 presidential election had he been an American citizen.[29] The main British television channels, particularly the BBC and ITV, gave the speech fairly limited coverage, for which they faced some criticism from Conservative MPs and "a handful of viewers";[30] Conservative MP Nigel Evans stated that their lack of coverage rendered YouTube the 'ultimate in public service broadcasting'. As of September 2009, there have been 2.5 million views of the clip.


Praise for Iceland's economic miracle

Hannan has been a regular visitor to Iceland for 15 years. His best man organised his stag night there to celebrate its refusal to join the European Union, and has declared Icelanders to be the sturdiest and most self-reliant people he knows. Hannan's critics have pointed to his extravagant praise for Iceland's economic miracle prior to the 2008 crash, in which he advocated that other countries should emulate the Icelandic model of minimal national and international regulation as their model. In an October 2004 piece for The Spectator, entitled Blue-Eyed Sheikhs, Hannan wrote "For 70 years the Althing has been dominated by the splendidly named Independence Party, which has pursued the kind of Thatcherite agenda that is off limits to EU members ... Icelanders have no more desire to submit to international than to national regulation. That attitude has made them the happiest, freest and wealthiest people on earth. Long may they remain so". He also said "In the ten years that I have been travelling to Iceland, I have watched an economic miracle unfold there" and that "Today, Icelanders are absolutely rolling in it".[31][32]

Hannan has responded to Iceland's crisis by writing that the country "would be mad to join the EU"; if they'd adopted the euro, their currency would have been unable to fall to cushion the blow. He continues to praise "the enterprise of your people. You understand that independence is the natural condition of a free-standing citizenry."[33] Iceland formally applied to join the EU in July 2009 after a narrow vote in the Icelandic parliament.[34] On his blog Hannan reacted to the news of the Icelandic EU application by reclaiming that Iceland would never join the EU and pointing out that so far it had only "voted to start discussing terms, not to accept them". After all the issue would at the end be decided by the people in a referendum and they would never accept membership.[35] Days later an opinion poll was published in Iceland showing a plurality of Icelanders, or 48.5 percent, opposed to joining the EU and 34.7 percent in favour.[36]


NHS criticism

In April 2009 he criticised supporters of the National Health Service, saying that those who claimed it was the greatest British invention were clearly forgetting about parliamentary democracy, penicillin, the discovery of DNA, the abolition of slavery, or common law.[37] He also argued that the NHS has left Britain with low survival rates for cancers, strokes, high chances of becoming more ill in hospital, and constant waiting lists. David Cameron, who had said that his priorities were "three letters: NHS", distanced himself from Hannan's remarks, saying that Hannan has "some rather eccentric points of view".[38][39]

Writing in The Telegraph, Mr Hannan said of the media storm around his comments: On a visit to the US, I was asked by an interviewer whether I would recommend a British-style health-care model, paid for out of general taxation. I replied that all three parties were devoted to the NHS, and that it had public support (although I added that this was at least partly the result of the inaccurate belief that free health care for the poor is a unique attribute of the British system). But I didn't want to dissemble: I have for years argued that Britain would be better off with a Singapore-style system of personal health-care accounts. So I cautioned against nationalisation, citing international league tables on survival rates and waiting times.[40]

Also making the wider point that: "we seem to have lost the notion that a backbencher speaks for himself. I like David Cameron, and want him to be Prime Minister, not least so that Britain stops racking up debt. But the idea that I therefore agree with him on every issue is, when you think about it, silly."[40]


Electoral reform

Hannan argues in his writings and in the media (for example, during an appearance on Question Time on BBC television on 28 May 2009) for ballot initiatives (whereby electors can directly enact legislation as happens in California), a power of recall (whereby a sitting Member of Parliament can be forced to submit to re-election if enough of his local electorate support this), fixed term parliaments, local and national referendums, open primaries and the abolition of party lists.


Enoch Powell

It was reported in August 2009 that Hannan had praised the anti-immigrant Conservative politician Enoch Powell as "somebody who understood the importance of national democracy, who understood why you need to live in an independent country and what that meant, as well as being a free marketeer and a small-government Conservative."[41][42]

However, he is also on record as saying "For what it's worth, I think Enoch Powell was wrong on immigration. The civil unrest that he forecast, and that many feared in 1968, didn't materialise. Britain assimilated a large population with an ease that few countries have matched. Being an immigrant myself, I have particular cause to be grateful for Britain's understated cosmopolitanism."[43]

The Times' associate editor Daniel Finkelstein said that "many immigrant families would find Dan's endorsement of Powell threatening and unpleasant, even though I am sure that was not his intent."[44]

Writing in on The Telegraph website, Mr Hannan said: "I'm surprised that no one has picked up on the thing that I most admire about Enoch Powell, namely his tendency to ignore conventional wisdom and think things through from first principles. Like Rowan Williams, he always did his hearers the courtesy of addressing them as intelligent adults. Both men regularly got into trouble in consequence, either because they were genuinely misunderstood or because their detractors affected to misunderstand them. Neither responded by dumbing down. That, in politics, takes a special kind of integrity."[45]


Publications

Daniel Hannan has been a leader writer for the Daily Telegraph since 1996.[46] He has also written for various other newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal, the German daily Die Welt, the Swiss weekly Weltwoche, The Sunday Telegraph, The Catholic Herald, Freedom Today, the Brussels Journal and The Spectator.

He is the author of Time for a Fresh Start in Europe (1993) A Guide to the Amsterdam Treaty (1997), The Euro: Bad for Business (1998), The Challenge of the East (1999), What if Britain Votes No? (2002) and The Case for EFTA (2004), and contributed to Treason at Maastricht (1994), by Rodney Atkinson and Norris McWhirter.[47]

He was the co-founder of Direct Democracy and co-author, along with 27 Conservative MPs elected in 2005, of Direct Democracy: An Agenda for a New Model Party, which proposes the wholesale devolution of power and the direct election of decision-makers. These ideas were developed further in a series of six pamphlets, The Localist Papers, serialised in The Daily Telegraph in 2007. In 2008, he published the book The Plan: Twelve Months to Renew Britain together with Douglas Carswell.

http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldn ... annan.html
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan